Man Arrested at Travis Kelce’s Home After Serving Taylor Swift Deposition Papers from Justin Baldoni
NEED TO KNOW
- A process server was arrested on Sept. 15 after allegedly attempting to serve Taylor Swift deposition papers on behalf of Justin Baldoni’s legal team
- The man, identified as Justin Lee Fisher, was arrested outside Travis Kelce’s gated Leawood, Kansas estate
- Fisher was allegedly charged with “jumping the fence onto a private residence in a private neighborhood”
A process server was arrested outside Travis Kelce’s home after allegedly attempting to serve Taylor Swift deposition papers on behalf of Justin Baldoni’s lawyers tied to the It Ends With Us director and actor’s legal dispute with Blake Lively.
PEOPLE can confirm the man, identified as Justin Lee Fisher, 48, was arrested in the early hours of Sept. 15 after being suspected of jumping a fence into the Kansas City Chiefs tight end’s gated Leawood, Kansas estate.
The newly engaged couple, both 35, were believed to be in their residence at the time. Fisher was allegedly charged with “jumping the fence onto a private residence in a private neighborhood.”
Details of the incident were allegedly missing from the one-page police report, which reportedly stated in bold letters, “This information is restricted as to use and dissemination,” according to Star, the first outlet to report the news.
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On Sept. 13, PEOPLE reported that Swift is unlikely to be deposed in the legal battle.
Lewis J. Liman, the U.S. District judge overseeing the case, declined Baldoni’s request for a 30-day extension of the discovery cut-off date, Sept. 30 (Lively’s extension request to Oct. 10 was granted).
Baldoni’s attorney Bryan Freedman had asked for the extra time to depose Swift, who he claimed in a Sept. 11 letter to Judge Liman was willing to do so. He wrote that the “Bad Blood” singer “has agreed to appear for deposition, but couldn’t until Oct. 20 due to her “preexisting professional obligations.””
But Swift — who is releasing her 12th studio album, The Life of a Showgirl, on Oct. 3 — did not agree to a deposition, an attorney for the superstar fired back in a letter the same day.
“My client did not agree to a deposition, but if she is forced into a deposition, we advised (after first hearing about the deposition just three days ago) that her schedule would accommodate the time required during the week of October 20 if the parties were able to work out their disputes. We take no role in those disputes,” the attorney wrote.
Lively filed a lawsuit against Baldoni, her It Ends with Us costar and director, as well as his Wayfarer Studios colleagues, publicist and crisis PR team last December. She alleged that she experienced sexual harassment and was the victim of a retaliatory smear campaign after she spoke up about it, which they deny.
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Swift — whose song “My Tears Ricochet” is featured in the film — first had her name dragged into the case when Baldoni filed a $400 million countersuit against Lively and her husband Ryan Reynolds, alleging defamation and extortion. (Judge Liman dismissed that suit in June.)
In court documents, Baldoni claimed that he was pressured into accepting one of Lively’s suggested rewrites for the movie during a meeting with Swift and Reynolds, 48, after he was “summoned” to Lively and Reynolds’s penthouse in New York City.
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During a text exchange with Baldoni following the meeting, Lively allegedly referenced HBO’s Game of Thrones and referred to Reynolds and Swift as her “dragons.”
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Baldoni’s lawyers also subpoenaed Swift in May, a move a rep for Swift slammed at the time.
“Taylor Swift never set foot on the set of this movie, she was not involved in any casting or creative decisions, she did not score the film, she never saw an edit or made any notes on the film, she did not even see It Ends With Us until weeks after its public release, and was traveling around the globe during 2023 and 2024 headlining the biggest tour in history,” the rep said in a statement obtained by PEOPLE.
The subpoena was withdrawn the same month.
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