You think country songs are messy? Try real life in Music City.
Nancy Jones, widow of the one and only George Jones, is knee-deep in a legal mess that sounds like it came straight out of a soap opera written by Johnny Paycheck. Six months after she accused her longtime boyfriend Kirk West of swindling her out of millions in cash and crypto, the man has come back swingin’ with a countersuit because he claims he deserves half of the money she says he stole.
This time, he is not denying the money is gone. He just says it is partly his.
Franklin police officers have arrested a man who is alleged to have stolen hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash, and millions of dollars in cryptocurrency from his ex-girlfriend. Kirk West, 58, of Franklin, is charged with Theft Over $250,000. His bond is $1 million. Less… pic.twitter.com/h6jvXQMEiy
— Franklin Police Department (@FranklinTNPD) July 25, 2025
According to court filings from January 9, Kirk West says he and Nancy shared assets during their 12-year relationship. He claims he helped manage her finances, invested her money, and lived with her like a partner and not a mooch. Now he wants a cut of the pot, specifically half of her cryptocurrency, cash, and precious metals. And we are not talking pennies. We are talking about ten million dollars worth of digital currency and physical assets, including over four hundred thousand dollars in cash and more than five and a half million units of XRP that allegedly disappeared from Nancy’s safe.
Last July, Nancy had West arrested at the Nashville airport after she discovered the money was missing. She told police her granddaughter had gone to check the safe after Nancy suspected West might be cheating. That is when they found it empty. Two days later, Nancy kicked him out of her house, and West reportedly called her and offered to return five million dollars but said she would not be getting anything else.
Yes, he actually tried to settle the theft by offering to give back half.
But now West is trying to rewrite the story. He says he was never broke when they met and that he was not a drifter looking for a soft place to land. In fact, he claims Nancy knew exactly what she was getting into. Their financial lives became so intertwined over the years that he now says it would be very difficult to tell whose money is whose. He says there was an agreement to split everything fifty-fifty when the relationship ended, although Nancy’s lawsuit does not mention any such agreement.
To make matters worse, West is suing her for defamation. He claims she subjected him to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule and that she ruined his reputation. This is coming from a man who pleaded guilty in 2016 to defrauding a bank by inflating his income and forging documents to get loans. He is the same man Nancy says she paid nearly eight hundred thousand dollars in court-ordered restitution for, not to mention his legal fees.
That kind of loyalty is rare, and apparently, it was still not enough.
The entire situation has country fans reeling, especially those who have watched Nancy work to protect George Jones’ legacy over the years. After his death in 2013, Nancy stepped up as keeper of the flame. She oversaw his estate and preserved his story. Then West came along just four months after George passed. Nancy was selling a home, and West showed up with investors and stayed for twelve years.
Now it has turned into a battle over millions, and it has more twists than a George and Tammy duet.
What happens next is up to the courts. But one thing is for certain. If the Possum were still around, this whole thing would already be a country classic, probably a double album.
Because in Nashville, when the money is big and the love turns sideways, the real heartbreak does not always come with a steel guitar.
Sometimes it comes with a court date.


















