Bryant, 40, was initially awarded $16 million in her case last week after a jury unanimously found that deputies and firefighters caused her emotional distress by sharing gruesome photos of her husband, Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant , and their daughter Gianna, who died in a helicopter crash in 2020 along with seven others. Her co-defendant, Chris Chester, who lost his wife, Sarah, and daughter, Peyton, in the Calabasas, California crash, was awarded $15 million by the same jury in the case, bringing the total damages to $31 million. But it was an eagle-eyed juror who spotted an error on the verdict form and then informed the court with a jury memo explaining that Bryant should be awarded $1.5 million for emotional distress, not $2.5 million, he said. USA Today. Bryant was also awarded $13.5 million in other damages for emotional distress — so the change from $2.5 million to $1.5 million means each plaintiff will be awarded $15 million each. “The intent of the nine jurors was to award both plaintiffs Vanessa Bryant and Christopher Chester equally,” Judge John Walter told USA Today. It is now set to drop to $15 million, a change Bryant agreed to, with her attorney Louis Lee calling the correction “exactly so.” The jury found that sheriff’s deputies and firefighters who responded to the scene of the helicopter crash in January 2020 illegally took photos of the carnage, including the shattered remains of the Lakers legend and their daughter Gianna. Vanessa Bryant, 40, walked out of court Wednesday after a jury found Los Angeles County liable for paying the widow in the deaths of her husband Kobe Bryant and their daughter. She was originally awarded $16 million, but is reduced by $1 million due to a clerical error Vanessa Bryant and Chris Chester, whose wife and daughter died in the crash, sued for emotional damages over the photos and have now been awarded $15 million. Chester, who was seen leaving Los Angeles Federal Court this month, was also awarded $15 million The judge told USA Today that it was unnecessary to summon the jury because of Bryant’s agreement to accept $1 million less. Bryant’s attorney says she reportedly still plans to donate the $15 million she won from Los Angeles County to a foundation that her late husband Kobe Bryant loved dearly. “In this whole case, Ms. Bryant was just looking for accountability,” Lee told USA Today. “He never asked for a specific dollar amount and trusted the jury to deliver justice.” All proceeds will go to the Mamba & Mambacita Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to creating a positive impact for underserved athletes and boys and girls in sports. Bryant said she wanted the money to “shed light on the legacy of Kobe and Gigi.” Bryant broke down in tears as the verdict was announced Wednesday. She was comforted by her daughter Natalia, whose 13-year-old sister Gianna died in the helicopter that killed the 41-year-old basketball superstar. Vanessa Bryant is set to donate the $15 million she won from Los Angeles County to a foundation dearly loved by her late husband Kobe Bryant. Pictured, an Instagram post from Vanessa’s Instagram account after the verdict on Wednesday Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna died in January 2020 in a helicopter crash in Calabasas Bryant’s co-defendant Chris Chester, who lost his wife Sarah, 45, and daughter Peyton, 13, in the helicopter crash that killed nine, was awarded $15 million Chester’s co-defendant, who lost his wife Sarah, 45, and daughter Peyton, 13, in the helicopter crash that killed nine, has been awarded $15 million The court found that sheriff’s deputies and firefighters who rushed to the scene of the January 2020 attack illegally took photos of the carnage, including the mangled remains of the Los Angeles Lakers legend and his daughter. In a small victory for firefighters, the jury found that they have no custom or practice of sharing photos of deceased people – only that the fire department lacks adequate training and policies. The foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to creating positive impact for underserved athletes and boys and girls in sports They concluded, however, that the sheriff’s department has a practice of sharing photos of accidents, as well as a lack of training. Her lawyer, Luis Li, released a statement last week: “From the beginning, Vanessa Bryant has only sought accountability, but our legal system does not allow her to mandate better policies, more training or discipline of officers. “These measures are the responsibility of the sheriff and fire departments — responsibilities that Ms. Bryant’s efforts have exposed as woefully inadequate, even granting amnesty to offenders. Ms. Bryant was courageous and