Jacobson, who remains married to her husband of 40-plus years back in Leawood, Kansas, fell hard for Shapiro when he was an employee of the male escort service Cowboys 4 Angels, according to an acquaintance who knows them both. Shapiro’s attorney, former federal prosecutor Kenneth McCallion, declined to comment. We expect that the plaintiff will learn that lesson the hard way.” “Whatever the merits were of his first version, he was wise to not include some of the new parties and claims he is trying to add now. “The plaintiff is asking the court for permission to change his complaint,” Klein said. Klein, told The Daily Beast in an email that Shapiro will regret trying to add Jacobson to his litigation. He’s an opportunist trying to cash in on a private situation.” Reached by phone, Jacobson declined to comment but said of Shapiro and the lawsuit, “It’s nonsense. A fourth person who was tangentially involved told The Daily Beast that her brush with the situation has been nothing short of “a nightmare.” In one court exhibit, Shapiro said Jacobson paid investigators to track people as far away as Philadelphia and Florida, some of whom she had never even met. (The influencer previously made headlines as a onetime female semi-pro football player who bared her breasts in public.) Another friend of Shapiro allegedly saw her marriage ruined as a result of the smear campaign. The court filings in Shapiro’s case read like a psychological thriller, and feature a supporting cast that includes a globetrotting Manhattan nurse and an Instagram influencer who, according to Shapiro’s complaint, blames Jacobson for sabotaging a male escort service she tried to launch with Shapiro. His latest accusations come in a proposed amended complaint filed March 10 that adds Jacobson and a group of private eyes as defendants and alleges defamation, tortious interference with business relations, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Shapiro, who once appeared on an episode of Bravo reality show Project Runway, initially filed suit against LET and its executive director and spokesman Kyle S. According to the court filings, Shapiro endured a year of surveillance and harassment so intense, he “required the assistance of a psychotherapist.”
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