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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Joe Francis Representing Himself in Federal Court in Florida

Joe Francis Representing Himself in Federal Court in Florida

PANAMA CITY, Fla., March 30, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Girls Gone Wild founder Joe Francis, facing the same judge in Panama City, Florida, who first sent him to jail back in 2007, is vigorously defending himself in Federal Court and, to say the least, things are getting wild. Not since Larry Flynt's outburst in the Supreme Court have we seen such fireworks in a courtroom.

Francis came face to face in court with the first of the four women suing him in a civil case dating back to 2002. The women, identified only by their first initials, allege they were unwillingly filmed underage for a GGW video. But the videos, which the jury may now never see, paint a very different picture of the troubled young women on the stand.

"Plaintiff B" claims she had never heard of GGW videos prior to her appearance and testified her life spiraled out of control since she appeared in a GGW video. Teary eyed, she says she had to drop out of college, move place to place to avoid being recognized, hasn't been able to hold down a job, and has been hospitalized repeatedly for weeks at a time. She even alleged her father died of a heart attack after he learned of her participation in a GGW video, but then addressed Francis directly by saying "I never said Girls Gone Wild killed my father."

In a heated cross-examination, Francis surprised the courtroom by getting "Plaintiff B" to admit she had been paid in the past to appear on camera. Under oath, Plaintiff B -- a self-admitted geometry scholar -- couldn't answer Francis' basic question as to what a right triangle was.

The deck appears stacked against Francis, as the judge denied Francis' right to show the jury a damaging video of "Plaintiff B" willingly participating in a GGW video. The judge, who has battled with Francis since the onset of this case, has ordered Francis not to ask the women about their ages at the time of the incident or whether they willingly signed waivers claiming they were 18.

So how does Francis -- who needs to convince a jury of 8 women -- get a fair shot at justice? "I respect this judge, I have trust in this jury, and I have a particular fondness for Lady Justice."

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20110330/LA73944)

SOURCE GGW Direct LLC

Photo:http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20110330/LA73944
http://photoarchive.ap.org/
GGW Direct LLC

CONTACT: Lisa Dufort of GGW Direct LLC, +1-917-279-0848, LisaDufort@gmail.com


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