In an interview with the BBC’s Fame Under Fire podcast, Mr Fudali highlighted that some of West’s posts on social media appear to admit some of her claims.
Mr Fudali told presenter Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty: “He [West] has a song called Heil Hitler. He calls himself a walking ‘Me Too’. He admits to sexually harassing his employees. You see all that he’s done publicly, you can imagine what he has done in private.”
West’s social media posts do not directly admit guilt to any legal claims and his team strongly deny the allegations.
Mr Fudali says all of West’s tweets will be brought up as evidence during his deposition with the rapper and shown in court during the trial.
The BBC asked West’s team for a response to the claims. His team did not reply but West’s spokesperson previously told USA Today: “Lauren Pisciotta’s amended complaint is the fourth version she has advanced. Each new revision contradicts the others.”
It goes on to call the latest claim a “breathless new instalment of fantasy fiction [that] discredits all past, present and future testimony”.
The spokesperson added: “We stand ready to annihilate Ms Pisciotta’s tall tales before a jury − an exoneration so inevitable that even she, lost in her fog of fantasy, must surely see it coming.”
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