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Thread: Following the Benoit murder/suicide congress opens investigation into pro wrestling

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    Baron dop's Avatar
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    Following the Benoit murder/suicide congress opens investigation into pro wrestling

    CONGRESS OPENS INVESTIGATION INTO PROFESSIONAL WRESTLING, REQUESTS DOCUMENTS FROM VINCE MCMAHON, REPORTS ESPN
    by Mike Johnson @ 2:56:17 PM on 7/27/2007


    World Wrestling Entertainment's Vince McMahon was asked in a letter dated today to provide records pertaining to World Wrestling Entertainment's drug testing policies by the two congressmen responsible for conducting steroid hearings into Major League Baseball, according to an article published on ESPN.com this afternoon.

    Rep. Henry Waxman, the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, and Tom Davis, its ranking minority member, wrote McMahon requesting, "a series of documents intended to give the committee and its investigation a detailed look at WWE's drug-testing policy, including information about the results of performance-enhancing drug tests on pro wrestlers."

    Excerpts from the letter according to the article include:

    "The tragic deaths of World Wrestling Entertainment star Chris Benoit and his family have raised questions about reports of widespread use of steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs by professional wrestlers.

    "These allegations -- which include first-hand reports of steroid use by prominent former wrestlers -- have swirled around the WWE for over a decade. Investigations by journalists have described a culture of performance-enhancing drug use in professional wrestling, high fatality rates among young professional wrestlers, and an inability or unwillingness of WWE to address these problems."

    "WWE has a responsibility to do everything possible to eliminate the use of performance-enhancing drugs -- or the perception of such use -- by its wrestlers."

    ESPN.com reported that the requests in the letter are similar to what was asked of Major League Baseball by Congress during its investigation into MLB and included requests for:

    *A listing of drugs covered by WWE's policies.

    *The entity [this would be Aegis Science, headed by Dr. David Black] that conducts its drug testing, details on the number of tests it conducts annually and how many wrestlers are tested during the period.

    *The protocols WWE follows after positive drug tests

    *Procedures that lead to exemptions of positive tests.

    ESPN.com also reports that WWE has been asked to provide results of any investigations WWE has prepared in regard to the deaths, injuries, or illnesses of "current or former professional wrestlers that may have been related to the use of steroids." as well as "all communications between [WWE] and outside entities including communications with health care professionals or law enforcement authorities, regarding allegations of drug use by wrestlers."

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    So, with a swelling debt, a rising nuclear threat from Iran, an ass-backwards immigration policy that inhibits economic growth, and an education system that produces so many sub-par students, this is what congress spends its time doing? Interfering with the affairs of a private organization doesn't strike me as all that constructive. But perhaps it is wrong of me to expect that the government that feels entitled to rob the people so greatly would actually expend the effort needed to put it to good use and solve some real problems.
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    Ream Me Up, Scotty swivel's Avatar
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    I agree with gprime. 3 deaths and we need an investigation? There are hundreds of intersections across the country that kill more than 3 people a year, why don't we investigate the need for stoplights at those intersections?

    Absolute bullshit. This is why congress usually has an approval rating even lower than Bush's.

    Please, people. Join the Anti-Incumbent political party. All you have to do, every chance you can, is vote for the politician not currently in office. It is that simple. We can change the world.

    All politicians are the same once they are settled in. If we can show them that their job is temporary, we will get a different sort of person running for office. No more career politicians. Perfect term-limits without a term-limit law. Please spread the word, this is a voting philosophy that actually makes sense, and can change the world immediately.

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    President gprime's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by swivel View Post
    All politicians are the same once they are settled in.
    I'd generally agree, but I do find that Ron Paul is the exception to that rule. He seems to have remained the same, "vote down anything unconstitutional", honest politician for ten House terms now.
    Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy.
    - HL Mencken

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    Ream Me Up, Scotty swivel's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by gprime View Post
    I'd generally agree, but I do find that Ron Paul is the exception to that rule. He seems to have remained the same, "vote down anything unconstitutional", honest politician for ten House terms now.
    Well don't let the exception blind you to the rule.

    I would gladly toss out the baby with the bathwater if the bathwater was every other politician in office.

    Gladly.

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    The personal doctor to a professional wrestler who killed himself, his wife and their 7-year-old son was sentenced to 10 years in prison Tuesday for illegally prescribing painkillers and other drugs to patients.
    http://msn.foxsports.com/other/story...ison?GT1=39002

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    Justices: Slain wrestling star's family can sue Hustler over nude picsWashington (CNN) --
    The Supreme Court has decided that the family of a slain professional wrestling personality can continue its lawsuit against Hustler magazine, a case that tested privacy concerns and the competing right to publish "newsworthy" material.

