Sunday, September 22, 2024

Wendy Williams’ Guardian Files Amended Lawsuit Claiming Talk Host Received “Paltry $82,000” For Lifetime Docuseries

By Ted Johnson

Wendy Williams lawsuit
Wendy Williams Getty Images

The guardian for Wendy Williams has filed an amended lawsuit against A+E Networks and eOne over the Lifetime documentary reality project Where Is Wendy Williams? that aired in February, claiming that the TV personality was exploited in her participation and paid just $82,000 for the project.

The guardian, Sabrina Morrissey, also claimed that Williams’ signature on her contract with eOne to produce the series “does not appear to be genuine” and there is “no evidence” that she signed the agreement on January 25, 2023.

Williams, the lawsuit stated, “was incapacitated and unable to consent at the time the Contract or its amendments were executed, even if she had signed it (which she did not).”  

Her representatives disclosed earlier this year that she has been diagnosed with primary progressive aphasia and frontotemporal dementia. Williams had participated in the documentary and served as executive producer. 

Read the amended Wendy Williams lawsuit.

The amended lawsuit, filed Monday in New York Supreme Court, follows an unsuccessful effort by Morrissey to halt the airing of the documentary this year. She had sought a court order to stop the project, arguing in February that the project was a “blatant exploitation of a vulnerable woman with a serious medical condition,” and that the talk host had lacked mental capacity to enter a contract to do the show.

A New York judge initially granted the order to prevent the airing of Where Is Wendy Williams?, but that was quickly reversed on appeal.

A spokesperson for A+E Networks and Lifetime said that they don’t comment on lawsuits.

A+E attorneys had argued earlier this year that the series reflected Williams’ “own journey through the guardianship process.” The attorney contended that “only after seeing the Documentary’s trailer and realizing her role in [Wendy Williams ] life may be criticized did Ms. Morrissey enlist the courts to unconstitutionally silence that criticism.”

Morrissey has enlisted Roberta Kaplan and her law firm to represent her in the amended complaint. They are seeking a court declaration that Williams’ contract is null and void, unspecified compensatory and punitive damages, disgorgement of proceeds from the documentary project and an injunction prohibiting additional airings of it, among other things.

“The profits from the Program should go to Wendy Williams, who will need significant funding to provide for proper medical care and supervision for the rest of her life,” the lawsuit stated.

In the new complaint, Morrissey claims that “by willfully taking advantage of a severely impaired, incapacitated person, Defendants have made millions on W.W.H.’s back, while W.W.H. has received a paltry $82,000.”

Morrissey’s attorneys cite early reports of Williams’ “increasingly erratic behavior,” and noted that her “difficulties were often captured on camera” as host of a daily talk show.

“As early as 2021, press reports attributed these changes to early-onset dementia,” the lawsuit stated. “These reports were widely circulated on social media, in the press, and on entertainment talk shows.”

Her show was canceled in 2022 after it became clear that she would not be able to return, according to the suit. Williams was diagnosed in May 2023 with frontotemporal lobe dementia and primary progressive aphasia, the suit stated. But stories had leaked a year earlier that a court had established a guardianship for her.

The lawsuit also cited the influence of David Selby, who represented Williams as her new manager. According to Morrissey’s claim, when the Lifetime documentary series went into production, Selby told her that he would have “full creative control” and that the project would show her in a positive light.

The lawsuit claimed that the contract for Williams’ participation was signed after the project started production, “while she was clearly disheveled, not mentally present, and confused.”

“No person who witnessed [Williams] in these circumstances could possibly have believed that she was capable of consenting either to an agreement to film, or to the filming itself,” the lawsuit stated. The lawsuit alleged that her signature on the contract “bears a printed, not cursive signature purporting to be the signature of [Wendy Williams], but looks nothing like W.W.H.’s signature.”

Morrissey did not see the contract until months later, according to the suit.

“Indeed, none of the Defendants ever gained the Guardian’s consent for [\Williams’] participation in the film, and there was no way W.W.H. could have consented, as she was incapacitated prior to and during filming,” the lawsuit stated.

People first reported on the new complaint.

Full Article & Source:
Wendy Williams’ Guardian Files Amended Lawsuit Claiming Talk Host Received “Paltry $82,000” For Lifetime Docuseries

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Wendy Williams

Casey Holds Aging Committee Hearing on Protecting Older Adults Who Are Targeted by Frauds and Scams


September 19, 2024

At hearing, Casey released annual Aging Committee Fraud Book

Hearing featured testimony from PA scam victim, law enforcement about how to prevent scams and support victims

Casey touted his report on how 2017 Republican tax law penalized scam victims

Washington, D.C. - Today, U.S. Senator Bob Casey (D-PA), Chairman of the U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging, held an Aging Committee hearing entitled “Fighting Fraud: How Scammers Are Stealing from Older Adults.” The hearing highlighted the psychological and economic impacts that frauds and scams have older adults, who are disproportionately targeted by fraudsters.

During the hearing, Casey unveiled the Aging Committee’s annual Fraud Book, which provides seniors with an overview of the most prevalent scams to help them identify and avoid being victimized. The Fraud Book also contains resources for scam victims. In addition to the Fraud Book, Casey touted his report on the 2017 Republican tax law, called Scammed Then Taxed,” which details how the law’s repeal of the theft loss deduction has imposed significant taxes on many scam victims.

