Vanessa Bryant crash scene photos lawsuit can move forward: Judge
Trial date set for Feb. 22 in Los Angeles
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A federal judge ruled Wednesday that a lawsuit over Kobe Bryant crash scene photos can move forward, keeping it on track for a jury trial next month.
U.S. District Judge John F. Walter concluded that "there are genuine issues of material fact for trial" and denied Los Angeles County's motion to dismiss the case, NBC Los Angeles reported.
KOBE BRYANT'S WIFE WINS RULING, LA COUNTY OFFICIALS TO TESTIFY ABOUT CRASH PICTURES
Four months after the January 2020 accident, the NBA icon's wife Vanessa Bryant sued the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department and other agencies for emotional distress, claiming first responders took and shared unauthorized photos of the human remains of her husband and daughter at the crash site. The county's lawyers maintain the images "were not publicly disseminated."
Bryant's attorneys asked a federal judge to deny a defense dismissal motion to allow the case to go forward. County attorneys argued that Bryant's claim of emotional distress caused by the alleged sharing of the cellphone photos is based on "hypothetical harm" and thus lacks standing since the images were never publicly circulated, and she never saw them, FOX 11 Los Angeles reported.
VANESSA BRYANT LAWSUIT DETAILS HOW SHE DISCOVERED KOBE BRYANT AND DAUGHTER WERE DEAD
"The close-up photos of Gianna and Kobe's remains were passed around on at least 28 LASD devices and by at least a dozen firefighters," Bryant's attorneys previously wrote. "And that was only the beginning. The gratuitous sharing continued in the following days and weeks and included such outrageous conduct as flaunting the photos in a bar while pantomiming dismemberment and showing off the photos over cocktails at an awards gala. One deputy guffawed while sharing the photos; another described the crash victims' remains as `hamburger' and `piles of meat.'"
All nine people aboard the helicopter died when the aircraft crashed into a hill in Calabasas, California, amid heavy fog while traveling to a teen basketball tournament at Kobe's Mamba Sports Academy near Thousand Oaks.
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The NBA legend's widow is seeking millions of dollars in damages for the severe emotional distress, according to FOX 11 LA.
Multiple media outlets report the trial date is Feb. 22 in Los Angeles.