May 30, 2011 13:03 GMT  ·  By
Judge allows Ojani Noa to release personal footage and photos of Jennifer Lopez
   Judge allows Ojani Noa to release personal footage and photos of Jennifer Lopez

Jennifer Lopez is in for a world of embarrassment as her first husband, Ojani Noa, has found a loophole in a court injunction and will release several personal videos and photos taken during their short-lived marriage.

The two were married for about a year back in the day when Lopez was not yet famous – and have been duking it out in court ever since over Noa’s willingness to share personal details about Jennifer to the press.

Judges repeatedly shut him down in attempts to release a tell-all book, personal photos and videos, or to do interviews on the topic of his relationship with the singer, actress and television personality.

After the most recent ban, Noa came up with a method to skip the court injunction: by selling the embarrassing material to his current girlfriend and have her sell it to the media, Radar Online writes.

“Court documents, exclusively obtained by RadarOnline.com reveal that Noa managed to find a loophole in the law – selling the footage to his current girlfriend, Claudia Vazquez for her to release it on his behalf,” Radar says.

“A Los Angeles judge issued a ruling Friday morning that allows Vazquez to release the footage JLo doesn’t want the public to see,” adds the publication.

Vasquez is currently meeting with industry people and making arrangements for the materials to see the light of day as soon as possible.

“Claudia Vazquez has been allowed to release the home videos of Ojani and Jennifer,” Ed Meyer, executive producer of the “project,” says for Radar.

Showing these images and footage is essential for fans to understand Lopez, Meyer argues.

“The project will deal with JLo’s rise to fame, and her marriage to Ojani. Claudia will be meeting with video distributors on Tuesday, and hopefully, a deal can be made very soon,” he adds.

So far, Jennifer Lopez has not responded in any way to reports that material she wanted kept private will soon become accessible to anyone with a TV or an Internet connection.