Christopher Griffith, who has accused Stefon Diggs of sexual assault, says he has provided more than 100 pages of communications as part of his case.
According to court documents, Griffith claims the materials include text messages and other conversations exchanged through platforms such as iMessage and Instagram.
Basically, the courtroom has entered the era of screenshots.
Welcome to modern legal battles, where the phrase “I have receipts” has gone from a social media joke to something that can end up as evidence.
In court docs, Stefon’s accuser, Christopher Griffith, claims he produced over 100 pages of communications — including texts on iMessage and Instagram — between himself and Diggs
Stefon had claimed Christopher had failed to turn over Instagram messages … but Christopher said Stefon has those messages himself. Stefon claims Christopher blocked him on Instagram and he can’t see their old messages anymore … so he asked the judge to order Christopher to hand them over.
Stefon sued Christopher for defamation, claiming the man was spreading lies about him. Christopher countersued, claiming he was drugged and sexually assaulted at Stefon’s home, which the NFL star denies ever happened.
The situation involving Diggs has drawn attention because he is one of the NFL’s biggest names. The wide receiver has built a career filled with highlight plays, huge catches, and plenty of media attention.
Now, the focus has moved away from football, and that is something no athlete wants.
For Griffith, the legal process will be about presenting evidence and making his case.
For Diggs, the matter represents another major off-field challenge that comes with being a high-profile athlete.
Fame brings opportunities. It also brings intense public attention when controversy appears.
At this stage, the case will be decided through the legal system, not through social media debates.
For now, the headlines will continue, the arguments will continue, and people will continue refreshing their feeds looking for updates, because in today’s world, sometimes the biggest battles are not played on a football field.
Sometimes they happen through court filings, text messages, and pages of documents.