Michael Irvin refiles $100M Marriott lawsuit, plays surveillance video

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WATCH: Michael Irvin's attorney plays video of interaction with Arizona hotel employee

Michael Irvin refiled a $100M lawsuit against Marriott and four employees on Tuesday. Irvin denies the hotel chain's claims that he made sexual comments to the woman in the video.

Weeks after Cowboys Hall of Famer Michael Irvin was pulled off Super Bowl coverage we are seeing video of the alleged unwanted advances in the Phoenix Marriott Hotel for the first time.

"Here's the truth. We used to say when we played football ‘the eye in the sky don’t tell no lie', it's just the truth," Irvin said Tuesday. "We talk and tell lies, but the eye in the sky don't tell no lie."

The video played at the news conference Tuesday does not have any audio of the conversation between the two and no clear images of facial expressions.

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VIDEO: Michael Irvin's lawyer breaks down interaction with Marriott employee

The video played at the news conference shows Irvin talking to a Marriott employee and shaking her hand. The video does not have any audio of the conversation between the two.

It shows Irvin walking in with multiple people, as he gets closer to the bar he starts talking to a Marriott employee who said he made sexually inappropriate comments.

To the left of Irvin and the woman is another employee. He clapped his hands when the woman initially approached Irvin and then he put his hands on his hips.

Irvin and the woman move more into the lobby and continue talking.

PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Michael Irvin denies Super Bowl hotel misconduct allegations

The conversation lasts for about two minutes.

Irvin touches the woman's arm, then seconds later he does it again.

Irvin's lawyer says they were joking.

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FULL NEWS CONFERENCE: Michael Irvin, attorney address defamation lawsuit against Marriott, 4 individuals

Michael Irvin filed a $100M lawsuit against Marriott, a hotel employee and three other individuals after accusations caused the former Dallas Cowboys receiver to be pulled off of Super Bowl coverage in Arizona. The lawsuit was refiled in Arizona.

You can see the woman put her hands up, but it is unclear what was said.

In a court filing last Friday, Marriott said Irvin made unwelcome sexual advances toward a female employee.

The documents say that on Feb. 5 at the Renaissance Phoenix Hotel, Irvin "appeared to be visibly intoxicated," In conversation with the female staffer, asked a lewd question about intercourse with a Black man.

"I don't speak like that. I've never spoken like that," Irvin said on Tuesday. "I totally deny saying that."

At the end of the conversation the two shake hands.

The woman walks to the bar and walks out of the camera shot with an employee.

Marriott claims Irvin leered at the woman and turned to an employee allegedly saying "she bad, she bad" followed by a sexual remark and slapped himself in the face three times. You can see him slapping himself in the surveillance video.

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PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Marriott claims Michael Irvin made vulgar sexual advance towards employee

The Marriott hotel chain says former Dallas Cowboy Michael Irvin made a vulgar sexual advance on a hotel employee, contradicting his claim that he did nothing wrong.

Irvin then walks near the door with someone his lawyers say is a hotel employee and takes a selfie.

Irvin team refiled his $100 million dollar defamation lawsuit against Marriott and a hotel employee, moving the case from Texas to Arizona.

Marriott previously filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit claiming that the case did not have jurisdiction in Texas, considering the event happened in Arizona.

"Maybe they believe the state court will be more favorable. There is still a possibility in Arizona it could be moved to a federal court," said Russell Wilson, an attorney not associated with the case. "The video helps demonstrate that there is not the sexual conduct we would normally associate with, for example, groping, touching in the private areas, things like that are not shown in the video. It does show interaction and touching, so the questions becomes what are the words during that interaction and touching."

Despite the video, Wilson says this remains a "he said, she said" case.

Irvin's legal team says they feel the release of the video makes their case stronger.

"Any rational person can see that this is a setup or an after the fact invention or something to try to cover why that guy up there is mad," said Irvin's attorney Levi McCathern.

PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Michael Irvin pulled from Super Bowl coverage after woman’s complaint

Wilson tells FOX 4 most civil lawsuits end in settlement.

Irvin said Tuesday he misses the people he works with and that he didn't know if or when he would return.