Crime & Safety

Judge Rules Against 'Real Housewives' Star's Cyberbullying Suit

Ex-"Beverly Hills" housewife Diana Jenkins​ tried to clear her name in connection to attacks against Garcelle Beauvais​' 14-year-old son.

Diana Jenkins sued an unidentified online troll in an effort to clear her name in connection to racist attacks against castmate Garcelle Beauvais​' 14-year-old son.
Diana Jenkins sued an unidentified online troll in an effort to clear her name in connection to racist attacks against castmate Garcelle Beauvais​' 14-year-old son. (Getty Images for Elton John AIDS Foundation)

VAN NUYS, CA — A judge this week ruled against former "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" cast member Diana Jenkins in a lawsuit she filed in an effort to clear her name in connection to cyberbullying against one of her castmate's children.

Jenkins in September filed a suit against a John Doe defendant, claiming that the unidentified troll used bots to target Garcelle Beauvais's 14-year-old son on social media. Jenkins claimed the mystery person framed her for the racist attacks — and heated onscreen exchanges on "Housewives" between her and Beauvais helped support that narrative, Rolling Stone reported at the time.

Van Nuys Superior Court Judge Virginia Keeny on Monday ruled that Jenkins' suit does not provide evidence to support Jenkins' single claim for false light invasion of privacy. The judge also denied a request by Jenkins' attorneys for a broader order to uncover the people behind the false Instagram accounts used to send 14 racist messages to her former costar's child.

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Jenkins' attorneys had asked the judge to allow them to serve deposition subpoenas on Comcast Cable Communications LLC, Verizon Business Network Services LLC, Colo Crossing, Scaleway Inc., Inter Connects, Inc., LeaseWeb USA Inc., MPower Communications Corp. and B2 Net Solutions Inc., also known as Servermania USA Inc. Keeny heard arguments on March 23 and took the issues under submission before ruling Monday.

The judge had previously given Jenkins' lawyers authority to present a deposition subpoena to Meta Platforms Inc., but Jenkins' lawyers said the information obtained was still insufficient to identify the perpetrator. In Monday's ruling, the judge said she has had second thoughts about previously granting the Meta Platforms subpoena. Meta owns Instagram.

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Jenkins' attorneys maintained their client had an action for false light invasion of privacy claim because the offensive comments about the boy were posted with the attempt to portray Jenkins as the one who directed, orchestrated, participated or approved them. But the judge disagreed, saying she could not find a case "that allowed such attenuated facts" to support Jenkins' claim.

"The reasonable take-away from anyone reading these posts is that they were created and posted by rabid fans of the program who were supporting (Jenkins) in her ongoing, highly orchestrated feud with the boy's mother on `Real Housewives of Beverly Hills,"' the judge wrote. "Had the individual or individuals who posted these messages created posts that made it appear that they had been authored by plaintiff, the situation would be different. But here, the users posted these messages with their own user identity, photo, idiosyncratic fonts and spelling, and unique writing styles."

The judge further said that while some of the postings are "vile" and "hurtful," none show they were written by Jenkins or posted at her direction.

"The Instagram users who posted these comments used their own monikers, none of which include plaintiff's name," the judge wrote.

City News Service contributed to this report.

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