'Terminate libel lawsuit'
2004-05-05 09:21
Los Angeles - California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's lawyer asked a judge to throw out a libel lawsuit filed by a Hollywood stuntwoman who alleged the former actor groped her on film sets.
Judge Robert Hess took under submission two motions to dismiss Rhonda Miller's lawsuit.
"Arnold Schwarzenegger never should have been sued in this case," lawyer Martin Singer said on Tuesday in court. "It was an absolute lie. Pure fabrication. Why would this woman come forward 13 years after the alleged event, the day before the election, with a press conference?"
Miller, 53, claims Schwarzenegger and his campaign defamed her after she accused him of groping her on the sets of Terminator 2 and True Lies.
Miller made the allegations on October 6, the day before voters were to go the polls to decide whether to recall Democratic Governor Gray Davis.
Hours after she made the allegations, campaign spokesperson Sean Walsh sent an e-mail to reporters directing them to a court website, where records for a Rhonda Miller showed a history including prostitution and disorderly conduct. It was a different Rhonda Miller.
Stands by it under oath
Miller's lawyers said the stuntwoman has no arrests or convictions for such crimes.
"She stands by the allegation, and she stands by it under oath," said Paul Hoffman, one of Miller's lawyers.
During his campaign to replace Davis, 16 women accused Schwarzenegger of groping them in the past. Schwarzenegger acknowledged he had "behaved badly sometimes" in the past and did some things that "were not right, which I thought were playful".
If the case does go to trial, Hoffman said, he would tell jurors that the Schwarzenegger campaign tried to undermine Miller's credibility because her allegations came on the eve of the election and "they had to do something" before the next TV news cycle.
Neil Shapiro, a lawyer for Walsh and the Schwarzenegger campaign, argued that his client honestly believed some of the criminal records on the website were Miller's.
In a statement filed in February, Schwarzenegger said the e-mail was created and sent out by the California for Schwarzenegger Campaign "without my knowledge or consent".
If Miller's lawsuit is dismissed, she could face legal fees. Last month, a judge ruled that Schwarzenegger will not have to give a deposition in the case.
- AP