New York, Nov 11 Jennifer Lopez heaved a sigh of relief when a judge passed a temporary restraining order in her favour, barring ex-hubby Ojani Noa from selling steamy home-made videos of the couple.
However, in a statement made after the ruling Noa, 34, said he did not intend to peddle the sexy footage from their 11-month marriage, which included intimate moments filmed during their 1997 honeymoon.
He made it clear that he just wanted to use it in a Borat-style mocumentary about his life as a Cuban immigrant.
"She is destroying my life...This is another proof of her power and money trying to stop me from moving on with my life," the New York Daily News quoted Noa, as saying.
He said: "I'm not making any money from these videos.... This is about having a closure. It's my story.
"We were watching with writers and directors and producers because we were getting the script down. We were writing about the characters."
He added: "They're trying to twist it, that everything is my fault. She's trying to step on my shoes and not let me move on with my life, and it's not fair."
A source revealed that some clips in the raunchy videos show a scantily clad Lopez "fondling herself" and getting spanked.
The insider added: "It's not stuff a mother of two wants out in the public," the source told The Daily News.
The court also asked Noa and movie partner Ed Meyer to turn over any material connected with the film and caution third parties - including TMZ.com and the National Enquirer - about its usage after the ruling.
Lopez filed a 10-million-dollar lawsuit on Friday alleging Noa of breaching a confidentiality agreement with an intention to produce and sell the movie "How I Married Jennifer Lopez: the J.Lo and Ojani Noa Story," believed to be based partially on the racy reels.
The next hearing on the case is scheduled for December 1. (ANI)