Steve Wynn Defamation Suit Against Celebrity Lawyer Lisa Bloom Moves Ahead, Bloom Vows She Will Win

Posted on: January 23, 2019, 01:30h. 

Last updated on: January 23, 2019, 01:42h.

Casino billionaire Steve Wynn’s lawsuit against celebrity civil rights lawyer Lisa Bloom is one of the more compelling defamation cases in recent memory. For a start, it hinges on whether a man who is registered blind is capable of “leering.”

Lisa Bloom
Steve Wynn has claimed that Lisa Bloom’s press release of March 22 last year was “false and defamatory,” and published with “actual knowledge of falsity.” (Image: The Blast)

And it’s full steam ahead. The case has been allowed to continue after a federal judge in Nevada denied Bloom’s motion to dismiss earlier this month, court records reveal.

Wynn sued Bloom in April last year over a March 22 press release in which she accused Wynn of “leering” at an unnamed female client.

The client — formerly a dancer in the show ShowStoppers at Wynn Las Vegas’ Encore Theater from late 2014 through late 2016 — alleged that whenever Wynn stopped by, she and her colleagues were told to strip to their underwear and put on heels and makeup, “so as to be sexually appealing to Mr. Wynn,” according to Bloom’s release.

Blind Justice

The press statement was issued one day after Wynn sold his entire stake in Wynn Resorts in a bid to distance the company from the wave sexual misconduct allegations that had surfaced against him earlier that year.

Wynn has denied all allegations, but he had a very specific reason for objecting to this one: he’s legally blind.

Mr. Wynn never, directly or indirectly, instructed any dancers at any time to strip down to their bras and panties,” asserts Wynn’s lawsuit. “Mr. Wynn never leered at Defendants’ unidentified client or any performer during the rehearsals he attended. When he was in his 20s, Mr. Wynn was diagnosed with a rare and degenerative eye disease, and he has been legally blind for almost two decades.”

The Public Interest

Wynn suffers from retinitis pigmentosa (RP), a genetic disorder that causes the cells in his retina to break down irreparably over time. It does not, however, cause total blindness, and whether it’s possible for someone in the latter stages of RP to “leer” is up to the court to decide.

“Plaintiff’s cause of action for defamation is based upon defendant’s published statements,” wrote the judge. “These statements relate directly to a significant issue of public interest, namely a pattern of sexual harassment against a public figure — and in the context of heavy media attention upon those allegations in the midst of the worldwide #MeToo movement.”

Bloom — who follows in the footsteps of her mother, Gloria Allred, also a high-profile and sometimes controversial women’s rights lawyer — was unapologetic this week and apparently relishing the prospect of being sued by Steve Wynn.

“I can’t wait to win my Steve Wynn case, which I will do, after I tell my compelling, fact-based, corroborated story at the deposition,” she told Page Six.