On December 10, Jay-Z's lead attorney, Alex Spiro, sent a letter to Judge Analisa Torres claiming that an anonymous woman had contacted his office to share an incident concerning Tony Buzbee. The letter claimed that Buzbee's law firm dropped the woman as a client after she refused to pursue a false case against Diddy and Jay-Z.As per NBC News on December 9, Texas attorney Tony Buzbee refiled an October lawsuit on December 8 after including Jay-Z as a defendant, accusing him of r*ping a 13-year-old girl alongside Sean "Diddy" Combs, at an MTV VMAs afterparty in 2000. The lawsuit was filed under New York's Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Act, with Buzbee representing the alleged victim.In response, the Roc Nation owner filed a lawsuit against Buzbee on December 10, accusing him of "extortion" and alleging that Buzbee's civil lawsuit against him was in itself a form of extortion. The rapper's legal team, represented by the firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, further alleged that Buzbee pressurized his client to implicate Diddy and Jay-Z.The same day, Alex Spiro, in a letter to the judge, slammed Tony Buzbee and claimed that the Texas attorney seeks "neither justice nor peace for his victims—he seeks only to benefit himself."Exploring the claims made by Jay-Z's attorney in the letter to the JudgeAlex Spiro's letter to Judge Analisa Torres narrated an incident that allegedly happened on December 9. As per the letter, his office received a phone call and email from a woman who wished to remain anonymous "for fear of retaliation by the Buzbee firm."The woman allegedly claimed that she had reached out to Tony Buzbee's law firm regarding "allegations of trafficking and abuse unrelated to Mr. Combs (or Mr. Carter)." However, Buzbee's representatives were allegedly bent on connecting the events with Diddy. The letter further read:"Members of the Buzbee firm encouraged this woman to pursue her claims anonymously even though she did not have any interest in doing so. When the woman raised wanting to talk to law enforcement she was informed that it was 'not encouraged.'"The letter then continued to explain the narratives allegedly created by Buzbee's law firm representatives."After several outreaches, the woman again spoke with members of the Buzbee firm, who she felt were pressing her to make allegations of being drugged, held down, and physically assaulted—allegations that were not true," claimed the letter.Thereafter, it was stated that the woman was "summarily dropped as a client" after she allegedly declined to adopt their version of events.The letter ended by claiming that this incident was further evidence in support of Jay-Z's right to "thoroughly investigate, test, and respond to the spurious allegations that have been leveled against him."Tony Buzbee posts a call transcript after claiming that Jay-Z was allegedly trying to bribe his former clients to sue himTony Buzbee (Image via Getty)On December 10, Tony Buzbee took to X to assert that investigators from Jay-Z's legal team were trying to contact his current and old clients and bribe them into initiating lawsuits against Buzbee. The Texas attorney provided further evidence of his claims by posting a transcript of a call record. He then described it as a criminal offense."INVESTIGATOR: ...“We could get you paid, . . . you could get money right soon, you know? We gave this kid 1,000 bucks to start yesterday just to get him on the right path. At the end of the day, this is going to go through the courts, Buzbee is getting sued . . .,” wrote Buzbee in his tweet.This is a developing story and we don't have any more updates about the legal proceedings as of this writing.