![]() The jury awarded Bollea an additional $25 million in punitive damages on March 21. The jury awarded him $115 million in compensatory damages, which included $60 million for emotional distress. On March 18, 2016, the jury delivered a verdict in favor of Bollea. Daulerio later told the court he was being flippant in his response. The court was shown a taped deposition where Daulerio said that he would consider a celebrity sex tape non-newsworthy if the subject was under the age of four. Bollea said that comments made in interviews were done in his professional wrestling character, an on-air persona different from his own. During the trial, Gawker argued that Bollea made his sex life a public matter, although on cross-examination, when asked by Bollea's lawyer whether a depiction of his genitalia had any "news value," former Gawker editor AJ Daulerio responded "no". The six-person jury consisted of four women and two men. Gawker tried to get Judge Campbell to dismiss the case based on that ruling, but the case went to trial. The injunction was quickly stayed on appeal, and was denied in 2014 by the appeals court, which ruled that under the circumstances it was an unconstitutional prior restraint on speech under the First Amendment. ![]() Gawker announced that it would not comply with the part of the court order requiring the removal of the post and associated commentary because it deemed the order "risible and contemptuous of centuries of First Amendment jurisprudence." Gawker removed the video itself, but linked readers to another site hosting the video. There, his request for an injunction was granted by Judge Pamela Campbell in 2013. īollea withdrew his case in the US district court and sued Gawker in Florida state court. Whittemore denied Bollea's motion, ruling that the validity of the copyright was in question, and that given the degree to which Bollea had already put his own private life into the public arena, the publication of the video might be protected by fair use. Preliminary injunction decisions īollea originally sued Gawker for copyright infringement in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, seeking a temporary injunction. Daulerio published a two-minute extract from the 30-minute video, including 10 seconds of explicit sexual activity. I felt that those people loved me." īubba testified that he burned the video to a DVD, wrote "Hogan" on it, and put it in a desk drawer. Bollea later testified: "I was depressed. On The Howard Stern Show, Bollea told Stern that he had slept with Heather with Bubba Clem's blessing and his encouragement because he was so burnt-out from the trauma of his coming divorce that he finally gave in to the "relentless" come-ons from Heather who "kept going down that road." Bollea said that he knew that Clem had "an alternative lifestyle" and that he had stopped by their house "just to say hello" when Heather tempted him. ![]() In 2006, Bollea was videotaped while having sex with Heather Clem at trial he claimed that the videotaping was without his knowledge or consent. On November 2, 2016, Gawker reached a $31 million settlement with Bollea. Gawker Media's assets, not including the namesake website, were subsequently sold to Univision Communications. Three months after the verdict, Gawker filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and put itself up for sale. In March 2016, the jury found Gawker Media liable and awarded Bollea $115 million in compensatory damages and $25 million in punitive damages. Prior to trial, Bollea's lawyers said the privacy of many Americans was at stake while Gawker's lawyers said that the case could hurt freedom of the press in the United States. Bollea's claims included invasion of privacy, infringement of personality rights, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. ![]() In the suit, Terry Gene Bollea, known professionally as Hulk Hogan, sued Gawker Media, publisher of the Gawker website, and several Gawker employees and Gawker-affiliated entities, for posting portions of a sex tape of Bollea with Heather Clem, at that time the wife of radio personality Bubba the Love Sponge. Gawker was a lawsuit filed in 2013 in the Circuit Court of the Sixth Judicial Circuit in and for Pinellas County, Florida, delivering a verdict on March 18, 2016. 2012), motion to remand granted, Bollea v. Daulerio Kate Bennert, and Blogwire Hungary Szellemi Alkotast Hasznosito KFT aka Gawker Media, Defendants aka Gawker Media Gawker Entertainment, LLC Gawker Technology, LLC Gawker Sales, LLC Nick Denton A.J. Heather Clem Gawker Media, LLC aka Gawker Media Gawker Media Group, Inc. Terry Gene Bollea, professionally known as Hulk Hogan, Plaintiff, v. Circuit Court of the Sixth Judicial Circuit in and for Pinellas County, Florida ![]()
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