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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Diamond Dealer Says Racism Incited $3M Theft Verdict Print

An Ohio jeweler who won a $3.8 million verdict against a diamond trading company for stealing a rare pink diamond used “inflammatory” stereotypes of Hasidic Jews to prejudice the jury, the defense says in a motion for a new trial.

John Stafford

Julius Klein Diamonds, like many dealers in New York City's jewelry district, is run by Hasidic Jews. A jury found JKD liable in November for conversion and criminal theft of the 5.56 carat pink diamond that jeweler John Stafford says he shipped to its office with the Brink's security company –- but JKD insists does not exist.

According to the new trial motion, “Religion was first injected into the trial in voir dire, when Plaintiffs’ counsel asked prospective jurors about their attitudes toward Hasidic Jews” and resurfaced when Stafford “gratuitously inserted overtly racist remarks (allegedly made by others) during his testimony.”

Among other things, he quoted a JKD employee in California as saying that he should send diamonds to him because JKD would “cheat a goy[ ] but never a Jew.”

“In a case in which the jury could find for Plaintiffs only by rejecting the testimony of every eye witness to the events that transpired upon the delivery of the Brinks bag in New York ... the injection of inflammatory evidence intended to stereotype and degrade members of a particular religious group mandates a new trial,” JKD argues.

Stafford claimed he sent the diamond to JKD for valuation after buying it from a mysterious German for only $8,000. But JKD employees testified there was only an empty box inside the Brink's package that arrived in New York and an investigation by Brink's showed the package had not been opened or tampered with before it was delivered.

The defense has already gotten some post-trial relief. In a May 13 order, U.S. District Judge Thomas M. Rose threw out the $2.3 million award on the criminal theft claim, leaving intact the $1.7 million for conversion and $8,400 for unjust enrichment.

Stafford, he ruled, had failed to present any evidence “regarding the retail value of the Pink Diamond when Stafford Jewelers and John Stafford sent it to JKD.” The plaintiff's experts testified only that the wholesale value of the pink diamond was $1.5 to $1.7 million.

But JKD contends that Stafford lied about the shipment of the diamond as part of an insurance scam and is now seeking to have the entire case thrown out, in part because “Plaintiffs injected inflammatory testimony calculated to incite bias and prejudice as a substitute for evidence.”

The new trial motion also cites Stafford's testimony that the mysterious German accused him of being Jewish, saying “Jews always want a better price.” “Stafford’s 'defense' to this accusation was equally inflammatory, informing the jury 'First of all, I’m not Jewish. I’m just a good Catholic kid working hard for a living,'” the defense says.

In other grounds for a new trial, it argues that “virtually every fact that the jury had to find in order to return its multi-million dollar verdict in favor of Plaintiffs runs contrary to common sense and logic.”

The acts of JKD employees “were uniformly consistent with the opening of an empty box,” the defense insists. “JKD routinely handles deliveries of jewelry worth millions of dollars. It would have no incentive to jeopardize its business by converting a single gem.”

UPDATE

  • The case was dismissed Aug. 3, 2009 after the parties reached a confidential settlement.


  • Other Pink Diamond Case Sources


    This story linked by:


    By Matthew Heller
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