The Standard (St. Catharines)

Investigat­ion into sexual assault claim involving Ronaldo reopened by Vegas police

Woman says she was paid $375,000 to keep quiet about attack

- KEVIN DRAPER

The Las Vegas Metropolit­an Police Department said in a statement Monday it had reopened an investigat­ion into a report of a rape of a woman who says her attacker was the soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo.

The police department, in response to queries from news organizati­ons, issued the statement saying it was once again investigat­ing the case and following up on informatio­n provided by the victim, though it did not name the woman or any suspect.

The woman, Kathryn Mayorga, filed a lawsuit against Ronaldo, the Portuguese star who plays for the Italian club Juventus, on Thursday in Clark County, Nev. She said that she was paid $375,000 by Ronaldo to settle her claims and had signed a nondisclos­ure agreement.

A number of documents that Mayorga’s representa­tives say support her allegation have been published in the German magazine Der Spiegel. Ronaldo’s legal team called their publicatio­n “blatantly illegal.”

In a statement, Christian Schertz, a lawyer for Ronaldo, threatened Der Spiegel and any news organizati­on that might repeat its reporting, citing Ronaldo’s privacy: “The reporting in Spiegel is blatantly illegal. It violates the personal rights of our client Cristiano Ronaldo in an exceptiona­lly serious way. This is an inadmissib­le reporting of suspicions in the area of privacy. It would therefore already be unlawful to reproduce this reporting. We have been instructed to immediatel­y assert all existing claims under press law against Spiegel, in particular compensati­on for moral damages in an amount correspond­ing to the gravity of the infringeme­nt, which is probably one of the most serious violations of personal rights in recent years.”

Schertz did not directly challenge the rape allegation; Ronaldo called it “fake news” in an Instagram video.

Mayorga said the attack occurred early in the morning on June 13, 2009, in a suite in the Palms Place Hotel.

Ronaldo, who was in the midst of a blockbuste­r transfer from Manchester United to Real Madrid, met Mayorga at a

Las Vegas nightclub and invited her and others back to his suite.

According to the lawsuit, Mayorga reported the assault to the police later that day and received a medical examinatio­n, during which evidence was collected in what is sometimes known as a rape kit. A Las Vegas police spokespers­on confirmed that Mayorga had filed a report on July 13, 2009 and was examined, but said she did not name the person who was accused. The case was reopened at Mayorga’s request last month.

Last year, Der Spiegel reported the existence of the settlement. The magazine had received documents — including an unsigned copy of the settlement and a sixpage letter Mayorga wrote to Ronaldo as part of it — through Football Leaks, a WikiLeaks-like website that has publicly released scores of confidenti­al soccer-related documents. Der Spiegel said they had repeatedly contacted Mayorga in advance of publicatio­n, but she refused to speak.

At the time, Ronaldo’s agency called the report “journalist­ic fiction” and threatened to sue

Der Spiegel.

On Friday, Der Spiegel published a followup article, which was done with extensive participat­ion from Mayorga and additional documentar­y evidence. She told Der Spiegel she was breaking her nondisclos­ure agreement because new lawyers she had hired did not believe it to be valid. She also said she had been inspired by the #MeToo movement.

The additional documents Der Spiegel obtained include the report from medical examinatio­n and correspond­ence between Ronaldo’s lawyers. The report says Mayorga was treated at the hospital for two hours, and that her injuries were photograph­ed.

The correspond­ence between Ronaldo’s lawyers includes a questionna­ire and answers submitted by Ronaldo, his brotherin-law and his cousin, who were with him on the night in question. According to Der Spiegel, there were multiple versions of answers to the questionna­ire.

In one, Ronaldo answered that Mayorga “said no and stop several times” and that “she said that she didn’t want to, but made herself available.” Those answers are not in later questionna­ires.

Mayorga’s lawyer, Leslie Mark Stovall, cited his client’s legal complaint, physical evidence of assault, the questionna­ire and settlement agreement as evidence that Mayorga’s claims were not “fake news.”

Stovall also vowed to “publicize how ‘fixers’ cover up and enable sexual assaults by the wealthy and famous.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Cristiano Ronaldo is being sued by a Nevada woman who said he raped her in the penthouse suite of a Las Vegas hotel in 2009 and then dispatched a team of “fixers” to obstruct the criminal investigat­ion.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Cristiano Ronaldo is being sued by a Nevada woman who said he raped her in the penthouse suite of a Las Vegas hotel in 2009 and then dispatched a team of “fixers” to obstruct the criminal investigat­ion.

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