A newly filed motion in the lawsuits over the redaction of police reports in the arrest of a judge's daughter say Massachusetts State Police officials and members of the Worcester District Attorney's Office tried to "illegally replace" a police report on file in court.

The document is contained in motions filed by Leonard Kesten, the lawyer representing Troopers Ryan Sceviour and Ali Rei, who both say they were forced to redact and destroy reports after the October arrest of Alli Bibaud, the daughter of Worcester County Judge Timothy Bibaud.

The troopers claim former State Police Col. Richard McKeon, who retired after admitting he ordered the redactions of Bibaud's arrest report, and Major Susan Anderson, along with "others," agreed to have Bibaud's original arrest report removed from the court file at Worcester Central District Court.

The plan was to replace the report with an altered report that removed what State Police officials deemed salacious comments. Troopers Rei and Sceviour included comments from Bibaud's Oct. 16 arrest where she told the troopers her father was a judge, she conducted sex acts to obtain drugs and she allegedly offered Sceviour sexual favors in exchange for leniency.

The troopers said they were forced to redact reports and remove those comments, the federal lawsuits state.

"First, the Complaint does not challenge McKeon's rule-making authority; rather, the plaintiff alleges that co-defendant Major Anderson acted on orders given by McKeon as part of a conspiracy between members of the Worcester District Attorney's Office, McKeon, Major Anderson, and others, to illegally replace the plaintiff's police report, which was on file in the Worcester District Court, with a doctored version," the newly filed motion states.

A clerk of the court refused to swap the reports stating it was illegal. Kesten has included Brendan Keenan, first assistant clerk at Worcester Central District Court, in a list of people he would like to speak to as part of the lawsuits.

"The plaintiff has alleged that McKeon, and others, ordered the destruction of the original arrest report, the creation of an alternative 'original' report, and planned that the original report would be illegally replaced in the Court file with the report that the plaintiff was ordered to create," the motion filed in Scevior's civil suit says.

Text messages show after Bibaud was arrested in October for driving under influence of drugs and alcohol, Assistant District Attorney Jeffrey Travers, the top prosecutor in Worcester County District Attorney Joseph D. Early Jr.'s office, messaged Early to say Bibaud had been arrested. The arrest was in Worcester.

Early told Travers on Oct. 23 to call Keenan. The case had already been moved out of Worcester County's jurisdiction. The police report had been impounded before the text message occurred, on Oct. 17. Early is not named as a defendant in the civil lawsuits.

Early's office has not commented on the case citing the review by the state Attorney General's Office and the pending lawsuits.

Bibaud's case was moved to Middlesex County, but before it was moved, her defense attorney in the Worcester court had the arrest report impounded. Travers appeared in court on Oct. 20 and had the original report redacted after making a motion to the judge.

Records show Bibaud once worked in Early's office and her father is a former prosecutor for Early. Bibaud was sentenced to probation in the drunken driving case after she pleaded guilty in November.