never wavered, even when the county tried to force her to undergo an involuntary psychiatric evaluation. He is deeply grateful to Ralph Mendez and Luella Weireter, the good Samaritans who brought to light the age-old practice of taking and sharing photos of accident and crime victims for no legitimate purpose.” Firefighters work at the scene of the helicopter crash that killed former NBA star Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna in Calabasas Investigators are seen examining the wreckage of the helicopter after the crash Vanessa, dressed in white on Wednesday, told jurors during the two-week trial in Los Angeles that she feared images from the crash scene would become public The civil trial in Los Angeles heard how some of those first responders showed the photos to members of the public – including a bartender – while a deputy texted them to a friend as the pair played video games. In its defense, Los Angeles County said the photos were never made public and officials diligently tried to purge them from devices. “To claim privacy and then release all these details — it defies logic,” Mira Hashmall, the county’s attorney, said in her closing statement. “This is a photo holder, but there are no photos.” But the two-week trial heard how Vanessa Bryant and Chris Chester, whose wife and daughter also died in the crash, live in fear of those pictures one day appearing online. Los Angeles Lakers legend Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gianna Maria-Honore Bryant, his wife Vanessa and daughter Natalia Diamante Bryant are seen before a 2017 NCAA women’s college basketball game Vanessa Bryant and husband Kobe are seen at Sean Combs’ 50th Birthday Celebration in Los Angeles in December 2019 Bryant was a five-time NBA champion in a career that began in 1996 right out of high school and lasted until his retirement in 2016 An investigation into the crash determined that the pilot was likely disoriented after flying the Sikorsky S-76 into fog. Bryant is widely recognized as one of the greatest basketball players of all time, a figure who became the face of his sport during two glittering decades with the Lakers. He was a five-time NBA champion in a career that began in 1996 right out of high school and lasted until his retirement in 2016.
title: “Vanessa Bryant Jury Award In Kobe Bryant Photo Trial Reduced By 1 Million After Clerical Error Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-20” author: “Terry Herren”
Bryant, 40, was initially awarded $16 million in her case last week after a jury unanimously found that deputies and firefighters caused her emotional distress by sharing gruesome photos of her husband, Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant , and their daughter Gianna, who died in a helicopter crash in 2020 along with seven others. Her co-defendant, Chris Chester, who lost his wife, Sarah, and daughter, Peyton, in the Calabasas, California crash, was awarded $15 million by the same jury in the case, bringing the total damages to $31 million. But it was an eagle-eyed juror who spotted an error on the verdict form and then informed the court with a jury memo explaining that Bryant should be awarded $1.5 million for emotional distress, not $2.5 million, he said. USA Today. Bryant was also awarded $13.5 million in other damages for emotional distress — so the change from $2.5 million to $1.5 million means each plaintiff will be awarded $15 million each. “The intent of the nine jurors was to award both plaintiffs Vanessa Bryant and Christopher Chester equally,” Judge John Walter told USA Today. It is now set to drop to $15 million, a change Bryant agreed to, with her attorney Louis Lee calling the correction “exactly so.” The jury found that sheriff’s deputies and firefighters who responded to the scene of the helicopter crash in January 2020 illegally took photos of the carnage, including the shattered remains of the Lakers legend and their daughter Gianna. Vanessa Bryant, 40, walked out of court Wednesday after a jury found Los Angeles County liable for paying the widow in the deaths of her husband Kobe Bryant and their daughter. She was originally awarded $16 million, but is reduced by $1 million due to a clerical error Vanessa Bryant and Chris Chester, whose wife and daughter died in the crash, sued for emotional damages over the photos and have now been awarded $15 million. Chester, who was seen leaving Los Angeles Federal Court this month, was also awarded $15 million The judge told USA Today that it was unnecessary to summon the jury because of Bryant’s agreement to accept $1 million less. Bryant’s attorney says she reportedly still plans to donate the $15 million she won from Los Angeles County to a foundation that her late husband Kobe