Tom Cruise
Courts Another Victory
Tom
Cruise, out to quash all homosexual rumors about him, won another
court victory this week.
A Los Angeles Superior Court judge on Thursday
approved a final settlement between Cruise and a magazine publisher the
actor sued for $100 million after the man claimed he had a video
of the Top Gunner engaged in some serious, um, risky business with
another man.
In exchange for Cruise dropping the megasuit,
Michael Davis, the target of Cruise's ire, has issued a retraction, saying
he never has seen a video of Cruise having gay sex and doesn't know of
the existence of any such video.
Or, as Judge Emilie Elias states in legalese,
"Plaintiff, Tom Cruise, does not appear on the videotape to which
said defendant referred in his statement alleged in the complaint. Plaintiff
is not, and never has been, homosexual and has never had a homosexual
affair."
And, according to the settlement, revealed
Friday, Davis is barred from ever making statements to the contrary.
Elias capped off the matter by ordering both
parties to pay their own attorney fees before everybody went their separate
ways. Naturally, both sides claimed victory.
"Tom is a great respecter of homosexual
rights, but he's not gay," Cruise lawyer Bert Fields said. "Tom
is tired of it and it hurts his children. It's something that will be
there forever. And damn it, he's going to stop it."
For his part, Davis' lawyer, Edward Pilot,
said his client was pleased with the deal.
"My client was sued for $100 million,"
Pilot tells Los Angeles' City News Service. "As it turned out, he
did not pay Mr. Cruise a penny, so obviously we are pleased with the outcome."
Pilot also reiterates that Davis, the publisher
of Bold magazine, had "no axe to grind with Cruise"--this,
despite the fact that Davis offered a $500,000 reward to anyone who had
conclusive evidence that Cruise was gay.
Cruise leveled the legal gun barrels at Davis
in May, after he allegedly sent emails to a dozen media outlets claiming
to have a videotape of Cruise putting on all the right moves with an unnamed
man.
In his lawsuit, the 38-year-old actor said
the claims were "unequivocally false" and no such tape exists.
Maybe now the Hollywood hunk can focus more
on movies than lawsuits over his sexuality.
Earlier this year, Cruise filed a $100 million
defamation lawsuit against a self-described "erotic wrestler"
named Chad Slater who was quoted in a French magazine saying he had an
affair with Cruise and was the reason behind the actor's breakup
with Nicole Kidman. Slater denied ever making the remarks, ended
up defaulting on the lawsuit and confessed that he never met Cruise.
Cruise also targeted Slater's ex-wife, Kristina
Ann Kirstin, accusing her of trying to sell a fake story to the National
Enquirier saying her husband left her for Cruise. That complaint is
moving forward with a hearing scheduled for December 4.
Cruise, whose divorce with Kidman became final
earlier this month, continues to make the rounds with Penélope Cruz, his
costar in the upcoming thriller Vanilla Sky. That film, directed
by Cameron Crowe, hits theaters on December 14.
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