Steve Moore files another lawsuit against Canucks forward Todd Bertuzzi
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at 18:34 on February 15, 2006, EST.
By STEVE ERWIN
TORONTO (CP) - Former NHLer Steve Moore has filed another lawsuit against the Todd Bertuzzi, placing a new legal hurdle in front of the Vancouver Canucks star while adding to Team Canada's distractions at the Winter Olympics.
Moore is seeking $15 million in lost wages and damages from Bertuzzi. Orca Bay, the parent company of the Canucks, is named along with the NHL team in the suit.
The latest lawsuit was filed in Ontario Superior Court, four months after a similar case in Denver was thrown out when a U.S. judge determined the suit would be better handled in Canada where its key defendants - Bertuzzi and the Canucks - are based.
Moore's lawyer, Tim Danson, said the suit had been filed but not yet served on Bertuzzi, who is in Italy at the Olympics with Team Canada.
Bertuzzi's agent, Pat Morris, said he was only aware of the suit based on media reports and couldn't comment.
News of the lawsuit came the same day that Bertuzzi and Canada played their first game in Turin.
The case is bound to spice the Canadian Olympic campaign, which is already dealing with the distraction of an alleged U.S. gambling ring that authorities say was financed by Wayne Gretzky's assistant coach at the Phoenix Coyotes. Gretzky is executive director of Team Canada.
Moore's lawyer, Tim Danson, denied there's any connection between the timing of the latest lawsuit and the Olympics.
Danson said the case was filed Tuesday in Toronto, one day before a two-year limitation on the filing of a lawsuit was set to expire.
The Moore attack took place March 8, 2004, when Bertuzzi grabbed him from behind, punched him in the head and drove his head into the ice. Moore, then with the Colorado Avalanche, suffered three fractured vertebrae in his neck, a concussion and other injuries.
A month earlier, on Feb. 16, Moore hit Canucks forward Markus Naslund with what Danson called a "clean check" that led to a "whole series of threats" against Moore, culminating with the Bertuzzi attack a month later in Vancouver.
The unpenalized hit on Naslund is included as evidence in the latest lawsuit, requiring Danson to file the suit before the two-year limitation in Ontario.
"There's nothing to the timing other than the fact that there's a limitation period," said Danson, who would not comment directly on the lawsuit.
Danson said he would have preferred reporters hadn't become aware of the suit.
"If we had our druthers, it wouldn't even be news - it would have been issued and no one would know about it until some time down the road. But that didn't work out for us," he said.
The lawsuit in Denver was filed in February 2004 because there's a one-year limitation on when lawsuits can be filed in Colorado. It was filed just days before reporters gathered for the NBA all-star game in Denver.
Bertuzzi was reinstated to the NHL in August after being indefinitely suspended and missing 13 regular-season games and the Stanley Cup playoffs in 2004, giving up about $502,000 US in salary. He is due to earn about $5.2 million US this season.
Bertuzzi faced up to 18 months in prison after Vancouver authorities charged him with assault. He pleaded guilty, and was then sentenced to probation and community service.
Bertuzzi has hoped to put the issue behind him in Turin.
"I think I'm deserving of the opportunity to be here," he said Tuesday prior to news of the lawsuit surfacing in Toronto. "My past play has done it. Unfortunately, there's been a gap in between with the lockout and some other stuff. So yes, I think I more than deserve to be here."
The latest lawsuit was filed in Ontario instead of B.C. because Moore lives in Ontario, where provincial law allows suits to be heard in the jurisdiction where the victim is allegedly suffering damages.
Danson declined comment when asked about Moore's condition.
http://start.shaw.ca/start/enCA/Sports/SportsNewsArticle.htm?src=s021535A.xml
The guy should be in jail for this. And fans are stupid enough that, oohh, he has done his time, the guy wasn't a good hockey player, he shouldn't get that much money.
I believe Moore should get every bit of money. His parents watched him as he was sucker punched by this bastard Bertuizzi and I think he should sue him for all he's got.
