Report: Cowboys’ Jerry Jones has paid $3M to woman in paternity claim; she asked for $20M to stay quiet

The 25-year-old has said she doesn’t want money from Jones, but the owner’s lawyers paint a very different picture of Alexandra Davis. | From @Cdburnett7 and @ToddBrock24f7

The 25-year-old woman at the center of a paternity lawsuit filed against Jerry Jones has claimed that she is not seeking money from the Cowboys owner.

But three weeks after the case became public, ESPN’s Don Van Natta Jr. is reporting that Jones’s lawyer claims Alexandra Davis has already received nearly $3 million over the years. That money was used to pay for her full college tuition, a sport utility vehicle, a “Sweet 16” birthday party, and trips abroad.

But it’s just a drop in the bucket compared to the $20 million that a dissatisfied Davis reportedly asked Jones for, with the promise of remaining silent about her alleged identity as the billionaire’s daughter.

Don Jack is the Little Rock, Arkansas lawyer representing Jones.

“On numerous occasions I have made payments on behalf of Mr. Jones to Cindy and Alex Davis,” Jack said in a statement to ESPN.

The first payment came in 1995, when Jack struck an agreement on Jones’s behalf with Cynthia Spencer Davis to pay her $375,000 and provide monthly child support payments out of two trusts “which ultimately totaled over $2 million,” he said.

Jones has not acknowledged Davis as his biological daughter; a condition of the payouts (two more lump sum payments are due when Davis turns 26 and 28) has been that Davis not try to establish legal paternity.

Now Davis has requested for the court to revoke the agreement. Her lawyer has insisted that she is not seeking money, but is instead asking that Davis be allowed to name Jones on her birth certificate as her true father.

Jack tells a different story, though, recalling a dinner with Davis and her mother at a Dallas area restaurant several years ago.

“In that meeting, Alex read to me a personal letter she had drafted to Jerry Jones in which she expressed her dissatisfaction with what she had received and sought $20 million,” Jack said. “She stated that if that amount was paid, she would not bother Mr. Jones again and would keep their relationship confidential.”

Neither Jack nor a Jones spokesperson could provide proof of that letter, Van Natta reports.

This week, though, Jones asked for a judge to dismiss the lawsuit, claiming that Davis is a part of “multiple monetary extortion attempts” against the Cowboys owner.

Jack told ESPN that Davis and her mother have repeatedly asked for additional money and other expenses over the years, exceeding the trust payouts by nearly $1 million dollars.

Those expenses included $33,000 for a “Sweet 16” birthday party that was featured on Big Rich Texas (Davis and her mother appeared on the reality series), a Range Rover, Davis’s four years at SMU, a $24,000 trip abroad for Davis after graduation, and a $25,000 Christmas trip for Davis and her mother to Paris.

“This clearly demonstrates that money has always been the ultimate goal here,” Jones spokesperson Jim Wilkinson said. “And sadly this is just one part of a more broad calculated and concerted effort that has been going on for some time by multiple people with various different agendas.”

One of those people may be Shy Anderson, the now-ex-husband of Charlotte Jones, Jerry’s daughter and chief brand officer of the Cowboys.

As the former couple goes through a “contentious divorce battle,” Anderson has been instructed to preserve documents “to determine whether a conspiracy exists among yourself and others” in several different areas of Jones family and Cowboys team interests, including communications Anderson may have had with Davis and her mother.

According to Wilkinson, Davis’s lawyer invoked the name of two high-salaried Cowboys players at a meeting between the two sides in early March.

“If you want this just to go away,” lawyer Andrew Bergman said, as per Wilkinson, “it’s going to cost you Zeke or Dak money.”

Bergman denies that claim, countering that Jones lawyer Levi McCathern was adamant that the Cowboys owner would never allow Davis to be portrayed as part of the Jones family.

“They said, ‘What does she want?'” Bergman said. “And I said she wants to establish parentage, and Jerry can do it cooperatively or not. Levi said Jerry’s not going to do that because of Mama Gene. Levi said Jerry said Alex will never be part of our family in a picture when we raise money for the Salvation Army.”

