
Big Tigger’s wife Alicia Brown promises receipts and testimony after co-host Francesca Amiker sues her in federal court.
Big Tigger‘s wife Alicia Brown fired back after his V-103 co-host hit her with a federal defamation lawsuit over affair claims. Brown released a statement through her attorneys at Kessler & Solomiany on Friday just hours after the filing made headlines. She captioned the post with a warning that plenty more information is on the way.
“Unfortunately a lot is going to come out. Through my testimony and husbands,” Brown wrote on Instagram, according to TheGrio. Her legal team said she won’t address specific allegations while multiple legal matters remain pending. They promised that “the receipts, including text messages, evidence, and the legal process will speak for themselves.”
Francesca Amiker filed the suit on June 30 in federal court in the Northern District of Georgia. She claims Brown used her personal Instagram plus several anonymous accounts to paint her as a “mistress/homewrecker” who destroyed the marriage. The four-time Emmy winner maintains her relationship with the radio host has always been strictly professional.
Amiker says the posts cost her celebrity bookings, advertiser meetings and hosting opportunities while forcing her to hire a crisis management firm. She’s seeking compensatory and punitive damages topping $75,000 along with attorney’s fees and a jury trial. The complaint landed in federal court because Brown claims North Carolina citizenship while Amiker lives in Georgia.
The lawsuit grew out of a May 9 altercation at the couple’s home that eventually landed Big Tigger in handcuffs. Police arrested him on June 20 on aggravated battery and child cruelty charges, according to CBS News. He’s denied every allegation and remains off the air at V-103, where Frank Ski has been filling in during the fallout.
Brown first went public on June 6 with a since-deleted video showing her injuries and tagging Amiker directly. Both Big Tigger and Amiker denied the affair allegations immediately. Her new statement also called out Audacy, the NBA and the NFL for allegedly overlooking conduct that clashes with their public values.
A judge granted Brown a temporary protective order on June 30 that bars Big Tigger from contacting her or their three children.

