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Ex-Bengals cheerleader testifies in libel case

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FILE - In this Monday, July 30, 2012 file photo, Sarah Jones, a former Dixie Heights High School teacher and Cincinnati Ben-Gal cheerleader, arrives at the Kenton County Justice Center, in Covington, Ky. Jury selection began Monday, July 8, 2013 in federal court in Covington, Ky., in a defamation lawsuit involving a gossip website and Jones, convicted of having sex with a teenage student. (AP Photo/The Enquirer, Patrick Reddy, File) NO SALES

COVINGTON, Ky. >> A former Cincinnati Bengals cheerleader says posts on a gossip website she is suing for defamation were so devastating that she considered suicide.

Sarah Jones told jurors Tuesday in her lawsuit retrial in Covington, Ky., that the posts were false and malicious. Website operator Nik Richie said the case involves freedom of speech and denied any malice.

Jones is suing over posts made in 2009 to the Scottsdale, Ariz.-based website, thedirty.com. They alleged she had sex with every Bengals player and probably had sexually transmitted diseases.

The posts were unrelated to the former high school teacher’s guilty plea last year to charges she had sex with an underage ex-student, and Deters stressed that Jones is only seeking damages up to Feb. 1, 2011. He urged jurors not to judge her by actions that she took after that.

But Richie’s attorney, David Gingras, said the case is about Jones’ character and that “felony convictions are relevant to a person’s credibility.”

“You must judge Sarah’s reputation based on her actions,” he said, adding that Jones initially denied charges to which she later pleaded guilty in the criminal case.

Gingras added that the evidence will show the posts were anonymous and not authored by his client. He also said there is no proof of any financial loss or other damage to Jones as a result of the posts.

Both attorneys agreed the case could have a broader impact than just resolving the dispute between Richie and Jones. Deters has said that while jurors cannot make Richie take the posts down, they can “send a message to society” that false and malicious posts are harmful.

Deters also told jurors that they will end up liking his client and despising Richie, whom Deters described as “mean.”

Gingras acknowledged that his client “can be mean, but mean is not a crime.” He said the evidence will show Jones has lied and his client has been truthful.

Jones, now 28, still has a relationship with her former 17-year-old student, her attorney said outside of court. After pleading guilty in that case last year, she was allowed to avoid jail time but forbidden from teaching again.

Jurors are being asked to decide whether Jones has proved the posts about her having sex with all the Bengals players and likely having STDs were substantially false. They also must decide whether Richie acted with malice when he posted the submissions.

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