John Doe A v. Penn State
First Penn State scandal lawsuit says Coach Jerry Sandusky sexually abused a boy more than 100 times and the abuse was enabled by the school's "negligent oversight."
Bradley v. Lohan
Former Betty Ford Center employee sues Lindsay Lohan for assault, alleging the actress threw a phone at her and yanked her wrist while refusing to be breathalzyed.
N.D. v. New York Post
Hotel maid allegedly raped by French politician sues the New York Post for falsely reporting that she is a prostitute who "routinely traded sex for money" with male guests.
Reinhart v. Mortenson
Two Montana residents allege the author of "Three Cups of Tea" "fabricated material about his activities and work in Pakistan and Afghanistan" to sell the book.
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• Maryland appeals court says dog owners can be held strictly liable for pit bull attacks. "Because of its aggressive and vicious nature and its capability to inflict serious and sometimes fatal injuries, pit bulls and cross-bred pit bulls are inherently dangerous." Tracey v. Solesky

• Woman who has been diagnosed as a sex addict sues a school district for failing to prevent her from having sex with male students on the school bus when she was in 11th grade.
Barksdale v. Egg Harbor Township Bd. of Ed.

• Civil rights activist challenges Georgia's "stand your ground law." "By not defining what actions create a reasonable perception justifying the use of deadly force, the Act[] potentially deprives all Georgia[n]s of the right to life without due process of law." Hutchins v. Deal

• Former patient of a Rhode Island doctor sues him for featuring her in a book about drug addiction. "Plaintiff had expected, as any reasonable patient would, that her private conversations during her treatment sessions with the Defendant would remain private and confidential."
Lisnoff v. Stein

• Class action alleges the YMCA deceives consumers by representing that it practices "Christian" values while allowing its gyms to be used for gay sex trysts. "YMCAs around the country ... are currently being used as brothels for cruising, with the YMCA's knowledge and implicit consent."
Keister v. YMCA

• Social workers are not liable for a sexual assault on a 5-year-old boy by a 16-year-old male placed in an adoptive home. "To rule against the individual defendants in this case would definitely break new ground."
Doe v. Braddy

• Student sues college for refusing to grant her the "reasonable accommodation" of a single room after she complained about her roommate's exhibitionist behavior.
Blankmeyer v. Stonehill College

• School district can be sued over a guidance counselor's sexual relationship with a student who was over the age of consent. "The inherent imbalance of power between a guidance counselor in a public school and a student may render opportunistic sexual predation sufficiently shocking, even with a 'consenting' student over sixteen, to form the basis of a substantive due process claim."
Doe v. Fournier

• Utah judge finds a "credible threat" that Utah County officials will prosecute a polygamist and his wives for bigamy. The officials' acts "suggest that an actual prosecution of Plaintiffs is forthcoming."
Brown v. Herbert

• Louisville, Ky., strip club sues a competitor for displaying an electronic sign outside a convention center that said "Don't go to Godfathers, their girls are ugly and have crabs."
The Godfather v. Trixie's Lounge

• A lawyer cannot sue two women he dated for posting derogatory comments about him on liarscheatersrus.com. "[W]hen viewed within the larger context of the website on which they were posted, there can be no doubt that a reasonable reader would understand the comments to be opinion." Coulotte v. Ryncarz

• Oglala Sioux tribe sues beer makers and Whiteclay, Neb., bars for enabling alcohol abuse on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. The illegal trade in alcohol has "caused devastating injuries to the Lakota people and massive financial damages to the [tribe]."
Oglala Sioux Tribe v. Schwarting




Alltop_125x125.jpg







Pin-up Attorney Sues Playboy over Gender Violence Print

The $7.5 million case of a Chicago divorce attorney who alleges a Playboy executive subjected her to an “extreme and outrageous sexual pursuit” is an early test of a “cutting edge” civil rights law designed to protect victims of “gender-related violence.”

Corri Fetman

Corri D. Fetman wrote the “Lawyer of Love” legal advice column for Playboy.com under the supervision of general manager of digital media Thomas Hagopian. In a complaint filed last week, she alleges he fired her in July 2008 after engaging in “a continuing pattern of harassment” that included raunchy e-mails, unsolicited gifts of lingerie and multiple unwelcome gropings.

Hagopian “use[d] his position and authority to attempt to force Fetman into a sexual and romantic relationship,” the suit says.

For part of her case, Fetman has invoked a recently-enacted Illinois law -- 740 ILCS 8211 –- which provides that “Any person who has been subjected to gender-related violence ... may bring a civil action for damages, injunctive  relief, or other appropriate relief against a  person or persons perpetrating that gender-related violence.”

The law was passed in response to a U.S. Supreme Court decision striking down the federal Violence Against Women Act and President Barack Obama helped steer it through the Illinois Legislature when he was a state senator.

Fetman is seeking $4.5 million in gender-violence damages, but no Illinois case has held that the law applies to the employer of a perpetrator. A similar California statute says more specifically that a victim of gender violence may sue “any responsible party.”

But Fetman's attorney, Timothy J. Ashe (Corbett & Ashe, Chicago), insists that the Illinois law has "a broad scope of recovery. The protection for victims is wide.”

The case has inspired plenty of unsympathetic comment, largely because the well-endowed Fetman posed nude for Playboy's February 2008 issue. She had also come to the magazine's attention by using a photo of her cleavage in an advertising campaign for her practice.

“She has systematically sexualized herself in the pursuit of her business,” an Overlawyered.com reader commented. “And now she is shocked that an executive at Playboy is seeing her just as a sex object.”

But Ashe doubts Playboy can make a similar argument as part of its defense. “It's kind of like saying, 'If you are wearing a short skirt, you are inviting rape,''” he observes.

According to the complaint, Hagopian -– who called himself “the Hef of online” -- offered Fetman the “Lawyer in Love” column in October 2007. At a dinner meeting just a week later, he allegedly presented her with unsolicited gifts including lingerie and, on the way back to his hotel in Fetman's car, committed his first alleged act of gender violence.

Hagopian “intentionally and without permission grabbed Fetman's breast and attempted to kiss Fetman,” she alleges.

The suit describes no fewer than six such groping incidents between October 2007 and March 2008, alleging that these “aggressive and inappropriate physical contacts ... satisfy the elements of battery,” as required by the gender-violence statute. Hagopian no longer works for Playboy.

Ashe tells On Point he will argue that Playboy is liable even if the company did not know about Hagopian's alleged misconduct before he fired Fetman. “It's basic agency principle law,” he says. "There's no requirement for knowledge or ratification."

He declined to explain why he did not plead a sexual harassment claim under either the Illinois Human Rights Act or Title VII of the federal Civil Rights Act. The IHRA holds an employer strictly liable for a supervisor's harassment of an employee and provides remedies similar to those of the gender-violence law.

UPDATE

  • Court records show the case was dismissed Feb. 25, 2010 after the parties reached a settlement.


  • By Matthew Heller
    4/6/09


     

    Editor's note: On Point's RSS feed has moved to this link.

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