In the email, Taylor said she believed that someone took the ring after she removed it from her finger during the cooking class.

“When I returned to my room and began getting ready for croquet and went to put on my jewelry — I immediately realized I had left the ring,” the email says.

Taylor’s lawsuit states that “AIG has not paid the market value of the blue diamond ring nor has AIG paid up to 150 percent of the amount scheduled for Plaintiff’s blue diamond ring.”

Integro USA, in a motion supporting dismissal of the lawsuit, describes Taylor as a “sophisticated lawyer, business person and politician” who manufactured a negligence claim against Integro that “cherry-picks from and ignores the indisputable documents received or authored” by Taylor that thoroughly undercut her claim.”

According to Integro, Taylor and her husband “have made crystal clear to Integro” that, since at least 2008, they did not wish to purchase an AIG Private Collections Insurance Policy that provided increased coverage if the market value of the jewelry or other insured items had appreciated by the time of the loss.