OH, THAT'S COLD!
Dippin' Dots chief is issued by ex over 'revenge porn' pix
The head of the Dippin’ Dots ice-cream empire dished a cold serving of revenge porn to his ex, sending “private sexual images” of her to multiple people — including her own mother, a new lawsuit charges.
But CEO Scott Fischer says the suit is nothing more than a money grab — and suggested former gal pal Amanda Brown is holding his white Chihuahua hostage until she gets what she wants, court papers show.
Brown alleges in her lawsuit against Fischer that he would threaten to withhold money from her unless she gave him X-rated snaps — and that he then tried to use the pics as “blackmail” to keep her in line.
“I just sent you the pics by text that I’m about to send out. You will see what my revenge will do,” Fischer told Brown on Jan. 14, according to the suit, which was filed on June 9 in Oklahoma, where he lives.
The suit alleges that “on the same date, Fischer delivered to Amanda a communication including several private sexual images of herself and further reading, ‘Sent everyone this . . . told you . . . I’ll make sure I hurt you in every way I can.’ ”
The frozen-treat millionaire a sent the photos to “perhaps the most traumatizing audience imaginable — Amanda’s mother,” the documents claim.
“Fischer’s delivery was accompanied by a menacing instruction [to] Amanda’s mother: ‘I’m sending this out tomorrow. Then I’m going to file a petition for [the dog],’ ” the papers say.
Fischer’s lawyers have fought to have the case sealed, saying it contains “unnecessary, inflammatory and hyperbolic allegations” and calling it an “outlandish” attempt to “extort” their client, according to separate court papers and TMZ.
Fischer’s lawyers allege in legal documents that once their client broke off his relationship with Brown, she “absconded” with his car and his dog and moved to Tennessee.
Fischer sued Brown in Tennessee in April seeking return of the car and dog, but she “has been avoiding service of the lawsuit,” he claims in court papers. Meanwhile, the papers say, “the car has been reported to authorities as embezzled.”
Fischer — who has helmed the Kentucky-based maker of flash-frozen ice-cream “dots” for nine years and who appeared on the CBS reality show “Undercover Boss” last year — alleges in the documents that Brown’s camp at one point suggested that if he didn’t pay “a large amount of money” to her, they would go public with their allegations against him.
Fischer’s camp did not return a request for comment from The Post on Sunday.
But his lawyers told TMZ, “This inflammatory lawsuit brought forth by Ms. Brown is nothing more than an attempt to extort Mr. Fischer after he ended their relationship.”
Brown, a traveling nurse who now lives in Tennessee, says the pair began their two-year relationship in early 2019 — claims that Fischer acted like a drunken lout through much of it, court papers show.
She alleges in her suit that she has suffered “emotional and verbal abuse” and is seeking unspecified damages.