Orlando Sentinel

A judge denies

- By Tamara Lush Associated Press

Gawker’s motion for a new trial in the Hulk Hogan sex-video case and won’t reduce the $140 million verdict.

ST. PETERSBURG — A judge on Wednesday denied Gawker’s motion for a new trial in the Hulk Hogan sexvideo case and won’t reduce a $140 million jury verdict.

Judge Pamela Campbell did not elaborate on her decision, the latest developmen­t in a years-long legal fight between Hogan, whose real name is Terry Bollea, and the gossip website.

Hogan sued Gawker after it posted a 2007 video of him having sex with Heather Clem, wife of his thenbest friend Bubba The Love Sponge Clem, a local Tampa DJ who made the video.

During the trial, Hogan mournfully described how Clem betrayed his trust. The three-week trial was a lurid inside look at the business of celebrity gossip and a debate over newsworthi­ness versus celebrity privacy.

In March, a Pinellas County jury awarded Hogan $115 million in compensato­ry damages plus an added $25 million in punitive damages.

Hogan lawyer David Houston released a statement saying that the judge’s decision reflects that “Gawker has failed and continues to fail in recognizin­g their obligation to Bollea for their reprehensi­ble behavior and method of doing what they call journalism.”

Gawker did not immediatel­y respond to the decision.

Earlier this month, Hogan sued Gawker again, saying the website leaked sealed court documents containing a transcript that quoted him making racist remarks.

In the transcript, Hogan, who is white, makes several racist statements about his daughter’s ex-boyfriend, who is black. Once the Enquirer published the story, WWE severed its longtime ties with the famous wrestler. Gawker denies that it leaked the transcript.

The latest suit also accuses a talent agent, two disc jockeys, a radio company and a lawyer of conspiring to send news media outlets the sex tape and causing Hogan emotional distress and economic harm.

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