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24th lawsuit filed against Deshaun Watson just days after attorney's comments

The plaintiff said she's coming forward now after hearing Watson say he had no regrets and did nothing wrong.
Credit: David Richard/AP
Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson walks on the field during an NFL football practice at the team's training facility Wednesday, June 1, 2022, in Berea, Ohio.

HOUSTON — Former Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson is facing another lawsuit alleging sexual misconduct in connection with a massage he received in 2020.

The lawsuit was filed Monday morning in Harris County.

This is now the 24th lawsuit filed against the former Texan, who now plays for the Cleveland Browns. Attorney Tony Buzbee is representing all 24 plaintiffs.

The woman in the most recent lawsuit goes into detail about the inappropriate behavior she allegedly experienced in August of 2020. 

The plaintiff said she's coming forward now after hearing Watson say he had no regrets and did nothing wrong. Buzbee said she quit giving massages after her encounter with Watson. 

"We are unable to respond to the new lawsuit at this time. Our legal team has not had time to investigate this new filing and had not heard her name until today," Watson attorney Rusty Hardin said in a statement. "Deshaun continues to deny he did anything inappropriate with any of the plaintiffs."

The lawsuit comes days after Hardin made headlines himself for comments he made on Houston SportsRadio 610’s Payne & Pendergast Show.

The 80-year-old Hardin closed the interview with a long rant about "happy ending" massages.

“I don’t know how many men are out there now that have had a massage that perhaps occasionally there was a happy ending,” Hardin told the hosts. “Maybe there’s nobody in your listening audience that that ever happened to. I do want to point out, if it has happened, it’s not a crime. OK? Unless you are paying somebody extra or so to give you some type of sexual activity, it’s not a crime. And so at the end of the day, that’s another thing that would affect conduct. Doing something or saying something or being a way that makes you uncomfortable is not a crime. So, we’ve had two grand juries find that, and nobody seems to want to listen."

Several hours later, Hardin released a statement to try to clarify what he meant during the interview.

"Deshaun Watson did nothing wrong. And as two grand juries have made clear, Deshaun did nothing illegal. Deshaun has always acknowledged consensual sexual activity with three of the plaintiff massage therapists after massages. And Deshaun has repeatedly sworn under oath that he did not force any of his accusers to have sexual contact.

“On a Houston radio show interview today, I mentioned that a massage that has a “happy ending” is not illegal, meaning it is not illegal for someone to have consensual sex with a therapist after a massage unless the sex is for pay.

“Deshaun did not pay anyone for sex. I was using the term hypothetically and not describing Deshaun’s case.

“I have reiterated to others it’s not OK to do anything that a woman does not agree to do. These women have alleged assault in their pleadings. I was speaking in a hypothetical situation. If there is a consensual sexual encounter after a massage, that is not a crime nor the basis for a civil lawsuit. I was not talking about what Deshaun did or did not do or expected or did not expect.”

The 23rd case filed against Watson came one week after HBO's "Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel" ran a segment interviewing two of his first 22 accusers. The 23rd woman to file a suit against the three-time Pro Bowl quarterback said she didn't originally plan to move forward with her allegations but decided to do so after seeing the HBO segment.

In a copy of the lawsuit, the woman claims Watson harassed or assaulted her on multiple occasions at a Houston massage business in the summer of 2020, while Watson was still a member of the Texans.

As Pro Football Talk's Mike Florio points out, buried deep in the lawsuit is the following footnote: “Of course, we now know that Deshaun Watson offered each Plaintiff $100,000 to settle their cases, but not all would accept that amount, due to the aggressive nondisclosure agreement that Watson’s team proposed.”

In the meantime, Buzbee told ESPN's John Barr on Friday that he believes that Hardin's comments "may have single-handedly lost" Watson's case. "Because I'm absolutely going to use that comment because I think it speaks volumes to how he, his team, and his client thing about the massage industry," Buzbee added.

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