Bat
World Sanctuary, a non-profit organization devoted to rescuing and
rehabilitating bats, and it’s president, Amanda Lollar of Mineral Wells
were awarded $6.1 million in damages by a Tarrant County district judge
today in a defamation lawsuit. After a four-day trial the court found
that Mary Cummins of Los Angeles, California had committed defamation
against Amanda Lollar and had breached her internship contract with Bat
World Sanctuary.
In
2010 Mary Cummins was accepted for an internship at Bat World Sanctuary
at Mineral Wells. While at Bat World she became dissatisfied with the
program and left the internship early. According to the plaintiffs she
went back to California and began posting “horrific allegations of
animal cruelty against Amanda Lollar on the internet.” She accused
Amanda Lollar of performing “illegal surgeries” on bats without
anesthesia, possessing and distributing controlled substances without a
DEA license, throwing dead bats in the trash, allowing interns to be
repeatedly bitten by rabid bats, breeding bats illegally, giving human
rabies vaccinations to interns, and neglecting her pet dogs. She filed
reports of animal cruelty with numerous wildlife and conservation
organizations as well as humane and animal welfare organizations. She
also complained to a foundation that had been providing funding to Bat
World but stopped doing so after receiving Cummins’ complaint. She
filed complaints with the Texas Department of Health, the Texas Board of
Veterinary Medical Examiners, Texas Parks and Wildlife, the Texas
Attorney General, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the USDA, the
Mineral Wells Police Department, the Mineral Wells Fire Department, the
Palo Pinto District Attorney and other agencies. According to Eric
Shupps, the plaintiff’s expert on information technology, Cummins used
“search engine optimization” and “Google bombs” to spread her defamation
far and wide across the internet.
Judge William Brigham, who was the visiting judge in the 352nd District
Court of Tarrant County, announced at the conclusion of the trial that
Amanda Lollar is world-renowned and is to bats what Jane Goodall is to
primates. He said that Mary Cummins’ defamation of Amanda Lollar was
“intentional, malicious, and egregious” and ordered her to pay $3.0
million in compensatory damages and $3.0 million in punitive damages.
He also ordered her to pay $10,000 for breach of her contract with Bat
World and $176,700 in attorney’s fees.
No comments:
Post a Comment