“At today’s hearing, we heard tragic stories from scam victims and law enforcement about how fraudsters are getting more sophisticated and aggressive with their scams and throwing the lives of older adults into chaos,” said Chairman Casey. “We must do everything we can to educate older adults about the threats they face from frauds and scams. We must also do more to provide resources for those who have been victimized by scams, including those who have been forced to pay taxes on money they’ve lost due to changes in the 2017 Republican tax law.”

Chairman Casey invited Susan Whittaker, an Administrative Assistant at Lehigh County Aging and Adult Services in Allentown, PA, to testify at the hearing about her late husband’s experience as a scam victim. Susan testified, “This scam was devastating and had a devasting effect on Bill—both financially and emotionally. Because we lost $20,000, and Bill had a lot of chronic health conditions, Bill began to ration his medications. We just couldn’t afford them anymore… He also lost his sense of self-worth. I was really sad to see this very intelligent and past business owner, become so afraid to read emails and use a phone. It was a huge setback for him, and I think contributed to his worsening health conditions...he stopped living.”

Source:
Casey Holds Aging Committee Hearing on Protecting Older Adults Who Are Targeted by Frauds and Scams

Containers for Change helps retiree cash in a million empties for animal rescue charity

By Jasmine Hines and Adam Stephen

An older man with white hair smiles, he is holding a small fluffy dog which looks happy and standing front of a row of bins

Selwyn Nutley with his beloved rescue dog Mindy. (ABC News: Jasmine Hines)

In short:

The 82-year-old from Emerald has alone raised more than $100,000 by collecting and cashing in recyclable cans and bottles. 

Containers for Change chief executive Natalie Roach says "Nuts" is one of the state's top recyclers.

What's next?

Mr Nutley says he will continue recycling up to 6,000 containers a week until he gets old.

Selwyn "Nuts" Nutley is affectionately known as the "patron of pets" in his small rural town.

With his custom-designed collections ute he has recycled more than a million cans and bottles to raise funds for his local pet rescue group.

The 82-year-old retiree from Emerald, in Queensland's Central Highlands, has single-handedly raised more than $100,000.

"I have plenty of spare time," Mr Nutley says.

"I drive around in my ute, which has got a tailgate lifter on it, and I collect from pubs, clubs and houses all around Emerald.

"A lot of people even throw them over my front fence."

The octogenarian recycles up to 6,000 containers a week, thanks to a retrofitted ute that allows him to easily lift and transport 12 full wheelie bins.

A close up of a fluffy white dog being held by an older man's hands

Rescue dog Mindy is one of four of Mr Nutley's spoilt pooches. (ABC News: Jasmine Hines)

Mr Nutley started his fundraising efforts after adopting his first rescue dog in 2014 and soon his brood expanded.

He now has four small dogs: Mindy, Lindy, Rover and Buddy.

"I love all dogs, big, small. They all just seem to come to me," he says.

He fundraises through Queensland's Containers for Change scheme, which refunds 10 cents for each eligible drink container.

A man standing on a ute tail lifter with a green bin, he is in the car port of his brick home

Mr Nutley retrofitted his ute to make it easier to recycle more containers.  (ABC News: Jasmine Hines)

'He could outrun me'

Susan Consedine, treasurer of CQ Pet Rescue, met Mr Nutley 10 years ago when he offered to help after adopting his first dog.

"He just took that ball and ran with it. We just got out of Selwyn's way," she says.

An older man leans over to pet his dog. There are three dogs in front of him in total and a row of bins in the background

Mr Nutley began fundraising for the rescue group after adopting his own dogs. (ABC News: Jasmine Hines)

He began by attending markets, washing dogs and even driving animals more than 800 kilometres to Brisbane, where there is a greater pool of rescue groups and foster carers.

"Selwyn would, in his younger years of his late 70s, load the animals up with me at three in the morning and he would drive them there and then back," Ms Consedine says.

"[He's] an absolute powerhouse. He could outrun me and I'm a fairly active person."

Ms Consedine says without Mr Nutley the rescue service would have shut during the COVID-19 pandemic when the charity's main fundraising avenue was events.

"The only fundraising scheme that we had was Selwyn and the recycling program … he basically kept us going for two years," she says.

"If we had collapsed … there would have been an untold number of animals that would have been euthanased that did not need to be."

A close up of a green bin with a sticker advertising the container refund scheme, there are small dogs in the background

Mr Nutley collects about 6,000 containers a week for his local animal rescue group. (ABC News: Jasmine Hines)

Containers for Change chief executive Natalie Roach says "Nuts" is one of the state's top recyclers.

"He's spending an average 45 hours a week collecting and recycling containers, so that's more than the average full-time job in terms of hours," she said.

A man with white hair sorts through containers in a bin

Mr Nutley also collects plastic bottle top lids which his local rotary sends away to make prosthetic limbs.  (ABC News: Jasmine Hines)

Ms Roach says since the scheme launched in 2018, 8.8 billion containers have been recycled.

Asked what's next, Mr Nutley says he will continue recycling up to 6,000 containers a week until he gets "old".

CQ Pet Rescue covers 52,000 square kilometres in the Central Highlands and only takes animals on a council list to be put down.

Full Article & Source:
Containers for Change helps retiree cash in a million empties for animal rescue charity