A Florida jury has awarded Hulk Hogan $115 million with the possibility of more after finding the Gawker website violated his privacy by publishing a sex tape of the celebrity wrestler.
After deliberating for six hours, the jury awarded Mr Hogan $60 million for emotional distress and $55 million for economic damages.
The funds will be sequestered until Monday when the jury will consider punitive damages and other matters.
“This is a victory for everyone who has had their privacy violated,” Mr Hogan’s attorney David Houston said.
As the award was announced, Mr Hogan cried and hugged Mr Houston. Gawker publisher Nick Denton said the website would appeal the verdict.
Mr Hogan had sought $100 million in damages over the edited video that Gawker, a New York-based outlet known for gossip and media reporting, posted online in 2012.
The jury of two men and four women agreed with Mr Hogan that his privacy had been violated, that the violation had caused him harm, and that he had a reasonable expectation of privacy.
Freedom of the press
The case drew attention as a digital-age test of a celebrity’s privacy rights and freedom of the press under the First Amendment of the US Constitution.
Gawker’s one-minute, 41-second video depicted Mr Hogan (62) engaged in sex with the wife of his then-best friend, radio “shock jock” personality Bubba the Love Sponge Clem.
Mr Hogan, a long-time star of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), said he did not know the consensual encounter had been recorded when it occurred nearly a decade ago in Bubba’s home.
Gawker’s video included excerpts from a 30-minute sex tape the company obtained without knowing its origin.
Mr Hogan, whose legal name is Terry Bollea, testified that he still suffers from the humiliation of a video that went viral. The video was viewed 2.5 million times on the Gawker site.
The moustachioed wrestling icon wore a signature black bandana during a two-week trial in St Petersburg, Florida, near his home.
Testimony touched on media ethics, website analytics and Mr Hogan’s statements about his sex life, including descriptions of his genitalia.
Gawker said the posting was in keeping with the outlet’s mission to cover true and interesting subjects, stressing Mr Hogan had made his sex life a public matter.
Mr Denton and the editor responsible for the post, AJ Daulerio, were called as defence witnesses. Both named in the lawsuit, they stood by the post, which Mr Denton said “stands up to the test of time.”
Reuters