Jones’s side maintains those words were never spoken.

A Thursday hearing to determine if the original file would remain sealed was canceled after Jones’s lawyers withdrew the request.

The next steps in the rollercoaster case are unknown at this time.

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Cowboys owner Jerry Jones sued by woman claiming to be secret daughter

The 25-year-old woman says she has been forced to live in secrecy after her mother accepted a $375,000 deal from Jones in the mid-1990s. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The Cowboys are in the headlines again for reasons that have nothing to do with football.

A woman who grew up in North Texas has filed a lawsuit in Dallas County, alleging that Jerry Jones is her biological father and that the billionaire owner of the Cowboys paid her mother well over a quarter of a million dollars to keep it a secret. Nataly Keomoungkhoun of the Dallas Morning News was first to report the story Wednesday afternoon, the paper having obtained the lawsuit through online court records. That file was subsequently sealed- after a motion filed by Jones’s legal team, says ESPN- ahead of a scheduled March 31 hearing on the matter.

Alexandra Davis, 25, claims that her mother, Cynthia Davis Spencer, had a relationship with Jones in the mid-1990s, when she was working for American Airlines in Little Rock, Arkansas and estranged from her husband.

Alexandra was born in December, 1996. Cynthia and her husband began divorce proceedings shortly thereafter, and genetic testing at that time determined that another man was Alexandra’s father. Cynthia reportedly told Jones that he was the girl’s father, but Jones, who was helping to pay for the woman’s divorce case, responded that he was unable to have children, according to court documents.

The lawsuit claims that a deal was struck between Jones and Cynthia: Jones would provide financial support for the mother and child, with the condition that his identity was never revealed publicly. A lump sum payment of $375,000 was paid to Cynthia, and two trusts were set up for Alexandra, to be funded by Jones. Alexandra was to receive “certain monthly, annual and special funding” from the trusts until she turned 21, and then additional lump sums upon turning 24, 26, and 28.

Alexandra, who was a year old at the time of the settlement, was prohibited from ever seeking to legally establish paternity. While Jones and Cynthia have reportedly been in contact, the owner and Alexandra have never met. Alexandra alleges that Jones “abandoned and shunned” her, forcing her to live in secrecy for her entire childhood, adolescence, college years at nearby SMU, and into adulthood.

She is now asking the court to be legally recognized as Jones’s daughter and to be released from the confidentiality agreement her mother signed. She maintains that she has never disclosed Jones’s identity as her father except to gain FBI security clearance to work in the White House for a little over a year during the Trump administration. She now works as an aide to U.S Representative Ronny Jackson of Texas.

Both Alexandra and Cynthia Davis starred for a time on the reality TV series Big Rich Texas.

As per the Dallas Morning News report, it is unclear why Alexandra has filed the lawsuit at this time, though the lawsuit does make mention of health concerns regarding her mother.

Jerry Jones and his wife Gene, married since 1963, have three children: Stephen, Jerry Jr., and Charlotte Jones Anderson.

Jones and the Cowboys were at the center of a scandal last month involving retired PR man Rich Dalrymple and four Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders. The cheerleaders claimed that they caught Dalrymple spying on them as they changed clothes in a locker room in 2015. Jones and the team paid the cheerleaders $2.4 million in a confidential settlement and non-disclosure agreement. A fan also accused Dalrymple in a sworn affadavit of taking “upskirt” photos of Charlotte Jones Anderson during a livestream of the 2015 NFL draft.

Jones has been out of the spotlight since the Dalrymple story broke, only briefly glossing over the scandal in a pre-arranged TV interview for a charity event and then appearing at a press conference at AT&T Stadium to promote a boxing event. He did not take questions regarding anything other than the fight. Last week, Jones declined making his usual appearance at the NFL scouting combine. He cited a “medical issue,” while Stephen blamed a project his father was working on with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell for taking up much of his time.

Attorneys for Jones could not be reached by the newspaper for comment on the Alexandra Davis lawsuit. Jim Wilkinson, personal spokesperson for the Cowboys owner, declined to comment.

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