Baltimore Sun

Jury picked in suit over lacrosse player’s slaying

Civil trial in death of former Notre Dame Prep standout Love seeks $30M in damages

- By Denise Lavoie

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va. — A jury was selected Monday in the civil trial of a man who was convicted of second-degree murder in the 2010 death of University of Virginia lacrosse player and former Notre Dame Prep standout Yeardley Love.

A wrongful-death lawsuit brought by Love’s mother seeks to hold George Huguely V liable in Yeardley’s killing. Love and Huguely — who also played lacrosse at Virginia — were in an on-again, off-again dating relationsh­ip.

The lawsuit seeks $29.5 million in compensato­ry damages and $1 million in punitive damages.

Eleven jurors were chosen to hear the case, including seven regular jurors and four alternates. The trial in Charlottes­ville Circuit Court is expected to last about eight days. Opening statements are expected Tuesday.

Love, of Cockeysvil­le, and Huguely, of Chevy Chase, were seniors who were weeks away from graduating. They were known for their play on Virginia’s nationally ranked women’s and men’s lacrosse teams, but they also were known for their volatile relationsh­ip.

Prosecutor­s said Huguely kicked a hole in Love’s bedroom door, then beat her after a day of golf and binge drinking, enraged that she had had a relationsh­ip with a lacrosse player from North Carolina.

A medical examiner concluded that the 22-year-old Love died of blunt force trauma to her head, but defense and prosecutio­n experts offered differing medical opinions on the lethal consequenc­es of her injuries.

During the jury selection process Monday, many of the potential jurors told Judge Richard Moore they had read or heard media reports about the case after

Yeardley was killed or during Huguely’s criminal trial in 2012.

Moore dismissed three potential jurors who said they had formed an opinion about the case and would be unable to put that opinion aside to serve as jurors in the civil case.

The civil trial is expected to include many of the same witnesses, although many of them are expected to testify in videotaped deposition­s instead of in person.

Huguely’s attorney, Matthew Green, said the defense will acknowledg­e that Huguely’s assault and battery caused Love’s death and that her family is entitled to compensato­ry damages in an amount to be decided by the jury. But he said the defense does not believe punitive damages are appropriat­e.

Love’s mother and sister, and Huguely’s mother, were present in the courtroom Monday.

Green said Huguely will be brought to court from prison on the day he is scheduled to testify, but not on the other days of the trial.

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