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Ronaldo rape lawsuit dismissed by US judge in Las Vegas

A lawsuit brought against Cristiano Ronaldo by a woman who accused the Manchester United star of sexual assault has been dismissed by a US district judge in Las Vegas.

Federal judge Jennifer Dorsey ruled that the suit filed by Kathryn Mayorga was based on "purloined" confidential documents obtained by her attorney which had "tainted" her case.

Last year, another Las Vegas court had also recommended dismissal due to the behaviour of Mayorga's legal counsel.

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What did Judge Dorsey about case against Ronaldo?

According to the judge's written verdict, “Mayorga loses her opportunity to pursue this case and attempt to unwind the settlement of claims that, themselves, implicate serious allegations of a highly personal nature.

“But in light of the depth and breadth with which the ill-gotten information has saturated her claims and other filings—and likely her memory and perceptions of key facts—any other sanction would be an inadequate remedy. 

"Nothing less than a with-prejudice dismissal will purge the taint that has permeated this case from its very inception and preserve the integrity of the litigation process.”

What were the documents in question?

Mayorga's counsel, Leslie Stovall, had obtained documents related to the sexual assault case from Football Leaks creator Rui Pinto, which the judge ruled were confidential and privileged and therefore inadmissible as evidence.

“Stovall’s repeated use of stolen, privileged documents to prosecute this case has every indication of bad-faith conduct,” the judge added. “And because the record shows that he and Mayorga have extensively reviewed these documents and used them to fashion the very basis of Mayorga’s claims, simply disqualifying Stovall will not purge the prejudice from their misuse.

“Stovall deliberately sought out his adversary’s hacked, internal, privileged communications. Once he received them, he didn’t seek ethical guidance on how to handle these clearly sensitive documents.

"Instead, he gave them to his client, ensuring that they would contaminate her memory and perception of events, and he built her complaint on their contents, as evidenced by plaintiff’s sworn verification.

"With that adulterated die cast, he then sat on the documents for fourteen months, nine of which he was actively litigating this case.”

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