Attempt to Serve Taylor Swift Leads to Arrest Outside Tra…

Taylor Swift’s name has been pulled into a legal drama she didn’t sign up for—and this time, it led to an arrest outside Travis Kelce’s house.
According to a TMZ report, a former police officer named Justin Lee Fisher was taken into custody in the early hours of September 15 after allegedly jumping a fence at Kelce’s Leawood, Kansas, residence.
Fisher, now working as a process server, was reportedly attempting to hand Swift deposition papers tied to the ongoing lawsuit between actor-director Justin Baldoni and actress Blake Lively.
Authorities say the arrest happened around 2 a.m. when Fisher entered the gated property. He was charged with trespassing on a private residence. Speaking via text to outlets covering the story, Fisher insisted he wasn’t hurt but admitted the arrest may cost him his private investigator’s license.
“I wasn’t hurt or anything besides being arrested for doing my job and possibly losing my [private eye] license,” he said.
The attempted service came just two days after Judge Lewis Liman denied a request to depose Swift in the Baldoni-Lively case. Court filings show the judge dismissed her from any deposition connected to the lawsuit on September 12.
Baldoni’s legal team had argued Swift should be questioned after her name surfaced in documents referencing alleged text messages from Lively that mentioned “dragons,” a term Baldoni claimed referred to Swift and Ryan Reynolds.
The larger case stems from Baldoni’s $400 million countersuit against Lively, Reynolds, and their longtime publicist Leslie Sloane. That claim was dismissed in June, but the legal fallout continues. The trial is currently scheduled for March 9, 2026.
Swift has remained silent about the arrest, but sources close to the situation told TMZ that her lawyers made it clear she never agreed to sit for a deposition. As of this writing, it’s unclear if Fisher ever managed to serve her before being taken into custody.