Las Vegas Review-Journal

Suit on WWE head injuries tossed out

- By Dave Collins The Associated Press

HARTFORD, Conn. — A federal judge in Connecticu­t has dismissed a lawsuit by 60 former profession­al wrestlers, who claimed World Wrestling Entertainm­ent failed to protect them from repeated head trauma, including concussion­s that led to long-term brain damage.

U.S. District Judge Vanessa Bryant in Hartford threw out the lawsuit Monday, saying many of the claims were frivolous or filed after the statute of limitation­s expired. Stamford-based WWE denied the lawsuit’s allegation­s.

Bryant also criticized the wrestlers’ lawyer, Konstantin­e Kyros, for repeatedly failing to comply with court rules and orders and ordered him to pay WWE’S legal fees.

Kyros strongly disagreed with Bryant’s ruling and vowed to appeal to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York. He said the allegation­s were not frivolous and Bryant was wrong about the claims being filed too late, because many wrestlers’ ailments — including dementia and chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, or CTE — were diagnosed years after they left the ring or after they died.

“I stand for profession­al wrestlers who face the prospect of losing their identity and consciousn­ess to the effects of a latent occupation­al disease that robs them of their sanity, comfort of their families and memories of everything they achieved entertaini­ng the millions of people who love them,” Kyros wrote in an email to The Associated Press on Wednesday.

The lawsuit, which also named WWE chairman Vince Mcmahon as a defendant, said the organizati­on knew the risks of head injuries but didn’t warn the wrestlers. Bryant, however, said there was no evidence that WWE knew that concussion­s or head blows during wrestling matches caused CTE.

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