Gwyneth Paltrow’s legal battle may not be over yet!
23.03.2023 - 05:29 / foxnews.com
Two witnesses took the stand Wednesday during the second day of the Gwyneth Paltrow civil trial stemming from a 2016 ski collision in Park City, Utah. Neuropsychologist Dr.
Sam Goldstein testified that Terry Sanderson, now 76, had an "acute change" in his behavior following the collision. Sanderson claimed that Paltrow left him with a "permanent traumatic brain injury" after she crashed into him from behind while skiing at the Deer Valley Resort.
He is suing the Academy Award winner for $300,000. "He has become obsessed with trying to return himself to the level of functioning he perceived he had before this accident," Goldstein said.
During cross-examination, Paltrow's lawyer, James Egan, said, "He felt like he was abandoned on the slope and he kind of obsessed about that," to which Goldstein responded, "Correct." Goldstein said Terry's problems were "more behavioral, emotional regulation." He added, "From his view, he is not the person he was." Sanderson accused Paltrow of crashing into him while skiing at the exclusive Deer Valley Resort and then skiing off after the accident.The incident left him with a "permanent traumatic brain injury, 4 broken ribs, pain, suffering, loss of enjoyment of life," along with emotional distress and disfigurement, according to the lawsuit obtained by Fox News Digital. Goldstein, who specializes in executive function and the cognitive assessment system, said post-collision, "In this man’s case, his problems were more behavioral, emotional regulation." Following a series of face-to-face tests, Goldstein also recalled Sanderson being "quite stressed." He reiterated that "in nowhere do I see his problem as a lack of effort." Egan also asked Goldstein to confirm that Sanderson "had a head
.Gwyneth Paltrow’s legal battle may not be over yet!
If Gwyneth Paltrow’s recent trial involving a ski-hill collision was a TV show, it would be a ratings blockbuster.
Now that the Gwyneth Paltrow ski crash trial is over, the person who started it all, plaintiff Terry Sanderson, is expressing some remorse in his actions. As he exited the courtroom on Thursday after being found at fault for the accident, he was asked if he thought the lawsuit was worth the trouble, and he responded, "Absolutely not." He lamented to reporters, "I'm gonna be on the internet forever." It was suggested that the trial, which garnered major public interest, could end up landing him a reality show, but he replied, "I don't need that." Getting more in depth about the trial, Sanderson explained "It should have been the facts of the accident because as I said, I brought absolutely the truth to the accident.
Matt Donnelly Senior Film Writer Gwyneth Paltrow’s ski trial was watched by nearly 30 million people across YouTube and social media platforms, Variety can report. The eight-day saga was covered exhaustively by major media outlets and disseminated in viral clips and memes all over the internet. It was also a significant boon for the Law and Crime Network, which streamed the trial live on its YouTube page (the channel also has carriage deals with the likes of Roku, Samsung TV and Sling TV, though those numbers only report quarterly). 16.5 million people tuned in to the livestream, the network said. Another 7.4 million viewed the event on Facebook, and another 4.2 million consumed proceedings involving the Oscar winner on TikTok. Keep in mind, these numbers do not account for similar airings on Court TV and the Associated Press live feed.
Gwyneth Paltrow just won the ski crash trial against retired optometrist Terry Sanderson and now a juror is speaking out.
Gwyneth Paltrow ski collision trial has captivated audiences everywhere for its viral moments (“Well, I lost half a day of skiing”) and courtroom fashion (the $250 notebook). The bombshell trial finally reached a conclusion on 30 March, with jurors finding that Paltrow was not liable. While the ski crash trial will likely be remembered as one of the most meme-able celebrity trials, it was the lawyers going viral on TikTok who had the best reactions to the high-profile lawsuit.
Jury deliberations in the civil trial between Gwyneth Paltrow and Terry Sanderson began Thursday afternoon. Sanderson has sued Paltrow for $300,000, claiming she left him severely injured after a ski collision in 2016. Sanderson and Paltrow have very different recollections of the incident.The actress claims Sanderson skied into her from behind, while the retired optometrist has stated Paltrow hit him.
William Earl Gwyneth Paltrow is in court after being accused of colliding with a skier, but the man suing her was served a blow after one of his own expert witnesses during a wacky morning in court on March 30. On March 27, Terry Sanderson, who is suing Paltrow after a 2016 collision in Park City, Utah, testified that he was sent “absolutely flying” after his claim that Paltrow hit him: “All I saw was a whole lot of snow. And I didn’t see the sky, but I was flying.” Yet Sanderson’s legal team brought Dr. Richard Boehme, a neurologist, to testify as a final witness via Zoom. After the connection was garbled several times, the team brought his testimony to a cell phone, which then promptly dropped. Once the communication issues cleared up, he was asked by Paltrow’s side if he recalls testimony from Sanderson that he went airborne during the accident.