Bryant loved dearly. “In this whole case, Ms. Bryant was just looking for accountability,” Lee told USA Today. “He never asked for a specific dollar amount and trusted the jury to deliver justice.” All proceeds will go to the Mamba & Mambacita Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to creating a positive impact for underserved athletes and boys and girls in sports. Bryant said she wanted the money to “shed light on the legacy of Kobe and Gigi.” Bryant broke down in tears as the verdict was announced Wednesday. She was comforted by her daughter Natalia, whose 13-year-old sister Gianna died in the helicopter that killed the 41-year-old basketball superstar. Vanessa Bryant is set to donate the $15 million she won from Los Angeles County to a foundation dearly loved by her late husband Kobe Bryant. Pictured, an Instagram post from Vanessa’s Instagram account after the verdict on Wednesday Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna died in January 2020 in a helicopter crash in Calabasas Bryant’s co-defendant Chris Chester, who lost his wife Sarah, 45, and daughter Peyton, 13, in the helicopter crash that killed nine, was awarded $15 million Chester’s co-defendant, who lost his wife Sarah, 45, and daughter Peyton, 13, in the helicopter crash that killed nine, has been awarded $15 million The court found that sheriff’s deputies and firefighters who rushed to the scene of the January 2020 attack illegally took photos of the carnage, including the mangled remains of the Los Angeles Lakers legend and his daughter. In a small victory for firefighters, the jury found that they have no custom or practice of sharing photos of deceased people – only that the fire department lacks adequate training and policies. The foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to creating positive impact for underserved athletes and boys and girls in sports They concluded, however, that the sheriff’s department has a practice of sharing photos of accidents, as well as a lack of training. Her lawyer, Luis Li, released a statement last week: “From the beginning, Vanessa Bryant has only sought accountability, but our legal system does not allow her to mandate better policies, more training or discipline of officers. “These measures are the responsibility of the sheriff and fire departments — responsibilities that Ms. Bryant’s efforts have exposed as woefully inadequate, even granting amnesty to offenders. Ms. Bryant was courageous and never wavered, even when the county tried to force her to undergo an involuntary psychiatric evaluation. He is deeply grateful to Ralph Mendez and Luella Weireter, the good Samaritans who brought to light the age-old practice of taking and sharing photos of accident and crime victims for no legitimate purpose.” Firefighters work at the scene of the helicopter crash that killed former NBA star Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna in Calabasas Investigators are seen examining the wreckage of the helicopter after the crash Vanessa, dressed in white on Wednesday, told jurors during the two-week trial in Los Angeles that she feared images from the crash scene would become public The civil trial in Los Angeles heard how some of those first responders showed the photos to members of the public – including a bartender – while a deputy texted them to a friend as the pair played video games. In its defense, Los Angeles County said the photos were never made public and officials diligently tried to purge them from devices. “To claim privacy and then release all these details — it defies logic,” Mira Hashmall, the county’s attorney, said in her closing statement. “This is a photo holder, but there are no photos.” But the two-week trial heard how Vanessa Bryant and Chris Chester, whose wife and daughter also died in the crash, live in fear of those pictures one day appearing online. Los Angeles Lakers legend Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gianna Maria-Honore Bryant, his wife Vanessa and daughter Natalia Diamante Bryant are seen before a 2017 NCAA women’s college basketball game Vanessa Bryant and husband Kobe are seen at Sean Combs’ 50th Birthday Celebration in Los Angeles in December 2019 Bryant was a five-time NBA champion in a career that began in 1996 right out of high school and lasted until his retirement in 2016 An investigation into the crash determined that the pilot was likely disoriented after flying the Sikorsky S-76 into fog. Bryant is widely recognized as one of the greatest basketball players of all time, a figure who became the face of his sport during two glittering decades with the Lakers. He was a five-time NBA champion in a career that began in 1996 right out of high school and lasted until his retirement in 2016.
