Jury selected in Vanessa Bryant's case against LA County over photos of Kobe's helicopter crash
A
jury of six women and four men was selected Wednesday in Vanessa Bryant's
lawsuit against Los Angeles County over gruesome photos taken of the fatal
helicopter crash that killed her husband Kobe, daughter Gianna and seven
others.
Opening
statements in the trial began Wednesday afternoon. The trial is
expected to last about two weeks, and witnesses are likely to include Vanessa
Bryant and LA County Sheriff Alex Villanueva.
The
jurors selected include a nun, someone who works in TV production for NBC
Universal, a college student, a real estate investor, a pharmaceutical
researcher, a computer science professor and a restaurant host.
Of
the 22 total potential jurors questioned, some mentioned having "strong
feelings" about Vanessa and/or Kobe Bryant. At least one potential juror
mentioned "strong feelings" about Villanueva. None of these people
were selected.
The
trial comes more than two years after the retired NBA legend Kobe Bryant, his
13-year-old daughter Gianna and seven other people died in a helicopter crash in Calabasas, California.
In
the federal lawsuit, Vanessa Bryant claimed that photos of the January 2020
crash were shared by county fire and sheriff's department employees in settings irrelevant
to the investigation, including at a bar. Filed in September 2020, the lawsuit
seeks undisclosed damages, claiming civil rights violations, negligence,
emotional distress and violation of privacy.
However, the county has argued that the "severe
emotional and mental injuries" were not caused by the county or the
photos, but by the fatal crash itself. The plaintiffs have not seen the crash
site photos, which "were never publicly disseminated," the county argued.
In
March 2020, LA County Sheriff Alex Villanueva said all of those photos had been
deleted and that eight sheriff's deputies were facing administrative action.
The
helicopter passengers were heading from Orange County to the Mamba Sports
Academy in Thousand Oaks for a youth basketball game in which Bryant was to
coach and Gianna and two others aboard were to play.
The National Transportation Safety Board determined the helicopter pilot pushed
the limits of bad weather flying rules, climbed into clouds, became disoriented
about the helicopter's position relative to the horizon and made a descending
left turn into a cloud-obscured hillside.
Bryant
played his entire professional career with the Los Angeles Lakers and won five
NBA championships before his retirement in April 2016.
California
Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an invasion-of-privacy bill called the "Kobe Bryant Act" in September 2020 that makes it illegal
for first responders to share photos of a dead person at a crime scene
"for any purpose other than an official law enforcement purpose." The
misdemeanor crime is punishable by up to $1,000 per violation.
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