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Wednesday, 20th August 2008

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Mosley sues German paper over allegations



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Published Date: 26 July 2008
FIA president Max Mosley has filed a lawsuit against the publisher of Germany's largest newspaper that is similar to the case he won over the News of the World this week, contending that his sex acts with several prostitutes did not have a Nazi theme.
According to the lawsuit, Mosley is demanding 1 million (£788,000) from Bild newspaper and 500,000 (£394,000) from its online edition in damages for their text, photo and video reports on Mosley's sadomasochistic encounter in March.

Mosley is pres
ident of the FIA, the motorsport world governing body. He is the son of the late Oswald Mosley, Britain's best-known fascist politician in the 1930s, who had Adolf Hitler as a guest at his wedding.

Mosley won a privacy-invasion lawsuit over the News of the World claim that his sex games had a Nazi connotation, and High Court judge David Eady ruled that the tabloid must pay Mosley £60,000 in damages plus legal costs for the story.

Mosley's legal costs are estimated at about £450,000. The newspaper must also pay its own legal costs of about £400,000.

The 68-year-old Mosley admits the encounter with sex workers, but maintained it was private and there were no Nazi overtones.

The prosecutor's office in Berlin opened an investigation based on Mosley's lawsuit, according to spokeswoman Simone Herbeth. The lawsuit is over breach of trust, violations of copyright laws and fraud, claiming Axel Springer AG, publisher of Bild, had spent money for "illegal purposes" by paying for the video and photos of the orgy.







The full article contains 268 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 26 July 2008 1:19 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
 
  

 
 


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