(CelebNMusic247-News) Mario Williams Charged with Perjury
This has to be completely crazy, but its possible that Buffalo Bills player Mario Williams may be charged with perjury for suing his ex fiancée in an attempt to get the engagement ring back?
According to reports, he is suing because she just plain out refuses to return the ring. However, recent reports now suggest things have gotten even nastier and thanks to a series of text messages allegedly from Mario Williams to his ex, he could possibly be charged with perjury.
Here’s the drop according to Ultimate Texans:
The attorney representing Mario Williams’ former fiancée asked a Houston judge Friday to dismiss Williams’ lawsuit seeking the return of a 10.04-carat engagement ring and to instruct Harris County prospectors to investigate Williams for perjury.
A hearing is scheduled for next Friday before state District Judge Larry Weiman to hear attorney Anthony Buzbee’s most recent challenge to Williams, the former Texans defensive lineman who filed suit earlier this month against Erin Marzouki of Houston.
Buzbee’s new petition is accompanied by another round of text messages between the estranged couple and by the attorney’s assertion Williams has committed perjury in his comments about Marzouki.
Wait there’s more – the site reveals that Mario repeatedly tells his ex to keep the ring and he still thinks she’s a good person, via a text message:
“…The latest round of text messages includes messages in which Williams wrote, “Keep those material things. It means nothing to me anymore: and “I said keep it” and “KEEP IT! Remember me by it.” In another series of messages, Williams is said to have written, “She said she was going to keep the ring n told her fine. I put down using material things as leverage long ago. She is free to be n do as she wants.”
Also introduced as an exhibit with the motion was a March 4 e-mail in which Williams wrote that he wanted to repair his relationship with Marzouki and said, “I just want to verbally discuss and answer things knowing you have closed the door, I still can’t say one thing bad about you that sticks.”
Williams last week said messages made public by Marzouki’s attorney had been taken out of context.”