Three
former World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. (WWE) wrestlers filed a class
action in California against their onetime employer, claiming it “has
for decades subjected its wrestlers to extreme physical brutality that
it knew, or should have known, caused...latent conditions and long term
irreversible bodily damage, including brain damage.” News of the lawsuit
filed Thursday was first reported by TMZ.
Russ
McCullough (a.k.a., Big Russ McCullough), Ryan Sakoda and Matt Wiese
(a.k.a., Luther Reigns) seek damages for what they charge is WWE’s
“egregious mistreatment of its wrestlers for its own benefit, as well as
its concealment and denial of medical research and evidence concerning
traumatic brain injuries suffered by WWE wrestlers,” according to the
court document. They are represented by Michael McShane and Jonas P.
Mann of Audet & Partners LLP in San Francisco.
The class
action was filed on behalf of all current and former wrestlers who claim
to have suffered as a result of injuries sustained while working for
the WWE. The plaintiffs allege that the WWE “disavowed, concealed, and
prevented any medical care for these head injuries after they were
sustained and to date.”
The court document demands a jury
trial, an injunction prohibiting WWE from continuing the alleged conduct
and an order for medical monitoring, in addition to damages.
Jerry
McDevitt of the law firm K&L Gates, who acts as WWE’s outside
counsel, calls the lawsuit “defective,” “fraudulent” and “frivolous,”
and says it contains “fabricated claims” and “nonsense.” He adds that
this is not the first lawsuit to have been filed making virtually
“identical allegations,” pointing to a lawsuit filed last year in Oregon and one filed in January in Pennsylvania.
“All it takes is 50 bucks and a pen to file a lawsuit,” he says. “Whether you can prove the things you allege is another.”
The National Football League, the National Collegiate Athletic Association and other sports bodies have faced similar litigation concerning concussions suffered by players.
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