A jury sided with ex-pro wrestler Hulk Hogan on Friday and awarded him $115 million in his sex tape lawsuit against Gawker Media.
The jurors reached the decision Friday evening, less than six hours after they began deliberations. The trial lasted two weeks.
The jury awarded Hogan $55 million for economic injuries and $65 million for emotional distress, CBS affiliate WTSP reported.
Hogan, dressed all in black including a black bandana, cried when the verdict was announced, WTSP said.
Earlier
Friday, in spirited closing arguments, lawyers for Hogan and Gawker
discussed themes of personal life versus celebrity, and freedom of
speech versus the right to privacy.
Hogan, whose given name is
Terry Bollea, sued Gawker for $100 million for posting a video of him
having sex with his former best friend's wife. Hogan contended the 2012
post violated his privacy.
Hogan's attorneys told jurors this is
the core of the case: "Gawker took a secretly recorded sex tape and put
it on the Internet."
They said Hogan didn't consent to the video,
that Gawker didn't follow usual journalism procedures before posting it
and that the video wasn't newsworthy. Gawker did not try to contact
Bollea or the woman in the video, and nor did the website contact the
woman's husband, DJ Bubba The Love Sponge Clem, who recorded the video.
It was never conclusively determined during trial who leaked the video to the media.
Hogan
didn't ask for any of this to happen, lawyer Kenneth Turkel said,
adding that Bollea, the private man, expected privacy during an intimate
moment. Much was made during the trial of Hogan's celebrity persona
versus Bollea's privacy.
"I want you to imagine the fact that for 35 plus years he is
essentially an actor, an entertainer, who has played the same role,"
said Turkel.
He said Hogan "has every right, every right, to keep
whatever precious private moments in his life, which for thisgentlemen
are very few."
Hogan's lawyers also said Gawker's value increased
by $15 million due to the post, while Gawker contends it made $11,000 in
ad revenue.
Gawker's attorneys told the jury that the video is
"not like a real celebrity sex tape" and urged them to watch the video,
which contains nine seconds of sexual content.
They pointed out
that news of the sex tape first appeared on at least two websites: TMZ
and The Dirty. Hogan went on TMZ's TV program to talk about it, and
later appeared on the Howard Stern show.
"He has consistently chosen to put his private life out there, for public consumption," said attorney Michael Sullivan.
He also criticized Hogan's claim that he was in Hulk Hogan persona when he was doing interviews.
"An actor playing a character does that on set, but when they go on a talk show, they're themselves," Sullivan said.
Sullivan called into question whether the tape was all a celebrity stunt to drum up publicity for Hogan's career.
He
suggested that although the jurors might find the video, Gawker and
Hogan's sex life distasteful, they must protect the First Amendment
right to free speech.
"We ask you to protect something that some
of you may find unpleasant," he said. "To write, to speak, to think
about all topics, to hold public figures accountable. It is right in the
long run for our freedoms."
Meanwhile, in a related development, sealed documents in the case were unsealed late Friday.
Attorneys
for media companies including The Associated Press sought to have the
files unsealed and an appeals court agreed Thursday.[cbs]
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