Diana Jenkins Drops Racist BOT Lawsuit After Being Ignored By Garcelle Beauvais
Diana Jenkins Drops Racist BOT Lawsuit After Being Ignored By Garcelle Beauvais
Diana Jenkins has dropped the lawsuit she filed to uncover the culprits behind the cyberbullying attack against the son of her former Real Housewives of Beverly Hills co-star, Garcelle Beauvais.
The Bravo alum ditched her effort after she “did not receive a response,” from the actress about how to move forward with the case.
In court documents obtained by Radar Online, Diana Jenkins said that after the court “expressed concerns” that she might not be the appropriate plaintiff to further the case, Diana’s lawyers contacted Garcelle’s attorney to determine “if she would join the lawsuit as Plaintiff.” Diana even “offered to cover all her legal expenses in connection with the suit.”
The motion filed in Los Angeles Wednesday stated that Diana “did not receive a response from Ms. Beauvais.” The filing also revealed that Diana’s team had “reached out to NBC Universal (the owner of the television network Bravo that airs the ‘Real Housewives of Beverly Hills‘) and informed NBC Universal regarding her efforts to identify the perpetrator(s), but also received no response.”
The documents read — “In light of the lack of response and assistance and despite having spent tens of thousands of dollars, Ms. Jenkins has concluded that she cannot proceed with this litigation at this time.”
The docs stated — “Ms. Jenkins is filing a Request of Dismissal Without Prejudice.”
The lawsuit also revealed that Diana’s lawyers were close to discovering the potential individuals involved in the internet attack on Garcelle’s son, Jax Nilon.
The suit read — “Many of the Instagram account holders had concealed their identities by using disposable email addresses and foreign phone numbers,” adding that several had ties to Mongolia and the Ivory Coast.
The filing stated that she “worked with a computer forensic expert” who “identified a potential name behind one of the accounts” with IP addresses in Northern California. The document confirmed the first initial and last name of the potential offender, but the outlet did not reveal the info.
Despite nailing down the “service providers for the IP addresses such as Comcast and Verizon,” Diana’s team “could not determine the persons who were using the IP addresses.”
The one-season Bravoleb filed a lawsuit in 2022, in an effort to identify those responsible for the racist online attack targeting Jax, via Instagram. Jax was 14 years old, at the time.
“This action seeks to unmask and hold accountable the morally bankruptcy person who has attacked a child and placed blame for his/her actions on Ms. Jenkins,” the suit read.
“Diana is a humanitarian who opposes all forms of hate, especially racism directed at a child,” the source told Radar at the time. “Whoever did this must and will face the consequences of their actions.”
Stay Connected With All About The Tea: Twitter Ι Instagram Ι YouTube Ι Facebook Ι Send Us Tips
Raissa Asunbo is a Content Editor at All About The Tea. She lives in Toronto, Canada and enjoys reading, watching movies, traveling and spending time with her family.