This feels like the Justin Bieber baby mama situation all over again. After two male masseurs have already “come forward” alleging actor John Travolta touched them inappropriately during a session, even more have stepped up now, all being backed by the same lawyer. Meanwhile, John already has solid proof against the first claim. SMH. Details below.

Marisa Mendez

(NYDN) – “I’m getting tons of calls,” lawyer Okorie Okorocha told the Daily News Wednesday. “If we weren’t dealing with statute of limitations, I’d say about 25 (potential plaintiffs) have contacted me. He’s done it everywhere, and the laws are very different in different states.”

Okorocha said he’s working furiously to screen the claims and sort through witnesses.

“They’re going to have to call half of Los Angeles liars by the time this is finished,” he said, referring to the claim by Travolta’s lawyer Marty Singer that the “Pulp Fiction” actor wasn’t even in Beverly Hills on Jan. 16 for the first alleged assault.

Singer blasted the lawsuit as “ridiculous” Tuesday, saying Travolta was on the east coast working on a movie Jan. 16. He similarly dismissed the second claim of a Jan. 28 assault at an Atlanta resort, calling it a fabrication.

“Our client will be fully vindicated in court on both of these absurd and fictional claims,” he said in a statement to The News.

A photo purportedly showing Travolta in New York on Jan. 16 and a receipt from Manhattan’s Mr. Chow restaurant from that night were posted on TMZ.com.

The receipt, attributed to Travolta, shows an 11:38 p.m. time stamp.

Okorocha said Travolta had more than enough time to fly to New York for the late-night noshing since the alleged Beverly Hills encounter happened at “roughly 10 a.m. that morning.”

“We know exactly where he was. That’s not even up for debate. I was talking to Travolta’s lawyers for two months, and they never brought up this excuse he was in New York (that morning),” he said.

The two masseurs now suing Travolta for $2 million claim the actor groped them, grabbed their crotches and tried to force happy endings during private massages.

According to the complaint, Travolta called the first plaintiff “selfish” when he didn’t reciprocate his advances and boasted that he “got where is now due to sexual favors he had performed when he was in his ‘Welcome Back Kotter’ days.”

Travolta was sweating profusely and said he “wasn’t even gay” when he started in the business but was “smart enough to learn to enjoy it,” the lawsuit claims.

The lawsuit added the Georgia-based plaintiff Tuesday. That masseur claims he originally asked a coworker to handle the Travolta assignment, but the colleague refused saying the actor had been banned from a spa where the coworker used to work in Los Angeles.

Both plaintiffs are identified as John Does in the court filing – an alleged bid for privacy that Singer seized upon as proof the lawsuit is a bluff to grab some cash.

Okorocha said it was standard practice to withhold the names of possible victims of sexual assault.

“I do it for all of my female clients victims of sexual assault, and I’m not going to treat the men any different,” he said. “I think it’s malpractice to identify them (in a complaint). I’m leaving it up to the judge. If they think that’s strange, they may not be familiar with the law.”