Ray J has lashed out at Kris Jenner and Kim Kardashian … accusing them of lying about their involvement in his sex tape with Kim. As you know, Kris was stuck on a polygraph on James Corden’s show and asked, “Did you help Kim release her sex tape?” Chris answered “No” and the polygrapher said she was telling the truth. Steve Hirsch, the Prez of Vivid Entertainment who released the tape, said that Kris never met, spoke or worked with him on the release of the tape. Play CBS video content In Ray’s 44-minute dialogue, he never says that Kris negotiated the distribution of the tape with Vivid Entertainment, the company that released the tape. However, she says there were 3 different sex tapes, not just one — 2 shot in Cabo and 1 in Santa Barbara — and she says Chris chose the one where Kim looked best. He also says in his contract with Vivid, where the 3 tapes are listed, Kim’s fingerprints are on them…literally. He says Kim wrote the section describing the 3 tapes. What’s important about this… Ray says this is the original contract he signed giving Vivid the rights and says Kim’s handwriting is right there. Interestingly… Hirsch said he obtained the tape not from Kim or Ray but from a “third party.” He was never more specific, but said “We are very confident in our legal position.” Under California law, the person whose image is depicted in such a video must sign either directly or through an agent in order for the distributor to have a solid legal standing. At one point, Ray shows Kim his DMs — specifically one from July — where he says he misses her and asks her to text him to catch up. Kim is ignoring his request, and we’re told those connected to her believe it’s another reason Ray is upset and posted the lengthy rant. Play video content Kim is also reportedly suing Vivid for invasion of privacy, claiming she never authorized her release. He says he ended up settling with Vivid and the suit was dropped. It was pulled from the market months later after a “third party” bought it from Vivid. Ray says both he and Kim cut a deal with Vivid for $400,000 upfront and 12.5% of the profits for each.