title: “Vanessa Bryant Jury Award In Kobe Bryant Photo Trial Reduced By 1 Million After Clerical Error Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-10-31” author: “Xavier Garcia”
Bryant, 40, was initially awarded $16 million in her case last week after a jury unanimously found that deputies and firefighters caused her emotional distress by sharing gruesome photos of her husband, Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant , and their daughter Gianna, who died in a helicopter crash in 2020 along with seven others. Her co-defendant, Chris Chester, who lost his wife, Sarah, and daughter, Peyton, in the Calabasas, California crash, was awarded $15 million by the same jury in the case, bringing the total damages to $31 million. But it was an eagle-eyed juror who spotted an error on the verdict form and then informed the court with a jury memo explaining that Bryant should be awarded $1.5 million for emotional distress, not $2.5 million, he said. USA Today. Bryant was also awarded $13.5 million in other damages for emotional distress — so the change from $2.5 million to $1.5 million means each plaintiff will be awarded $15 million each. “The intent of the nine jurors was to award both plaintiffs Vanessa Bryant and Christopher Chester equally,” Judge John Walter told USA Today. It is now set to drop to $15 million, a change Bryant agreed to, with her attorney Louis Lee calling the correction “exactly so.” The jury found that sheriff’s deputies and firefighters who responded to the scene of the helicopter crash in January 2020 illegally took photos of the carnage, including the shattered remains of the Lakers legend and their daughter Gianna. Vanessa Bryant, 40, walked out of court Wednesday after a jury found Los Angeles County liable for paying the widow in the deaths of her husband Kobe Bryant and their daughter. She was originally awarded $16 million, but is reduced by $1 million due to a clerical error Vanessa Bryant and Chris Chester, whose wife and daughter died in the crash, sued for emotional damages over the photos and have now been awarded $15 million. Chester, who was seen leaving Los Angeles Federal Court this month, was also awarded $15 million The judge told USA Today that it was unnecessary to summon the jury because of Bryant’s agreement to accept $1 million less. Bryant’s attorney says she reportedly still plans to donate the $15 million she won from Los Angeles County to a foundation that her late husband Kobe Bryant loved dearly. “In this whole case, Ms. Bryant was just looking for accountability,” Lee told USA Today. “He never asked for a specific dollar amount and trusted the jury to deliver justice.” All proceeds will go to the Mamba & Mambacita Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to creating a positive impact for underserved athletes and boys and girls in sports. Bryant said she wanted the money to “shed light on the legacy of Kobe and Gigi.” Bryant broke down in tears as the verdict was announced Wednesday. She was comforted by her daughter Natalia, whose 13-year-old sister Gianna died in the helicopter that killed the 41-year-old basketball superstar. Vanessa Bryant is set to donate the $15 million she won from Los Angeles County to a foundation dearly loved by her late husband Kobe Bryant. Pictured, an Instagram post from Vanessa’s Instagram account after the verdict on Wednesday Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna died in January 2020 in a helicopter crash in Calabasas Bryant’s co-defendant Chris Chester, who lost his wife Sarah, 45, and daughter Peyton, 13, in the helicopter crash that killed nine, was awarded $15 million Chester’s co-defendant, who lost his wife Sarah, 45, and daughter Peyton, 13, in the helicopter crash that killed nine, has been awarded $15 million The court found that sheriff’s deputies and firefighters who rushed to the scene of the January 2020 attack illegally took photos of the carnage, including the mangled remains of the Los Angeles Lakers legend and his daughter. In a small victory for firefighters, the jury found that they have no custom or practice of sharing photos of deceased people – only that the fire department lacks adequate training and policies. The foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to creating positive impact for underserved athletes and boys and girls in sports They concluded, however, that the sheriff’s department has a practice of sharing photos of accidents, as well as a lack of training. Her lawyer, Luis Li, released a statement last week: “From the beginning, Vanessa Bryant has only sought accountability, but our legal system does not allow her to mandate better policies, more training or discipline of officers. “These measures are the responsibility of the sheriff and fire departments — responsibilities that