Jennifer Lopez and Ojani Noa at the premiere of 'Anaconda' in 1997. (Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES -- Jennifer Lopez's first husband Ojani Noa fears for his life and thinks Lopez is having him followed after he threatened to release intimate home videos of himself and the celebrity, according to his business manager.
Ed Meyer says they ran the license plate of a black Audi that was following Noa and it went back to Lopez.
Noa has also received death threats, according to attorney Frank Sanes Jr.
Sources say Lopez is not breaking the law and is just trying to have a process server give Noa a subpoena.
Last week, a Los Angeles judge temporarily blocked the release of intimate home videos of the one-time couple, as well as the making of a new movie about their relationship.
Superior Court Judge James C. Chalfant granted the order until a hearing can be held in the case.
Lopez has filed a multimillion dollar lawsuit against Noa. The two were married in 1997 but were divorced less than a year later.
Lopez claims Noa has been shopping a film project called "How I Married Jennifer Lopez: The JLo and Ojani Noa Story." She says the movie directly violates a confidentiality agreement Ojani signed in 2005.
Lopez also says Noa is trying to market previously unseen home videos of the couple -- which reportedly show the two in their hotel room during their honeymoon.
The order specifically applies to Noa and Meyer, his manager and producer for the proposed film.
Lopez is suing Noa for $10 million dollars, breach of contract and invasion of privacy. The judge said the information Noa and Meyer propose to divulge may violate an employment settlement agreement between the actress and Noa, in which both agreed not to divuldge private information about each other.
The same injunction prevented Noa from publishing a tell-all book in 2006 and was ordered to pay $545,000 in damages. The manuscript for the never-published, book alleged that Lopez had multiple affairs, including one with current husband Marc Anthony, when he was married to someone else. A description of the manuscript appeared in the New York Post in January 2006.
Lopez' attorney, John H. Lavely, wants the judge to issue an order directing that videos and film footage related to the Lopez-Noa movie be turned over to him for review for possible contract violations.
Meyer's attorney, Frank Sanes Jr., urged the judge not to order against his client, saying Meyer is not bound by any agreement between Noa and Lopez.
Noa, who came to court without an attorney, said he isn't giving up. "I'm going to fight this," Noa said.
"How I Married Jennifer Lopez: The JLo and Ojani Noa Story" is said to be a parody and not meant to be serious, according to Claudia Vazquez, the film's executive producer. Vasquez says the film is about Noa's life, not Jennifer Lopez's life.
Lopez and Marc Anthony were married in June, 2004 and have twins, Max and Emme, who were born in February, 2009.
Lopez was also married to her former backup singer Cris Judd and had high profile relationships with hip hop mogul Sean Combs and actor Ben Affleck.
Ed Meyer says they ran the license plate of a black Audi that was following Noa and it went back to Lopez.
Noa has also received death threats, according to attorney Frank Sanes Jr.
Sources say Lopez is not breaking the law and is just trying to have a process server give Noa a subpoena.
Last week, a Los Angeles judge temporarily blocked the release of intimate home videos of the one-time couple, as well as the making of a new movie about their relationship.
Superior Court Judge James C. Chalfant granted the order until a hearing can be held in the case.
Lopez has filed a multimillion dollar lawsuit against Noa. The two were married in 1997 but were divorced less than a year later.
Lopez claims Noa has been shopping a film project called "How I Married Jennifer Lopez: The JLo and Ojani Noa Story." She says the movie directly violates a confidentiality agreement Ojani signed in 2005.
Lopez also says Noa is trying to market previously unseen home videos of the couple -- which reportedly show the two in their hotel room during their honeymoon.
The order specifically applies to Noa and Meyer, his manager and producer for the proposed film.
Lopez is suing Noa for $10 million dollars, breach of contract and invasion of privacy. The judge said the information Noa and Meyer propose to divulge may violate an employment settlement agreement between the actress and Noa, in which both agreed not to divuldge private information about each other.
The same injunction prevented Noa from publishing a tell-all book in 2006 and was ordered to pay $545,000 in damages. The manuscript for the never-published, book alleged that Lopez had multiple affairs, including one with current husband Marc Anthony, when he was married to someone else. A description of the manuscript appeared in the New York Post in January 2006.
Lopez' attorney, John H. Lavely, wants the judge to issue an order directing that videos and film footage related to the Lopez-Noa movie be turned over to him for review for possible contract violations.
Meyer's attorney, Frank Sanes Jr., urged the judge not to order against his client, saying Meyer is not bound by any agreement between Noa and Lopez.
Noa, who came to court without an attorney, said he isn't giving up. "I'm going to fight this," Noa said.
"How I Married Jennifer Lopez: The JLo and Ojani Noa Story" is said to be a parody and not meant to be serious, according to Claudia Vazquez, the film's executive producer. Vasquez says the film is about Noa's life, not Jennifer Lopez's life.
Lopez and Marc Anthony were married in June, 2004 and have twins, Max and Emme, who were born in February, 2009.
Lopez was also married to her former backup singer Cris Judd and had high profile relationships with hip hop mogul Sean Combs and actor Ben Affleck.

