A bucket of missing evidence: Ruling sends WVSP hidden camera case back to mediation
A
The ruling, written by
More than 80 women have filed lawsuits in the matter, in addition to a class-action lawsuit.
Class-action lawsuit filed against
20-year
Previously,
However, an attorney for the plaintiffs argued that each plaintiff who was videoed could receive up to
How much will WVSP have to pay in hidden camera case? Attorneys argue insurance limit
Ballard ruled for the plaintiffs in this matter.
"The Court finds as a matter of law that the alleged secret videotaping and invasion of privacy of each individual Plaintiff would constitute a separate 'occurrence' and 'offense' or 'event' for purposes of the coverage limits under the subject National Union Policies," Ballard wrote.
Case background
In his ruling, Ballard wrote the background of the case, starting with a
According to the letter, Portaro placed the camera to catch
In
"They found the video," Justice said. "Then one, if not all, immediately jerked the thumb drive out and threw it on the floor and started stomping on it."
"The more we dug, the worse it stunk:" Justice says feds now investigating WVSP
One of the troopers, WVSP instructor
"However, he has also purportedly acknowledged that there was much more on the video and the video was not the only file on the hard drive which he received," Ballard wrote.
In a deposition quoted by Ballard, Eldridge said he could see the sink area, the toilet stalls and the area leading to the shower.
Missing evidence
Eldridge has testified that his superior, Patterson, ordered the one thumb drive to be destroyed, Ballard wrote.
However, in a deposition in a related case, Ballard wrote, Eldridge testified there were as many as 50 thumb drives and SD cards that he and two other troopers cleaned out of Portaro's room and placed in a white bucket. Eldridge testified he did not review the contents of the devices and didn't know where the bucket was.
"To this day, nobody knows what occurred with these 50 or more thumb drives and SD cards," Ballard wrote.
"Based upon this evidence, Plaintiffs assert that there were likely hundreds of individual videos on the 50 or more drives which contained video of many more individual Plaintiffs who were videotaped while using the locker rooms," Ballard wrote. "However, all of this evidence was destroyed by the
Ballard ruled that the parties in the case should go back to mediation before a
Cahill lawsuit
Former WVSP Superintendent Cahill sues state, says he was forced to resign
Cahill filed a lawsuit this spring against the state and the state
The lawsuit was dismissed last month by



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