Lohan v. E-Trade
Actress Lindsay Lohan alleges a TV ad featuring a "milkaholic" baby named Lindsay used her name and personality for advertising purposes without her consent.
Irvin v. Mustafa
NFL Hall of Famer Michael Irvin files a countersuit against a woman who accused him of rape, alleging she is a "morally-bankrupt individual" who is trying to ruin his career.
Robbins v. Lower Merion SD
High-school student accuses a school
district of spying on him and other students
by remotely activating webcams contained in school-supplied laptops.
Peterson v. Grisham
10th Circuit finds John Grisham did not defame three Oklahoma law enforcement officials in a book about the wrongful convictions of two men for a rape-murder.
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• Owners of Who Dat?, Inc. sue the NFL and the New Orleans Saints for trademark infringement, seeking to protect the mark that "has become one of the most recognizable in all of America and quickly became well-known around the world."
Who Dat?, Inc. v. NFL Properties

• Army bomb disposal expert sues the makers of "The Hurt Locker" for plagiarizing his life story. The film is "nothing more than the exploitation of a real life honorable, courageous, and long serving member of our country’s armed forces, by greedy multi-billion dollar 'entertainment' corporations."
Sarver v. The Hurt Locker

• Former patient sues the Cincinnati hospital where he was sexually assaulted by a transgender nurse. The nurse's "employment while masquerading as a member of the female gender in a hospital environment involved an unreasonable risk of harm to others."
Evans v. University of Cincinnati

• Federal judge enjoins the City of Phoenix from enforcing a noise ordinance against "sound generated in the course of religious expression," finding the right of churches to ring bells outweighs "the City's interest in preserving the peace and tranquility of its neighborhoods."
St. Mark Roman Catholic Parish v. City of Phoenix

• 5th Circuit says a Texas city's junked vehicle ordinance applies to a cactus planter made out of wrecked Oldsmobile 88. "Irrespective of the intentions of its creators ... the car-planter is a utilitarian device, an advertisement, and ultimately a 'junked vehicle.'"
Kleinman v. City of San Marcos

• Oklahoma City bomber Terry Nichols notifies a federal judge that he has gone on hunger strike, saying he is "prepared to die if necessary because he is done allowing his body to be defiled by [ ] refined and dead foods."
Nichols v. Federal Bureau of Prisons

• Texas judge finds the makers of a film about Rin Tin Tin did not infringe on the trademarks of a breeder of German Shepherds. "Defendants['] title 'Finding Rin Tin Tin: The Adventure Continues" is a fair use of the term 'Rin Tin Tin.'"
Rin Tin Tin, Inc. v. First Look Studios

• Illinois appeals court says the contact sports exception to negligence liability does not apply to the case of an athletic trainer who was struck in the eye by a hockey puck while refilling water bottles. Michael Weisberg "suffered injuries as a result of alleged conduct that was not inherent to the sport of hockey."
Weisberg v. Chicago Steel




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Baseball Star's Ex Seeks $15M for Fear of AIDS Print

A $15 million “fear of AIDS” lawsuit filed against former New York Mets star Roberto Alomar by an ex-girlfriend may hinge on whether he can be held liable for having unprotected sex with her when he had “reason to know” he was HIV positive or had AIDS.

Ilya Dall

Ilya Dall says she has developed AIDS phobia since Alomar allegedly tested positive for HIV in 2006. She has tested negative herself, but alleges his “negligent behavior” in refusing earlier tests despite being diagnosed with conditions associated with HIV has caused her “immense emotional, psychological and mental suffering.”

“[T]he Defendant knew or should have known he was HIV positive or suffering from AIDS when he was having unprotected sexual relations with the Plaintiff,” Dall says in a complaint that was removed from state to federal court last week.

Several states have recognized a “reason-to-know” or “constructive knowledge” standard in negligent transmission of HIV or AIDS phobia cases. A defendant is not required to have actual knowledge of HIV infection, the California Supreme Court ruled in 2006,

when there is sufficient information to cause a reasonably intelligent actor to infer he or she is infected with the virus or that infection is so highly probable that his or her conduct would be predicated on that assumption. John B. v. Superior Ct., 38 Cal.4th 1177.

New York has yet to examine the constructive knowledge issue in detail. In Plaza v. Estate of Wisser, 626 N.Y.S.2d 446 (1995), an appeals court said only that a suit alleging a man knew or had reason to know he was infected with HIV prior to being diagnosed with the virus could withstand a motion to dismiss.

But such cases became potentially more lucrative for plaintiffs in New York when the state's highest court ruled last year that they can recover damages beyond the initial six-month period of anxiety following exposure to the HIV/AIDS virus. Ornstein v. New York City Health and Hospitals Corp.

Dall is seeking unspecified compensatory damages for her post-traumatic stress disorder resulting from fear of AIDS and $15 million in punitive damages for Alomar's “wanton and reckless disregard” of her health and safety.

According to the suit, the second baseman assured her “he was free of all sexually transmitted diseases” when they began dating in 2002. But he allegedly ignored a doctor's advice to take an HIV test after being diagnosed in March 2005 with idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura (ITP), a blood disorder common in people infected with HIV.

A few weeks later, Dall says, the same doctor advised Alomar that he had oral thrush, a yeast infection which is also associated with AIDS. Again, he “refused to submit to an HIV test,” telling Dall that “he was recently tested for HIV/AIDS and was not infected.” They continued having unprotected sex until his positive HIV test in early 2006.

Assuming Alomar is HIV positive, the alleged diagnoses of ITP and thrush should amount to sufficient evidence of constructive knowledge to meet the John B. requirements.

Alomar, who retired from baseball in 2004, has said he is in “very good health” and described the suit as “full of lies.” “I am deeply saddened that someone I cared for would make such terrible accusations and try to hurt me in this way,” he said in a statement.

In a constructive knowledge case, an Iowa jury recently awarded $1.5 million to a woman who sued a man for infecting her with a sexually transmitted disease after telling her he was disease-free. A Los Angeles judge in November ordered the defendant in John B. to pay his ex-wife $12.5 million for infecting her with HIV.

UPDATE

  • Dall dismissed the case May 5, 2009 after reaching a confidential settlement with Alomar.


  • This story linked by:


    By Matthew Heller
    2/15/09


     
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