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Ryan Reynolds wants to take himself out of Justin Bardoni’s story.
On Tuesday, Reynolds filed court documents and demanded his dismissal from Justin Bardoni’s $400 million delinquent lawsuit against Blake Lively.
In Bardoni’s lawsuit, he includes scenes where Reynolds accused of bullying, referring to Ryan’s film Deadpool & Wolverine, including Ryan playing Kneespool. Many people, including Justin’s legal team, speculate that the scene is an ock-lol of the “it’s finished with us” star.
Bardoni’s lawsuit also accused Reynolds of naming him a “sexual predator.”
In a new court document obtained by “Extra,” Reynolds’ team said: [Baldoni’s] The claim for honor loss appears to be based on the double that Reynolds is said to have called Bardoni a “predator.” But FAC [First Amended Complaint] He has not argued any plausible facts that suggest that Reynolds does not believe this comment is true. Instead, the related FAC claims suggest that Reynolds truly, perhaps passionately, believes Bardoni’s actions reflect “predators.”
“The whole Bardoni incident is said to have been told that Reynolds privately calls Bardoni a “predator,” and that this is the issue, but it is not a honourable loss unless Reynolds shows that he is unbelievable that the statement is true, argued, “Reynolds’ lawyer.” “The complaints do not argue that Reynolds truly believes that Bardoni truly believes he is a predator. Reynolds’ wife emphasizes Reynolds’ allegations that he denounces sexual harassment and retaliation in personal and multiple complaints, and that he is pretending to be Reynolds’ moves and false moves. Consent. Reynolds has the first right to amend Bardoni’s opinion.
Of Bardoni’s case, Reynolds’ attorney added, “essentially a burn book filled with frustration trying to shame Mr. Reynolds listens to women in his life and is confident enough to actually stand with her.”
The Reynolds submission comes weeks after Lively spokesperson Leslie Sloane was asked to be removed from the lawsuit.
In February, Sloan asked Bardoni to take it from a lively lawsuit against Reynolds against lively Reynolds lawsuit, claiming that the PR company is “tugging” in the legal battle, adding that “wayfarer parties have been Leslie Sloan and Vision PR, Inc. have inhaled smoke and absorbed it as an absorption scheme, bringing it to the introduction of absorption schemes.”
Regarding Bardoni’s claims of fear tor, Sloan’s legal team said, “The Wayfarer party has denounced fear tor, but does not (and cannot) identify where and how the suspected fear tor occurred, or how the exaggeration is.
Bardoni’s lawyer opposed the dismissal request, claiming that “the Sloan Party played an active and integral role in the conspiracy to harm the parties to the Wayfarer.”
The document alleges that “in a desperate effort to save Lively’s reputation and escape her rage, the Sloan Party will conspire with vibrant and integrated defendant Ryan Reynolds and the New York Times company to create a Wayfarer Party scapegoat for Life’s lament.”
“In regards to information and belief, the Sloan parties have worked for months to secretly misrepresent their listener trumpets and sinister allegations to the public,” the document allegedly claimed. “As a direct result of the actions of the Sloan parties and their co-conspirators, the Wayfarer parties have been damaged beyond measurements.
Sloane’s legal team responded to the document and spoke People Magazine“Once our dismissal claims came to light, Leslie Sloan and her company’s vision PR were dragged into this lawsuit to divert it from serious allegations of sexual harassment and systematic retaliation.”
They “have not lost the irony that Bardoni and his team were falsely accused of relying on claims against Leslie Sloan, who look forward to locking up an unfounded finger, court.”
Blake and Justin are scheduled to go to trial in March 2026, but it could come soon if legal war gets troubled!
In December, Lively filed a legal complaint with California’s Civil Rights Office, claiming that Baldoni had sexually harassed her on set. She also denounced him in a smear campaign in a New York Times article. In return, he sued the New York Times, which denied any misconduct.
Lively then sued Baldoni, who was fired in a $400 million defamatory lawsuit against her. Both parties also denies fraud.