The latest ad for Blake Lively’s beverage brand is ripped from the headlines.
25.03.2023 - 01:47 / usmagazine.com
Time for her side of the story. Three days into the trial, Gwyneth Paltrow testified about her 2016 skiing accident.
The Goop founder, 50, took the stand on Friday, March 24, to recall the events that took place seven years ago when she and Terry Sanderson crashed into each other while on the slopes in Deer Valley, Utah, as she was on a ski trip with her now-husband, Brad Falchuk, and their family. During her testimony, the Emma actress revealed she originally thought the collision was a sexual assault when she and Sanderson, 76, crashed into each other on the slopes.
“So that was a quick thought that went through my head when I tried to reconcile what was happening,” Paltrow recalled when asked about he sexual assault remark. “I was skiing and two skis came between my skis forcing my legs apart and then there was a body pressing against me and there was a very strange grunting noise so my brain was trying to make sense of what was happening. I thought, ‘Is this a practical joke? Is someone doing something perverted? This is really, really strange.’ My mind was going very quickly and I was trying to ascertain what was happening.”
The trial began at the Park City District Court on Tuesday, March 21, and was scheduled to go on for eight days. All eyes have been on the hearings as they have been airing on Court TV. Paltrow made headlines on day 3 when she and her security team asked if they could bring the court bailiffs some treats as a thank you for their help. However, the request was objected to by Sanderson and ultimately denied by the judge.
The retired doctor originally sued Paltrow for $3.1 million back in January 2019 — three years after the incident occurred. He
The latest ad for Blake Lively’s beverage brand is ripped from the headlines.
This month, thousands have been focusing in on Deer Valley, an extremely affluent ski town located in Park City, Utah. It also happens to be the scene of the alleged accident over which Gwyneth Paltrow was recently sued. The incident happened in 2016 when Paltrow and the plaintiff, Terry Sanderson, were both skiing on the same mountain.
All’s well that ends well? After the jury ruled in her favor and found her not liable for a skiing accident in 2016, Gwyneth Paltrow made a point to say goodbye to the man behind the lawsuit — Terry Sanderson — before exiting the courtroom.
Gwyneth Paltrow, who won the much-watched, two-week civil trial in which a retired optometrist claimed the actor caused a 2016 ski accident that left him with brain damage, says she fought the allegations because “acquiescing to a false claim compromised my integrity.”
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.
Gwyneth Paltrow‘s kids are sharing their side of the story!
Gwyneth Paltrow is currently in the middle of her ski crash trial against Terry Sanderson, who alleged that she caused him considerable damage after they collided in a ski accident back in 2016.
In her corner. Gwyneth Paltrow’s children, Apple and Moses, gave their testimony on Tuesday, March 28, amid their mom’s ski crash trial.
Gwyneth Paltrow on a ski slope recalled hearing a “blood-curdling scream” moments before the 2016 incident. Terry Sanderson, who is suing the Hollywood star, took the stand on Monday 27 January, adding he thought somebody “was seriously out of control” on the slopes of the Deer Valley resort in Utah.
Gwyneth Paltrow and plaintiff Terry Sanderson have both taken the stand in the ongoing negligence suit filed by the retired optometrist who claims the Oscar winner skied into him nearly eight years ago. 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. 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.
Gwyneth Paltrow was seen chuckling and smiling during Terry Sanderson‘s testimony on Monday, March 27.
A Utah man who claims he was severely injured after Gwyneth Paltrow skied into him is expected to take the stand Monday in the ongoing civil trial. Paltrow, 50, is being sued for $300,000 by retired optometrist Terry Sanderson, who claims the actress skied into him from behind at Utah's Deer Valley Resort in 2016. Paltrow's attorney plans to call the actress' husband Brad Falchuk and her children – Apple, 18 and Moses, 16 – to testify in her defense Monday once the plaintiff's lawyers rest their case.
The man suing Gwyneth Paltrow over a 2016 skiing collision at one of the most upscale resorts in North America is expected to take the stand Monday as the closely watched trial goes into its second week.
LIVE – Updated at 11:55Gwyneth Paltrow says she briefly thought a 2016 ski collision was in fact a sexual assault and “froze” when a set of skis suddenly “forced my legs apart. ”Terry Sanderson, 76, has accused the Hollywood star of crashing into him on a ski slope at the Deer Valley resort in Park City, Utah, in February 2016, leaving him with “permanent traumatic brain injury, four broken ribs, pain, suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, emotional distress and disfigurement”. Meanwhile, Paltrow claims it was Mr Sanderson who crashed into her — and that he told his daughter afterwards that he was “famous.
Gwyneth Paltrow is countersuing Terry Sanderson for $1 following his claims that she intentionally injured him during a 2016 ski collision, an amount that lawyers wonder was inspired by Taylor Swift.
Gwyneth Paltrow has insisted that she was the "victim" of a skiing collision with a retired optometrist during an accident at a resort in Utah. The Oscar-winning actress was speaking while giving evidence in a civil case brought by Terry Sanderson, who is suing the actress for $300,000 (£245,000) over the incident at Deer Valley in 2016.
Gwyneth Paltrow reiterated multiple times that she had been the “victim” of a ski crash, as she began giving evidence in her US trial.The Oscar-winning actress said she did “not believe” the testimony of previous witnesses and that her version of events was “categorically” the truth. Gwyneth is being sued by retired optometrist Terry Sanderson over a collision at the Deer Valley resort in Utah in 2016.
Gwyneth Paltrow testified she thought she was being sexually assaulted when a skier rammed into her back during a 2016 trip to Deer Valley Resort. The Goop founder described the moment she claims retired optometrist Terry Sanderson collided with her, and how she was "extremely upset." "I was confused at first, and I didn’t know exactly what was happening. It’s a very strange thing to be happening on a ski slope," she recalled.
Not happy. Gwyneth Paltrow appeared visibly annoyed while listening to testimony from plaintiff Terry Sanderson’s daughter, Shae Sanderson Herath, during day four of her ski crash trial.