In a continuing legal battle linked to allegations of sexual assault and breach of contract, lawyers for the pop singer Kesha have asked a Manhattan judge to issue a protective order against her former music producer to ensure that more than 900 pages of Kesha’s personal medical records are not made public.

James Pearl, a partner in O’Melveny & Myers’ Los Angeles office, filed motion papers Monday with state Supreme Court Justice Shirley Werner Kornreich arguing that his client—Kesha Rose Sebert—is “a world-renowned recording artist in whom there is great public interest” and that “any potential disclosure of those records [are] potentially harmful to her personal and economic interests.”

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