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Cowboys owner Jerry Jones ordered to take paternity test amid legal dispute with 26-year-old woman

Texas judge ordered dallas cowboys Owner Jerry Jones undergoes a paternity test amid a legal dispute with a 26-year-old woman. According to CBS NewsA woman, Alexandra Davis, claims that Jones is her biological father.

Jones’ attorneys declined to give an immediate public response, but court filings show they plan to appeal the decision, according to CBS News.

Davis filed a paternity lawsuit against Jones in early March and has yet to confirm that he is Davis’ father, but Jones’ attorney said less than a month later that the Cowboys’ owner had admitted to paying millions of dollars to Davis and her mother, Cynthia Spencer. Davis.

In a statement, Jones’ attorney, Don Jack, said: He told ESPN.com that he donates regularly Since Alexandra’s birth on December 16, 1996, Jones has replaced Jones to the two women of Davis.

“Many times we paid Cindy and Alex Davis on behalf of Mr. Jones,” Jack said.

Jack also noted that he paid Cynthia Davis a lump sum of $375,000 in 1995, and that Jones made Cynthia Davis “eventually made monthly child support payments totaling over $2 million.” It revealed that.

According to Jack, Cowboys owners set up two trusts to help pay for Alexandra Davis’ child support. These trusts have paid her over $1.2 million over the last 25 years. According to ESPN, Alexandra Davis will receive two more payments from the trust, one when she turns 26 and the other when she turns 28.

In addition to the trust, Jack claims that Jones also bore the bills for several luxury items, including the $70,000 Range Rover that Alexandra Davis received for her 16th birthday. Jones spent $33,000 to throw a “Sweet 16” birthday party. The Cowboys owner also netted nearly $50,000 for her two big international trips with Alexandra Davis. One trip was with her mother on a Christmas vacation to Paris, where Jones allegedly tipped her $25,000. Another vacation he took was a trip abroad after graduating from university. Jones is said to have donated her $24,000 to the trip.

In a March 28 court filing, Jones said: asked about the paternity lawsuit The Cowboys’ owner called it an extortion attempt, so it is thrown out. Jones’ spokesman, Jim Wilkinson, called the lawsuit an extortion of money.

Wilkinson and Jack claimed that Davis’ original plan was to try to get $20 million from Jones, and that he had made the request at a dinner party several years earlier.

“At that meeting, Alex read me a personal letter he had drafted to Jerry Jones. He said he would keep the relationship a secret.

Alexandra Davis’ attorney, Andrew A. Bergman, argued that there was no such demand.

“Let’s take a look at the letter,” Bergman said Thursday. “And let’s see the evidence that more money was paid beyond those agreements. And I ask why? Jerry says money is a substitute for being a father.” Will millions make him a good father and my client a blackmailer? Remember the money was contingent on her keeping quiet.”

According to Alexandra Davis’ lawsuit filed March 3, the $375,000 given to her mother was hush money to buy her silence about the identity of Alexandra Davis’ real father.

Alexandra Davis filed her father’s lawsuit because she was forced to abide by a confidentiality agreement her mother signed. I wanted the court to rule that I shouldn’t have been detained. She also wants to acknowledge Jones as her father.

“It’s hard to imagine anything less in the child’s best interests than coercion. [confidentiality] A pact that leaves a child without a father and prevents or legally punishes the child from even revealing who the father is,” her lawsuit states. Via ESPN.com.

According to the paternity lawsuit, Alexandra Davis just wants a father she can recognize.

“The aforementioned combined effect [confidentiality] The agreement and Cynthia’s divorce proceedings left plaintiff without a legal father,” the complaint said. was to force her to reveal his identity. “

The Jones camp does not accept that explanation.

“The facts clearly show that millions of dollars were paid,” Wilkinson said.

Alexandra Davis, who currently works as an aide to Rep. Ronnie Jackson (R-Tex.), has not publicly commented on the lawsuit.

Asked about the lawsuit at the NFL’s annual league meeting last week, Jones dodged the question.

“It’s personal,” he said. dallas morning news“It’s personal.”

The next court date for this case has not yet been scheduled.

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