Ms. Bryant’s efforts have exposed as woefully inadequate, even granting amnesty to offenders. Ms. Bryant was courageous and never wavered, even when the county tried to force her to undergo an involuntary psychiatric evaluation. He is deeply grateful to Ralph Mendez and Luella Weireter, the good Samaritans who brought to light the age-old practice of taking and sharing photos of accident and crime victims for no legitimate purpose.” Firefighters work at the scene of the helicopter crash that killed former NBA star Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna in Calabasas Investigators are seen examining the wreckage of the helicopter after the crash Vanessa, dressed in white on Wednesday, told jurors during the two-week trial in Los Angeles that she feared images from the crash scene would become public The civil trial in Los Angeles heard how some of those first responders showed the photos to members of the public – including a bartender – while a deputy texted them to a friend as the pair played video games. In its defense, Los Angeles County said the photos were never made public and officials diligently tried to purge them from devices. “To claim privacy and then release all these details — it defies logic,” Mira Hashmall, the county’s attorney, said in her closing statement. “This is a photo holder, but there are no photos.” But the two-week trial heard how Vanessa Bryant and Chris Chester, whose wife and daughter also died in the crash, live in fear of those pictures one day appearing online. Los Angeles Lakers legend Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gianna Maria-Honore Bryant, his wife Vanessa and daughter Natalia Diamante Bryant are seen before a 2017 NCAA women’s college basketball game Vanessa Bryant and husband Kobe are seen at Sean Combs’ 50th Birthday Celebration in Los Angeles in December 2019 Bryant was a five-time NBA champion in a career that began in 1996 right out of high school and lasted until his retirement in 2016 An investigation into the crash determined that the pilot was likely disoriented after flying the Sikorsky S-76 into fog. Bryant is widely recognized as one of the greatest basketball players of all time, a figure who became the face of his sport during two glittering decades with the Lakers. He was a five-time NBA champion in a career that began in 1996 right out of high school and lasted until his retirement in 2016.
title: “Vanessa Bryant Jury Award In Kobe Bryant Photo Trial Reduced By 1 Million After Clerical Error Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-15” author: “Rebecca Poland”
Bryant, 40, was initially awarded $16 million in her case last week after a jury unanimously found that deputies and firefighters caused her emotional distress by sharing gruesome photos of her husband, Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant , and their daughter Gianna, who died in a helicopter crash in 2020 along with seven others. Her co-defendant, Chris Chester, who lost his wife, Sarah, and daughter, Peyton, in the Calabasas, California crash, was awarded $15 million by the same jury in the case, bringing the total damages to $31 million. But it was an eagle-eyed juror who spotted an error on the verdict form and then informed the court with a jury memo explaining that Bryant should be awarded $1.5 million for emotional distress, not $2.5 million, he said. USA Today. Bryant was also awarded $13.5 million in other damages for emotional distress — so the change from $2.5 million to $1.5 million means each plaintiff will be awarded $15 million each. “The intent of the nine jurors was to award both plaintiffs Vanessa Bryant and Christopher Chester equally,” Judge John Walter told USA Today. It is now set to drop to $15 million, a change Bryant agreed to, with her attorney Louis Lee calling the correction “exactly so.” The jury found that sheriff’s deputies and firefighters who responded to the scene of the helicopter crash in January 2020 illegally took photos of the carnage, including the shattered remains of the Lakers legend and their daughter Gianna. Vanessa Bryant, 40, walked out of court Wednesday after a jury found Los Angeles County liable for paying the widow in the deaths of her husband Kobe Bryant and their daughter. She was originally awarded $16 million, but is reduced by $1 million due to a clerical error Vanessa Bryant and Chris Chester, whose wife and daughter died in the crash, sued for emotional damages over the photos and have now been awarded $15 million. Chester, who was seen leaving Los Angeles Federal Court this month, was also awarded $15 million The judge told USA Today that it was unnecessary to summon the jury because of Bryant’s agreement to accept $1 million less. Bryant’s attorney says she reportedly still plans to donate the $15 million she won from