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at 18:34 on February 15, 2006, EST.
By STEVE ERWIN
TORONTO (CP) - Former NHLer Steve Moore has filed another lawsuit against the Todd Bertuzzi, placing a new legal hurdle in front of the Vancouver Canucks star while adding to Team Canada's distractions at the Winter Olympics.
Moore is seeking $15 million in lost wages and damages from Bertuzzi. Orca Bay, the parent company of the Canucks, is named along with the NHL team in the suit.
The latest lawsuit was filed in Ontario Superior Court, four months after a similar case in Denver was thrown out when a U.S. judge determined the suit would be better handled in Canada where its key defendants - Bertuzzi and the Canucks - are based.
Moore's lawyer, Tim Danson, said the suit had been filed but not yet served on Bertuzzi, who is in Italy at the Olympics with Team Canada.
Bertuzzi's agent, Pat Morris, said he was only aware of the suit based on media reports and couldn't comment.
News of the lawsuit came the same day that Bertuzzi and Canada played their first game in Turin.
The case is bound to spice the Canadian Olympic campaign, which is already dealing with the distraction of an alleged U.S. gambling ring that authorities say was financed by Wayne Gretzky's assistant coach at the Phoenix Coyotes. Gretzky is executive director of Team Canada.
Moore's lawyer, Tim Danson, denied there's any connection between the timing of the latest lawsuit and the Olympics.
Danson said the case was filed Tuesday in Toronto, one day before a two-year limitation on the filing of a lawsuit was set to expire.
The Moore attack took place March 8, 2004, when Bertuzzi grabbed him from behind, punched him in the head and drove his head into the ice. Moore, then with the Colorado Avalanche, suffered three fractured vertebrae in his neck, a concussion and other injuries.
A month earlier, on Feb. 16, Moore hit Canucks forward Markus Naslund with what Danson called a "clean check" that led to a "whole series of threats" against Moore, culminating with the Bertuzzi attack a month later in Vancouver.
The unpenalized hit on Naslund is included as evidence in the latest lawsuit, requiring Danson to file the suit before the two-year limitation in Ontario.
"There's nothing to the timing other than the fact that there's a limitation period," said Danson, who would not comment directly on the lawsuit.
Danson said he would have preferred reporters hadn't become aware of the suit.
"If we had our druthers, it wouldn't even be news - it would have been issued and no one would know about it until some time down the road. But that didn't work out for us," he said.
The lawsuit in Denver was filed in February 2004 because there's a one-year limitation on when lawsuits can be filed in Colorado. It was filed just days before reporters gathered for the NBA all-star game in Denver.
Bertuzzi was reinstated to the NHL in August after being indefinitely suspended and missing 13 regular-season games and the Stanley Cup playoffs in 2004, giving up about $502,000 US in salary. He is due to earn about $5.2 million US this season.
Bertuzzi faced up to 18 months in prison after Vancouver authorities charged him with assault. He pleaded guilty, and was then sentenced to probation and community service.
Bertuzzi has hoped to put the issue behind him in Turin.
"I think I'm deserving of the opportunity to be here," he said Tuesday prior to news of the lawsuit surfacing in Toronto. "My past play has done it. Unfortunately, there's been a gap in between with the lockout and some other stuff. So yes, I think I more than deserve to be here."
The latest lawsuit was filed in Ontario instead of B.C. because Moore lives in Ontario, where provincial law allows suits to be heard in the jurisdiction where the victim is allegedly suffering damages.
Danson declined comment when asked about Moore's condition.
http://start.shaw.ca/start/enCA/Sports/SportsNewsArticle.htm?src=s021535A.xml
The guy should be in jail for this. And fans are stupid enough that, oohh, he has done his time, the guy wasn't a good hockey player, he shouldn't get that much money.
I believe Moore should get every bit of money. His parents watched him as he was sucker punched by this bastard Bertuizzi and I think he should sue him for all he's got.