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Georgia high court to hear ‘Girls Gone Wild’ case

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In a court filing, Carr said Bullard “placed no restrictions — indeed, never expressed any concern for — how the image of her exposing her breasts would be used.” The video “admittedly voluntary public conduct,” the filing said. “Now that spring break is over, (Bullard) has had second thoughts about her decision to expose her breasts for the video camera, but that choice was hers alone.” Bullard said that by the time she got to high school, fellow students, teachers and coaches had seen her photo in the “Girls Gone Wild” advertising campaign.

“It didn’t make it easy going to school — it was pretty rough, in fact,” said Bullard, a hairstylist who is married with a 3-week-old daughter. “I was pinpointed as a bad girl, as the problem girl.” Bullard’s suit, filed in 2004, has been overseen by Chief U.S. District Judge Julie Carnes in Atlanta.

In an Aug. 27 order, Carnes said she could not decide whether the case should go to trial. She asked the Georgia Supreme Court to give her some answers.

“Unfortunately, the very scant Georgia law on this subject provides no clear answer as to whether (Bullard) has a viable claim,” Carnes wrote. “… It is not at all clear that the law has caught up with this kind of vulgar exploitation of a young girl.” Among the questions Carnes wants the state Supreme Court to answer: Can Bullard’s consent to being videotaped be rendered invalid because she was a minor at the time? In the order, Carnes also made it clear what she thinks of the entire matter.

“That (Bullard) behaved foolishly and recklessly by baring herself to a stranger with a camera is an obvious fact,” Carnes wrote. “Yet, fourteen-year-old middle-schoolers sometimes do stupid things, with little thought for future consequences.” Carnes recognized that Bullard made no request to “be compensated for her momentary lack of common sense.” The video companies, Carnes said, “exploited that momentary foolishness for their own commercial gain, with no concern for the humiliation that could befall (Bullard) when her image was placed on the cover of their video.”

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