The woman who accused Garth Brooks of rape says the country music star “pressed her to engage in 𝓈ℯ𝓍ting with him,” and she tried to substantiate her claims with a single message.
In a court document that was obtained, the woman—who wants to remain anonymous and goes by Jane Roe in her case against Brooks—attached a snapshot of messages that she claimed the musician had sent to her. Roe is said to have written to Brooks, “And that huge stick you carry!” at the beginning of the undated communication. Roosevelt!
Garth Brooks, pictured here in 2023, allegedly sent 𝓈ℯ𝓍ually explicit messages to the woman who accused him of rape.
“I’ll take that nickname Thank you I love you ,” he allegedly responded.
In a court document, the accused included a snapshot of allegedly exchanged messages with the country artist.
Roe’s attorneys stated in court filings that Brooks “encouraged [her] to speak in a 𝓈ℯ𝓍ualized manner to him,” using his “huge stick” as one example. We have contacted the lawyers for Brooks and Roe to request additional information and background.
When filing her lawsuit last Thursday, Roe—who was a hairstylist when Brooks allegedly 𝓈ℯ𝓍ually assaulted her during a 2019 work trip to Los Angeles—first brought up the inappropriate messages were exchanged between the two.
The woman, identified only as Jane Roe, claimed Brooks, seen above in 2020, “encouraged [her] to speak in a 𝓈ℯ𝓍ualized manner to him.”
She claimed the musician, photographed here in September, raped her in 2019.
“Brooks sent Ms. Roe 𝓈ℯ𝓍ually explicit text messages and pressured her to engage in 𝓈ℯ𝓍ting with him,” her attorneys claimed documents previously obtained by us.
The accuser further alleged that many of the messages no longer exist because “Brooks surreptitiously took her phone and deleted most of the text messages that he had sent to her containing explicit 𝓈ℯ𝓍ual content” in 2020.
However, the filing did include one text Roe purportedly sent Brooks, 62, in May 2020 after he allegedly talked to her about “inventing a shampoo bottle that would double as a dildo.”
Roe went on to claim Brooks, shown above in 2023, used different phones to contact her.
The woman worked as a hairstylist during the time of the alleged assault. Brooks is seen here in 2021.
“I have thought a lot about the conversation of last Monday. I can’t work in an environment where explicit 𝓈ℯ𝓍ual comments are made about shampoo bottles doubling as dildos,” she is said to have written to him.
Roe went on to claim that Brooks had “more than one cellphone” and would even use “different ‘names’ and email addresses to communicate” with her.
“It will come back to you as [woman’s first name] [woman’s last name] but that is me [smiley face emoji],” he allegedly texted her in 2019, according to her lawsuit.
The “Friends in Low Places” singer, pictured above in 2023, has denied the claims.
The performer, shown here in 2017, claimed the woman has “hassled” him for months.
The “Friends in Low Places” singer has vehemently denied the accuser’s allegations, claiming to Page Six that he had been “hassled to no end with threats, lies and tragic tales of what [his] future would be if [he] did not write a check for many millions of dollars.”
“It has been like having a loaded gun waved in my face. Hush money, no matter how much or how little, is still hush money. In my mind, that means I am admitting to behavior I am incapable of — ugly acts no human should ever do to another,” he said in a statement to us last week after Roe’s filing.
Brooks then countersued Roe for compensatory and punitive damages Tuesday.
The “Dance” crooner accused Roe of causing “emotional distress, defamation and false light invasion of privacy, including incidental and consequential damages.”
Brooks, pictured above in 2022, countersued Roe a few days after her filing.
Later, Brooks—pictured above in 2016—came under fire from Roe’s lawyers for disclosing her identity in his case.
His counsel said, “Plainant will suffer irreparable harm if no injunction is issued, while Defendant will suffer no hardship from an injunction of her wrongful conduct.”
In his filing, Brooks also revealed the identity of his previously unnamed accuser, which led her attorney to publicly criticize him.
“Garth Brooks just made his real self known. He disclosed the name of a rape victim in public out of retaliation. Her lawyers argued on Tuesday that Brooks outed her without any legal reason because he believes the law doesn’t apply to him. “We will be pushing for the maximum sanctions against him right away on behalf of our client.”