A secret audio recording, an alleged fake death threat, and a multi-million dollar corporate collapse are at the center of Jay-Z’s latest legal counterattack.
Last week, the music mogul’s legal team filed a motion in federal court asking to submit an updated Third Amended Complaint against Texas attorney Tony Buzbee, private investigator David Fortney, Curis, and Jane Doe. Jay-Z is demanding $190 million in damages, arguing that the original sexual assault lawsuit against him was actually a highly organized extortion plot meant to force a massive payout. He is also using a New York law that could triple those damages if the court finds that Buzbee intentionally lied to judges.
A central piece of evidence in the new filing involves a recorded conversation that took place in February 2025, just a week after Jane Doe voluntarily dismissed her initial lawsuit with prejudice.
According to the court papers, Doe admitted during this recorded interview that Jay-Z never sexually assaulted her and stated that “Buzbee brought Jay-Z into it” to inflate the value of the case. This claim aligns with separate audio obtained by Rolling Stone from February 21, 2025, where private investigators visited Doe at her home. When asked if Jay-Z was simply present at the party but had nothing to do with any sexual assault, Doe replied, “yeah,” and did not deny that Buzbee pushed to involve the billionaire rapper.
The new court documents also claim that investigator David Fortney manufactured a completely fake death threat to keep their client under control. Jay-Z’s team alleges that Fortney told Jane Doe that Jay-Z was trying to kill her, using the fake threat to scare her into dropping the case. The filing argues this was done to cover up a major legal mistake that Buzbee had reportedly been signing federal court documents in the Southern District of New York without a license to practice law in that jurisdiction, scrambling to dismiss the case the day after his application for admission was officially denied.
The legal battle originally stemmed from the fall of 2024, right after Diddy was arrested and Buzbee launched a massive social media and hotline campaign to gather potential plaintiffs. Jay-Z’s lawyers say they received a private letter on November 5, 2024, stating that Jane Doe wanted “something of substance” to stay quiet. Jay-Z refused to pay, and on December 8, 2024, Buzbee filed a public lawsuit accusing Jay-Z and Diddy of assaulting a 13-year-old girl at an MTV Video Music Awards afterparty back in 2000. Jay-Z denied everything immediately, labeling the entire situation a shakedown.
Jay-Z’s team is now arguing that the timing of that public lawsuit was intentionally weaponized to cause maximum financial ruin. The complaint hit the public the exact day after the high-profile premiere of the movie “Mufasa: The Lion King,” which featured Jay-Z’s daughter Blue Ivy. It also dropped right before a major NFL owners’ meeting where Roc Nation was closing critical business deals for the Super Bowl halftime show. The sudden rush of bad press caused more than $150 million in contracts and corporate financing to collapse for Jay-Z, forming the basis of his $190 million demand.
Though Buzbee denies all of the extortion claims and argues that Jay-Z is simply using his wealth to bully a victim into silence, judges have already found merit in the rapper’s case. The dispute has moved across multiple courtrooms, transferring from Alabama to New York in March 2026. Before the transfer, a judge in Los Angeles ruled that parts of Jay-Z’s lawsuit were strong enough to proceed to a jury trial, explicitly finding that Buzbee acted maliciously by calling Doe a survivor on social media and liking posts that identified Jay-Z before the lawsuit was even public.
The federal court still needs to sign off on the new filing, but Jay-Z has completely reframed the case from a standard defense into an aggressive multi-million dollar offensive.
⚖️COURT UPDATE⚖️Jay-Z has now moved for leave to file a Third Amended Complaint in his case against Tony Buzbee, David Fortney, Curis and Jane Doe — and the proposed new pleading sharply expands the narrative around the alleged extortion scheme. A May 22, 2026 declaration from… pic.twitter.com/r96Enm7O6Z
— Document Tingz (@DocumentTingz) May 29, 2026
