Despite going out of their way to try to make sure that the details of their relationship remained private, it would seem that Miranda Lambert might soon find herself talking about her divorce from Blake Shelton in open court after all. According ting to the latest gossip news updates, Lambert's split form Blake prompted someone to hack Miranda's personal emails in order to sale their contents to the tabloids. Word has it that neither Blake nor his ex-wife are particularly thrilled with the idea of having to rehash what went wrong in a public forum, however.
They may have made sure than the entire divorce was finalized and legally sealed by the time Blake Shelton and Miranda Lambert announced that they had split, but there was one loose end they apparently hadn't thought of -- their emails.
Several major tabloids are now reporting to have been approached by a hacker named "Brenda" claiming to have intimate information about the couple's breakup, freshly culled from Lambert's personal online correspondence.
While Miranda is said to be taking the matter very seriously, attorney Bradly Shear explains in the latest August 24, issue of Life & Style that getting the courts involved might wind up being more trouble to Lambert than it is worth:
"If they go to court, [Miranda] is going to have to say, 'These are my emails and this is information form my account.'
"There's a high probability that the information is going to become public.
Yet another legal expert insists that regardless of his email's still being safe, Blake might too find himself in court having to discuss matters he'd rather leave private:
"Blake could certainly be dragged into court, if there was information about him that was distributed [in the hacked emails]."
Regardless of whatever cyber-attacks his ex-wife may be facing, an insider from the set of NBC's The Voice told Us Weekly, that Blake certainly didn't seem to be letting it get to him while shooting the show:
"Blake seems to have moved on from Miranda and is just over it
"There are no hard feelings...They want to move on as friends, and they are doing just that."
What do you think about yet another celebrity supposedly falling victim to an online attack of their personal data?
Should the FBI get out there and make sure the Hollywood can function without harassment?
Or, are there more important things for the government to worry about then finding whomever is responsible for leaking Jennifer Lawrence's nude selfies?
Let us know what you think in the comment field below.
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