Bo Jackson awarded $21M in extortion case against his OWN niece and nephew… ex-NFL and MLB star is also granted a restraining order after the ‘harassment and intimidation’ began in 2022

  • Bo Jackson played a total of four seasons in the NFL and eight seasons in MLB 
  • Jackson won the coveted Heisman trophy while playing for Auburn in 1985
  • DailyMail.com provides all the latest international sports news 

Former professional baseball and football player Vincent ‘Bo’ Jackson has won a $21million verdict in his civil case against his niece and nephew for trying to extort him.

The February 2 decision included a permanent protective order barring Thomas Lee Anderson and his sister, Erica M. Anderson Ross, from further bothering or contacting Jackson, 61, and his immediate family members. The Andersons also must stay at least 500 yards from the Jacksons and remove from social media any content about them, news outlets reported.

The lawsuit, filed in April, alleged that the Andersons tried to extort $20m from Jackson through harassment and intimidation.

‘Unfortunately for those attempting to extort $20m from Jackson and his family, Bo still hits back hard,’ Jackson’s attorneys – Robert Ingram and David Conley – said in a news release about the case on Monday. 

Jackson claimed the harassment started in 2022 and included threatening social media posts and messages, public allegations that put him in a false light, and public disclosure of private information intended to cause him severe emotional distress, per WSB-TV.

Bo Jackson was awarded $21m following an extortion case against his niece and nephew 

Jackson rushed for 2,782 yards and 16 touchdowns in four years with the Los Angeles Raiders

Jackson rushed for 2,782 yards and 16 touchdowns in four years with the Los Angeles Raiders

Jackson played for the Kansas City Royals, Chicago White Sox and California Angels in MLB

Jackson played for the Kansas City Royals, Chicago White Sox and California Angels in MLB

He said Thomas Anderson wrote on Facebook that he would release photos, text and medical records of Jackson to ‘show America’ that he wasn´t playing around, the lawsuit alleged.

The Andersons, with help from an Atlanta attorney, demanded the money in exchange for ending their conduct, Jackson said. He said they threatened to appear at a restaurant near his home and disrupt a charity event he hosted in April in Auburn as a means of harassment and intimidation.

The former Heisman winner feared for his safety and that of his immediate family, the lawsuit states. It sought a stalking protective order against the Andersons as well as unspecified compensation for intentional infliction of emotional distress and invasion of privacy. Jackson also brought a civil conspiracy claim against the siblings.

The court found that there was no legitimate purpose for these actions and that even after receiving a cease and desist letter from Jackson’s attorneys, the intimidation and harassment continued.

According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Cobb County Superior Court Judge Jason D. Marbutt said in his order that neither the Andersons nor their attorneys rebutted Jackson’s claims or participated in the case after a May 2023 hearing, when they consented to a temporary protective order.

The judge found the Andersons to be in default, accepting as true all of Jackson’s allegations, the newspaper said.

‘Reasonable people would find defendants´ behavior extreme and outrageous,’ Marbutt wrote. ‘The court saw evidence that an attorney representing defendants claimed his clients´ conduct would cease for the sum of $20 million.’

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Read more at DailyMail.co.uk