    The justices without comment Monday turned aside an appeal from the publishers of the men's magazine, which featured old nude photos of Nancy Benoit, who was killed nearly three years ago by her husband and fellow wrestling superstar Chris Benoit. The couple's young son also was slain in the family's Georgia home.

    The order is a victory for the estate of Nancy Benoit, which is seeking damages from Hustler.

    At issue was whether the constitutional right of privacy indirectly referenced in the 14th Amendment trumps the First Amendment protections of the media and publishers in this "right-of-publicity" dispute.

    The original lawsuit was brought by Maureen Toffoloni, whose daughter, Nancy Benoit, had posed nude for a photographer more than two decades ago. Toffoloni claims that her daughter, who was also known by the wrestling moniker Woman, had asked immediately after the shoot to have the photos and video destroyed and believed that photographer Mark Samansky had done so.

    He later sold stills from the video to Hustler, a men's magazine founded by Larry Flynt that publishes racy material. The photos were published in the March 2008 issue.

    The murders had occurred the previous summer. At the center of the crimes was Chris Benoit, a Canadian-born athlete who worked for several professional wrestling circuits, including the popular World Wrestling Entertainment. In 2000, he married Nancy Sullivan, a Florida native who had become a well-known wrestling manager after her time in the ring. Their son, Daniel, was born earlier that year.

    Police say the crimes occurred over a three-day period in June 2007 at the Atlanta-area home of the Benoits. Investigators concluded that Chris Benoit first bound his 43-year-old wife and strangled her. The 7-year-old boy was then drugged and strangled. The man then committed suicide by hanging himself with a weight machine. No formal motive was ever established.

    CNN reported at the time that doctors found testosterone, painkillers and anti-anxiety drugs in the body of 40-year-old Chris Benoit, according to Georgia's chief medical examiner. Performance-enhancing anabolic steroids were later found in the home.

    Weeks after the killings, a study of Chris Benoit's brain showed damage from "prior repetitive injury." His father, Michael Benoit, said on CNN's "Larry King Live" that a series of concussions from his high-flying moves in the ring were in part to blame.

    Georgia has a law similar to many states' recognizing the right to privacy against "the appropriation of another's name and likeness ... without consent and for the financial gain of the appropriator." That would include "a private citizen, entertainer, or a public figure who is not a public official" like a legislator.

    The state's high court ruled against Hustler magazine in June, finding that a "brief biography" of Nancy Benoit and her murder accompanying the nude photos did not represent a "newsworthy article."

    "The photographs published by [Flynt] neither relate to the incident of public concern conceptually [the murders] nor correspond with the time period during which Benoit was rendered, against her will, the subject of public scrutiny," the state court wrote. "Were we to hold otherwise, [Flynt] would be free to publish any nude photograph of almost anyone without their permission, simply because the fact they were caught nude on camera strikes someone as 'newsworthy.' Surely that debases the very concept of a right to privacy."

    The state justices said "crude though the concept may seem," Nancy Benoit's mother is now entitled to control such images "in order to maximize the economic benefit to be derived from her daughter's posthumous fame." Such power is known legally as the "right of publicity."

    Flynt and the photographer, Samansky, later filed the appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court and had the support of several media organizations.

    In a brief filed in support of Hustler, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press said the Georgia ruling "makes no sense, as it goes well beyond the photographs that appear in magazines such as petitioner's to affect all news-gathering."

    The group noted that other courts have long recognized a broadly read "newsworthiness" standard for commercial media like CNN and that such specific "dissection" of content-based stories and pictorials by judges would cripple editorial decision-making by all news outlets.

    The case is LFP Publishing Group (dba Hustler Magazine) v. Maureen Toffoloni, as administrator and personal representative of the estate of Nancy E. Benoit (09-625).
    http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/03/01/...acy/index.html <
    Wrestling star Chris Benoit killed his wife, Nancy, their son and himself in their Georgia home in 2007.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    For any quirk of fate we may arrange.
    We are not "meek" or "mild";
    Don't turn your back when twilight dims the sky -
    We'll haunt the perpetrators till they Die
    "Rescuing one animal may not change the world, but for that animal their world is changed forever!" - Unknown

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    Great Duke Aslan's Avatar
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    I don't know how it works but once you pose and are paid, doesn't that make the pictures property of the photographer?
    Kind of like Madonna's little scandal back in the 80's when Playboy ran her pics from back in her weirdo "I don't shave my armpits" phase.
    I agree it was in poor taste for Hustler to run them but then again I would never accuse Hustler (or Larry Flynt) of having taste to begin with.