Los Angeles County to a foundation that her late husband Kobe Bryant loved dearly. “In this whole case, Ms. Bryant was just looking for accountability,” Lee told USA Today. “He never asked for a specific dollar amount and trusted the jury to deliver justice.” All proceeds will go to the Mamba & Mambacita Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to creating a positive impact for underserved athletes and boys and girls in sports. Bryant said she wanted the money to “shed light on the legacy of Kobe and Gigi.” Bryant broke down in tears as the verdict was announced Wednesday. She was comforted by her daughter Natalia, whose 13-year-old sister Gianna died in the helicopter that killed the 41-year-old basketball superstar. Vanessa Bryant is set to donate the $15 million she won from Los Angeles County to a foundation dearly loved by her late husband Kobe Bryant. Pictured, an Instagram post from Vanessa’s Instagram account after the verdict on Wednesday Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna died in January 2020 in a helicopter crash in Calabasas Bryant’s co-defendant Chris Chester, who lost his wife Sarah, 45, and daughter Peyton, 13, in the helicopter crash that killed nine, was awarded $15 million Chester’s co-defendant, who lost his wife Sarah, 45, and daughter Peyton, 13, in the helicopter crash that killed nine, has been awarded $15 million The court found that sheriff’s deputies and firefighters who rushed to the scene of the January 2020 attack illegally took photos of the carnage, including the mangled remains of the Los Angeles Lakers legend and his daughter. In a small victory for firefighters, the jury found that they have no custom or practice of sharing photos of deceased people – only that the fire department lacks adequate training and policies. The foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to creating positive impact for underserved athletes and boys and girls in sports They concluded, however, that the sheriff’s department has a practice of sharing photos of accidents, as well as a lack of training. Her lawyer, Luis Li, released a statement last week: “From the beginning, Vanessa Bryant has only sought accountability, but our legal system does not allow her to mandate better policies, more training or discipline of officers. “These measures are the responsibility of the sheriff and fire departments — responsibilities that Ms. Bryant’s efforts have exposed as woefully inadequate, even granting amnesty to offenders. Ms. Bryant was courageous and never wavered, even when the county tried to force her to undergo an involuntary psychiatric evaluation. He is deeply grateful to Ralph Mendez and Luella Weireter, the good Samaritans who brought to light the age-old practice of taking and sharing photos of accident and crime victims for no legitimate purpose.” Firefighters work at the scene of the helicopter crash that killed former NBA star Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna in Calabasas Investigators are seen examining the wreckage of the helicopter after the crash Vanessa, dressed in white on Wednesday, told jurors during the two-week trial in Los Angeles that she feared images from the crash scene would become public The civil trial in Los Angeles heard how some of those first responders showed the photos to members of the public – including a bartender – while a deputy texted them to a friend as the pair played video games. In its defense, Los Angeles County said the photos were never made public and officials diligently tried to purge them from devices. “To claim privacy and then release all these details — it defies logic,” Mira Hashmall, the county’s attorney, said in her closing statement. “This is a photo holder, but there are no photos.” But the two-week trial heard how Vanessa Bryant and Chris Chester, whose wife and daughter also died in the crash, live in fear of those pictures one day appearing online. Los Angeles Lakers legend Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gianna Maria-Honore Bryant, his wife Vanessa and daughter Natalia Diamante Bryant are seen before a 2017 NCAA women’s college basketball game Vanessa Bryant and husband Kobe are seen at Sean Combs’ 50th Birthday Celebration in Los Angeles in December 2019 Bryant was a five-time NBA champion in a career that began in 1996 right out of high school and lasted until his retirement in 2016 An investigation into the crash determined that the pilot was likely disoriented after flying the Sikorsky S-76 into fog. Bryant is widely recognized as one of the greatest basketball players of all time, a figure who became the face of his sport during two glittering decades with the Lakers. He was a five-time NBA champion in a career that began in 1996 right out of high school and lasted until his retirement in 2016.