Gawker,
publisher slapped with punitive damages over Hulk Hogan sex tape
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[March 22, 2016]
By Letitia Stein
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Reuters) - A Florida
jury awarded punitive damages totaling $25 million on Monday in a second
blow to Gawker, coming on top of the $115 million the online news outlet
must pay for posting a sex tape of the former professional wrestler Hulk
Hogan.
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The six-person jury assessed Gawker $15 million in punitive
damages. The media company's publisher and CEO, Nick Denton, was
slapped with an additional $10 million.
"I think we made history today, because I think we protected a lot
of people today who may be going through what I went through," Hogan
told reporters Monday.
Juror Salina Stevens, 35, said watching the video strengthened her
resolve to find in favor of protecting Hogan's privacy.
Stevens said she believes in First Amendment rights, but "we also
have privacy laws, and I hope those will be taken into more
consideration."
Hogan sued the website for posting a video clip in 2012 featuring
him having sex with the wife of his then-best friend, the radio
shock jock Bubba the Love Sponge Clem.
Hogan, 62, testified that he did not know that their consensual
tryst was being recorded when it occurred nearly a decade ago inside
Clem's home.
The editor responsible for the post, A.J. Daulerio, was assessed
$100,000 in punitive damages.
On Friday, after a two-week trial in St. Petersburg, near Hogan's
home, the jury awarded the longtime World Wrestling Entertainment
star $60 million for emotional distress and $55 million for economic
damages.
Gawker plans to appeal the decision in a civil case that has drawn
wide interest for testing boundaries between a celebrity's privacy
rights and press liberties in the digital age.
Legal experts say the company stands a good chance of getting the
decision pared back or reversed on appeal.
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"We are confident we will win this case ultimately based on not only
on the law but also on the truth," Gawker said in a statement.
An attorney for Hogan, whose legal name is Terry Bollea, argued on
Monday that the jury could deter Gawker and other sites with a
significant award of punitive damages.
Gawker attorney Michael Berry argued that punitive damages would be
piling on to a verdict that already "could be debilitating for
Gawker Media."
The jury was told that Gawker Media is worth $83 million.
Denton is worth about $121 million, most of which came from his
share of a separate parent company that owns Gawker and holds its
intellectual property, valued at $276 million.
Daulerio had no assets and thousands of dollars in student loans,
the attorneys said.
(Reporting by Letitia Stein; Editing by Bernard Orr)
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