Houston Chronicle

Billionair­e may be helping wrestler go to mat with website

- By Tamara Lush and Michael Liedtke

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Is Hulk Hogan’s courtroom cage match with Gawker being bankrolled by a high-tech billionair­e with a grudge against the news-and-gossip site?

Two months after Hogan won a $140 million invasion-of-privacy verdict against Gawker for posting a sex tape of him, news reports say the pro wrestler is secretly backed by Silicon Valley venture capitalist Peter Thiel.

Thiel, who co-founded PayPal and was an early investor in Facebook, was outed as gay by a Gawker-owned website in 2007, and the Gawker empire has run a number of stories skewering Facebook.

On Wednesday, Hogan and Gawker were back in a Florida court, where Judge Pamela Campbell denied a request for a new trial and refused to reduce the damages. Gawker vows to take the case to an appeals court.

Swirling in the background of the legal proceeding­s were reports in the New York Times and Forbes that Thiel is footing Hogan’s legal bills against their common enemy, Gawker. The news stories cited unidentifi­ed sources.

Thiel, whose net worth is estimated by Forbes at $2.7 billion, didn’t immediatel­y respond to interview requests.

Gawker reacted to the reports by saying: “We trust the appeals court will correct the outsized Florida jury verdict and reaffirm the law that protects a free and critical press, which is more embattled and important than ever.”

Hogan’s lawyers wouldn’t comment on the Thiel story but praised the judge for denying a new trial and accused Gawker of refusing to accept responsibi­lity for “their reprehensi­ble behavior and method of doing what they call journalism.”

Nothing illegal

Legal experts say there is nothing illegal — or even unethical — about someone financing a lawsuit. There are entire companies that invest in contingenc­y claims, usually in product liability, personal injury, patent infringeme­nt and copyright cases. It is called “litigation financing.”

But a billionair­e doing it out of what may be spite? That’s a little different, experts say.

“As much as this is not at all illegal or unethical, it just smells and feels wrong,” said Scott Greenfield, a New York lawyer who is managing editor of Fault Lines, an online legal magazine. “When a rich guy can basically afford to bring down a media outlet, that has horrible social ramificati­ons, even if the particular outfit is one that everybody hates, like Gawker.”

Gawker is counting on the case to be overturned on appeal and has not said whether it can afford the full $140 million. During the trial, Gawker’s parent company, a collection of websites called Gawker Media, was estimated to be worth $83 million.

Transcript leaked

Earlier this month, Hogan sued Gawker again, saying the website leaked sealed court documents containing a transcript that quoted him making racist remarks. After the National Enquirer published the story, the WWE pro wrestling company severed its ties with Hogan. Gawker denies it leaked the transcript.

In legal circles, attorney James Sammataro of Miami said people speculated how Hogan could afford such a large “dream team” of lawyers.

Said Miami attorney Richard Wolfe: “It sounds to me that Hulk Hogan made a smart deal by getting the right guy to finance his lawsuit.”

 ?? Dirk Shadd / Tampa Bay Times ?? Hulk Hogan, whose given name is Terry Bollea, was in court in March after a jury returned its decision against Gawker in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Dirk Shadd / Tampa Bay Times Hulk Hogan, whose given name is Terry Bollea, was in court in March after a jury returned its decision against Gawker in St. Petersburg, Fla.
 ??  ?? Peter Thiel was identified as gay by a Gawker website in 2007.
Peter Thiel was identified as gay by a Gawker website in 2007.

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