Overview
- Under the injunction, Cory Mills cannot contact Lindsey Langston directly or indirectly, may not reference her on social media, and must stay at least 500 feet from her home, workplace, and other listed locations until at least Jan. 1, 2026.
- The judge concluded Langston had reasonable cause to fear another act of dating violence and described large portions of Mills’s testimony as difficult to understand and not credible.
- Court records cite messages including “I can send him videos” and “strap up cowboy,” and note Langston asked him to stop contacting her multiple times, with the judge finding the communications caused substantial emotional distress.
- After Langston filed on Aug. 5, Mills used another partner’s phone and a congressional staffer to reach out, according to the ruling, which followed two days of hearings in Columbia County, Florida.
- Langston reported the conduct to law enforcement in July; the Florida Department of Law Enforcement is reviewing the matter, and Mills denies the allegations and calls them politically motivated while no criminal charges have been filed.