    The state's high court ruled against Hustler magazine in June, finding that a "brief biography" of Nancy Benoit and her murder accompanying the nude photos did not represent a "newsworthy article."

    "The photographs published by [Flynt] neither relate to the incident of public concern conceptually [the murders] nor correspond with the time period during which Benoit was rendered, against her will, the subject of public scrutiny," the state court wrote. "Were we to hold otherwise, [Flynt] would be free to publish any nude photograph of almost anyone without their permission, simply because the fact they were caught nude on camera strikes someone as 'newsworthy.' Surely that debases the very concept of a right to privacy."
    This is where I'm confused. I'm sure I'm wrong but I have to ask. Doesn't being on tv as the manager of your husband in effect 'make you a public figure'?
    It's not like you or I were out sunbathing while going through our normal and happy lives on the other side of a camera. That's stalking.
    This person sought out a photographer and was paid for the shots. Obviously more than the average person due to her resume and what the publicity could bring to the table.

    What happened to her was TERRIBLE and may her husband rot in hell for doing that and then waiting a good 24 hours and killing their 7 year old precious little boy.
    My questions are more about legality because her mom is pissing me off
    The state justices said "crude though the concept may seem," Nancy Benoit's mother is now entitled to control such images "in order to maximize the economic benefit to be derived from her daughter's posthumous fame." Such power is known legally as the "right of publicity."
    So mom wasn't that offended. She just wants to make sure when the pictures are printed, she's the one getting paid.
    *spit*
    Last edited by Aslan; March 1st, 2010 at 06:19 PM.
    There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal. Nations, cultures, arts, civilization -- these are mortal, and their life is to ours as the life of a gnat. But it is immortals whom we joke with, work with, marry, snub, and exploit ~ C. S. Lewis

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    Yeah I thought so too.As far as I know once your paid the fee agreed upon and sign the papers they own that roll of film.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    For any quirk of fate we may arrange.
    We are not "meek" or "mild";
    Don't turn your back when twilight dims the sky -
    We'll haunt the perpetrators till they Die
    "Rescuing one animal may not change the world, but for that animal their world is changed forever!" - Unknown

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    Great Duke Aslan's Avatar
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    He shouldn't have printed those pictures and she (and her son) shouldn't have died that way. Again though I think it's been established that Larry Flynt will run around doing anything he can for attention.
    I'm just wondering why the court pointed out that he didn't post the pics along with how she was murdered, thus making it less 'newsworthy'.
    Not sure about you because I don't read the nudie mags but...um. Wouldn't that be kind of creepy? Is a magazine known for crude pictures obligated to also run a news story with every layout they display?
    "Enjoy her now on her back, she was strangled to death you know"
    That doesn't seem like such a selling point. Her name had been in the news, he bought the pictures and ran them. As much as I can't stand him, it seems fair game at the same time.

    Boy do I loathe him. Her mom is no saint either. I would have much preferred to read "she is now destroying all pictures of her daughter that she knows Nancy would not want seen"
    Instead with this lawsuit and wanting all the money she can get, she brought it back to the surface.
    THANKS MOM
    Last edited by Aslan; March 1st, 2010 at 08:47 PM.
    There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal. Nations, cultures, arts, civilization -- these are mortal, and their life is to ours as the life of a gnat. But it is immortals whom we joke with, work with, marry, snub, and exploit ~ C. S. Lewis

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    Hustler Wins Lawsuit About Using Nancy Toffolini Benoit Pictures

    ATLANTA -- A federal appeals court has sided with a racy magazine in a dispute over nude pictures of a model published after she was killed by her professional wrestler husband.

    The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday said there wasn't enough evidence to support a jury's decision to make Hustler Magazine pay almost $20 million to the family of Nancy Toffolini Benoit.

    [...]
    Benoit's family said Nancy never gave permission to publish the 24-year-old photos, while the magazine said it could print them because they were newsworthy.

    The jury's 2011 decision to penalize the magazine $19.6 million was later reduced to $250,000, which was also vacated by the court.
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/0...html?ref=crime
    Hustler magazine published nude photos of Nancy Benoit after she was murdered by her husband wrestler Chris Benoit in 2007.
    Last edited by Whisper; May 1st, 2012 at 11:09 PM.

    For every murdered child
    We fly with all prevailing winds of change,
    For any quirk of fate we may arrange.
    We are not "meek" or "mild";
    Don't turn your back when twilight dims the sky -
    We'll haunt the perpetrators till they Die
    "Rescuing one animal may not change the world, but for that animal their world is changed forever!" - Unknown

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