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Georgia high court to hear ‘Girls Gone Wild’ case

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(MCT) — ATLANTA — Fourteen-year-old Lindsey Boyd was walking down the strip in Panama City, Fla., when two men, one holding a video camera, asked her to expose her breasts.

She complied and was compensated, as were many who flashed their breasts during spring break in 2000, with a cheap beaded necklace.

Video of the Powder Springs, Ga., middle schooler was sold for the “Girls Gone Wild, College Girls Exposed” series. Not only would a 5-second clip of Lindsey exposing herself be on the video, a photo of her baring her breasts would be on the cover of the DVD and displayed in commercials in a national advertising campaign. (On the cover, Lindsey’s breasts were blocked out with the instructions “Get Educated!”)

On Monday, the Georgia Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether Lindsey, who is now 26-year-old Lindsey Bullard of Cartersville, Ga., can sue the production companies that bought the video of her and put it in the “Girls Gone Wild” video. Bullard is seeking unspecified damages from the companies, saying they misappropriated her image for commercial purposes.

The case could set an important precedent for the protection of minors whose images are captured and then distributed across the digital world.

“The expectation of privacy has changed significantly in the digital age,” said Atlanta lawyer Gerry Weber, an expert on First Amendment law. “Everybody’s got a camera phone, and people are photographing and videotaping each other in public places all the time. Once the image is captured, the possibility of it being widely distributed can certainly happen, particularly if it’s provocative.” A key issue in the case, Weber said, is whether a minor has the legal capacity to consent to being photographed.

What happened in 2000, Bullard said last week, was a poor decision made in the moment by a teenager who had no clue what could happen next.

“What they did to me — using my image as advertisement — was wrong,” she said. “They did not have my consent. It was exploitation. If I would have known that the whole world was going to see it I definitely would have thought more about it and would not have done it. … There should be laws against it to protect others from this.” Atlanta lawyer Scott Carr, who represents the production companies, MRA Holding Inc. and Mantra Films Inc., declined to comment.

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