In court documents filed this week, former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore pointed to a hand-marked amendment to a consent agreement as forbidding the raising of sexual misconduct allegations against him on a Showtime series on which he was tricked into appearing.

And that appearance on comedian Sacha Baron Cohen's show was solely to make fun of Moore regarding the sexual allegations raised against him in November 2017, allegations which Moore has repeatedly denied.

Moore and his wife, Kayla, last year filed a $95 million lawsuit against Cohen weeks after Moore appeared on the comedian’s “Who is America?” show. In the episode, Cohen impersonated an Israeli anti-terrorism expert demonstrating a device that could identify pedophiles. The wand-like device beeped when waved in front of Moore, who walked off the set once he realized what was happening.

Moore, a Republican candidate in the U.S. Senate race next year, said in the lawsuit he appeared on the show with the expectation that he would be presented an award for his strong support of Israel and that a $200 donation would be made to the charity of his choice.

The filing this week was Moore’s response to a September filing by Cohen and co-defendants Showtime and CBS seeking to dismiss the lawsuit because Moore signed a consent agreement before appearing on the show that waived all legal claims.

Moore has long argued that the one-page consent agreement was invalid because it was signed under fraudulent circumstances. As he signed it, however, Moore crossed out a line in the agreement that would allow the sexual allegations against him to be raised. He also initialed next to the crossed-out section.

In a lengthy one-sentence paragraph in which Moore agreed not to bring legal claims, he marked out the provision that said, "such as any allegedly sexual oriented or offensive behavior or questioning."

Moore's attorney, Larry Klayman, also raised the hand-marked amendment in a court hearing in April.

“It is indisputable that defendants, through their phony and fraudulent claimed surrogates, signed the ‘Consent Agreement’ after this modification had been made, thereby consenting to this modification,” Klayman wrote in the filing.