Terry Sanderson claimed Gwyneth Paltrow was responsible for more than just the injuries he suffered on the ski slope in 2016. During the sixth day of testimony, Sanderson blamed the actress for three "near-death experiences" after the collision. Sanderson initially sued Paltrow for $3.1 million and claimed he was the victim of a hit-and-run on the slopes at the Deer Valley ski resort in 2016.
Gwyneth Paltrow’s ski accident trial has been making headlines for much more than just the 2016 incident at the center of the case.
Taylor Swift embarked on The Eras Tour two weeks ago, but she was one of the many celebrity names invoked in Gwyneth Paltrow's ski collision trial in Park City, Utah. The 50-year-old Goop lifestyle brand founder took the stand Friday to defend herself in a lawsuit filed by Terry Sanderson who claimed Gwyneth not only crashed into him causing traumatic injuries, but also skied away after the crash on the slopes at the Deer Valley ski resort in 2016. He initially sued Paltrow for $3.1 million, but a judge dismissed the claim and removed the exclusive resort and a ski instructor from the lawsuit before Sanderson proceeded with the $300,000 suit.
In her corner. Gwyneth Paltrow’s children, Apple and Moses, gave their testimony on Tuesday, March 28, amid their mom’s ski crash trial.
The Utah ski crash trial involving Gwyneth Paltrow and retired optometrist Terry Sanderson is heating up, as both sides attempt to prove they were not responsible for the collision that allegedly left Sanderson badly injured. On Monday, Paltrow's lawyers called into evidence a recreation video of the accident scene, as described from the vantage point of ski instructor Eric Christiansen. Christiansen, who was hired by Paltrow to teach her then 9-year-old son Moses how to ski, confirmed that the animated video was an accurate representation of how he recalled the events of the day.
Meredith Woerner Deputy Editor, Variety.com The retired optometrist who is suing Gwyneth Paltrow over a 2016 ski crash took the stand on Monday, telling the jury that he heard a “blood-curdling scream” just before being struck in the back. Terry Sanderson is suing Paltrow for $300,000, and alleges that he was left with a concussion, four broken ribs and a brain injury. Paltrow was the first to testify, telling the Utah jury last week that it was Sanderson who crashed into her. She said she became very upset and yelled “you skied directly into my fucking back.” Paltrow is countersuing for $1 and attorneys’ fees.
The man who claims actress Gwyneth Paltrow ran into him back in 2016 during a ski slope crash took the stand on Monday and described his side of the incident in a Utah courtroom. “I heard something I had never heard at a ski resort — a blood-curdling scream,” Terry Sanderson said. He says at that point he thought someone has lost control while on the slopes. The crash took place on Feb. 26, 2016, at Deer Valley Resort in Park City.
The first week of the trial involving Gwyneth Paltrow over a 2016 ski accident in Utah has come to a close. Retired optometrist Terry Sanderson is seeking $300,000 in damages from the Goop founder after a collision at the Deer Valley ski resort. According to Sanderson's lawsuit, Paltrow collided with Sanderson and skied off, leaving him with a "permanent traumatic brain injury, four broken ribs, pain, suffering, loss of enjoyment of life," and emotional distress and disfigurement. "Paltrow got up, turned and skied away, leaving Sanderson stunned, lying in the snow, seriously injured," the complaint filed in 2019 says. "A Deer Valley ski instructor, who had been training Ms.
Gwyneth Paltrow is taking the stand.
The daughter of the man who collided with Gwyneth Paltrow on a ski slope, has said seeing her father’s state after the incident was like “a slap in the face”. Polly Sanderson-Grasham said that following the crash in 2016, her father was unable to “see the forest for the trees” and got “lost in the minutiae” of things. Retired optometrist Terry Sanderson is suing the Oscar-winning actress over the incident at the Deer Valley ski resort in Utah, alleging she crashed into him and caused severe brain injuries.
Gwyneth Paltrow and Terry Sanderson began with a deposition from Dr Alina Fong. The neuropsychologist told jurors that the accident "completely changed" the retired optometrist's life and that his injuries were likely to be "long-standing". Mr Sanderson is suing the Oscar-winning actress over a 2016 incident at the Deer Valley ski resort in Utah, alleging she crashed into him and caused severe brain injuries.
A neuropsychologist who treated the man suing Gwyneth Paltrow over a 2016 ski collision cast aspersions on the testimony of medical experts hired by the celebrity’s legal team — and argued that, as his personal doctor, she was better suited to speak about 76-year-old Terry Sanderson’s post-concussion symptoms.