Chris Brown’s lawyer says no guns, diamond necklace were found by cops as he suggests accuser has ties to singer’s baby mama

Police found no guns, no drugs and no diamond cross necklace inside Chris Brown’s hilltop mansion during a filmed police search, the singer’s lawyer Mark Geragos said Friday.

“As far as I can tell, there were no drugs found. As far as I can tell, there were no guns found in the house,” Geragos said at a press conference.

“There was no jewelry found in the house that matched what she described,” he added, referring to the diamond cross necklace that accuser Baylee Curran said she was admiring when Brown allegedly pointed a gun at her face around 3 a.m. Tuesday.

In a bizarre twist, Geragos said Curran, 24, might have a personal connection to Nia Guzman, the Texas model now locked in a bitter custody dispute with Brown over their toddler daughter Royalty.

“One of the things we’re investigating is that there are now reports the accuser has a relationship with the mother of his child,” Geragos said.

“What’s particularly disturbing to me is that this comes on the heels of a custody battle that he won — and that the lawyer in Houston who represented the mother of Royalty immediately came out and was making statements.”

Guzman’s lawyer Carl Moore spoke to E! News as the standoff unfolded at Brown’s Tarzana, Calif., house before the singer’s arrest for felony assault with a deadly weapon. Moore said Royalty was at the house when Curran called 911, according to E! News

“That is categorically false. She was not in the house,” Geragos said Friday.

“I don’t want to be a conspiracy theorist, but that certainly would be one angle,” Geragos said, referring to a possible link between Curran and Guzman.

Geragos said his client was “completely cooperative” with cops during their search Tuesday and even unlocked “certain items” for closer inspection.

Six witnesses including the singer Ray J spoke to police and none corroborated Curran’s story about Brown threatening her with a gun, according to Geragos.

“Nothing happened. This woman got irate when she was asked to leave,” Geragos said. “She was acting in an erratic manner.”

Geragos said he was in possession of two text messages allegedly sent by Curran before she was picked up from Brown’s house.

He said one text called Brown a “motherf—er” who was “going to go down” and the other said “I’m going to say he tried to shoot me.”

If authenticated, the texts would prove this was a “setup,” and Brown could then call for a criminal investigation of Curran, he said.

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