Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones asks judge to dismiss paternity test lawsuit alleging attempted rac

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Jerry Jones on Monday asked a judge to dismiss a paternity test lawsuit against him, alleging that a congressional aide who claimed he was her father was involved in "multiple racketeering attempts" against him and the Cowboys.
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Jerry Jones on Monday asked a judge to drop the paternity test lawsuit against him, saying the 25-year-old congressional aide who claimed to be his daughter was involved in "multiple blackmail attempts" against him and the Dallas Cowboys.

Jones' response to the lawsuit filed by Alexandra Davis said she sent Jones a draft on an unspecified date and asked if he would "make a deal" to "ensure he is not identified publicly or privately" for her father." .

Court documents did not identify the individuals who allegedly tried to blackmail Jones and the Cowboys, or how much money was being extorted. "These potential sources of attempted racketeering ... will be the subject of other lawsuits that have been filed or are about to begin," Jones' attorneys Levi McCathern II and Charles L. Babcock said in a motion filed Monday afternoon in a court-ordered order. line.

However, Babcock, in a March 10 letter of demand, linked Davis' parent-child lawsuit against Jones and many other recent Cowboys scandals with Jones' daughter Charlotte Jones Anderson and her husband Shy Anderson. linked to the ongoing contentious divorce battle. The letter, obtained by ESPN, advises Anderson to keep documents "to determine whether there is collusion between you and others, including but not limited to some of your attorneys."

The letter advises Jones' longtime son-in-law to keep 10 categories of documents and other evidence, including his possible correspondence with Davis and her mother, Cynthia Davis Spencer. Other specific issues the lawyers asked Anderson to keep were "any efforts to obtain funds, directly or indirectly, from Mr. Jones" and "any efforts to obtain information that you and/or your lawyers deem embarrassing to Mr. Jones".

Babcock's March 10 letter also referred to "all communications with anyone regarding an incident involving certain Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders that was the subject of an ESPN article."

The letter also asked Anderson to retain any ties he had with a former Cowboys executive named Vincent Thompson. Thompson provided the first tip, which led to a Feb. 16 ESPN story. The story details the team's $2.4 million settlement after four cheerleaders accused longtime captain Richard Dalrymple of spying in the locker room at AT&T Stadium. ESPN confirmed the story by obtaining classified documents outlining the settlement and secrecy
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