Might be thinking of publication bans. Of course NDAs are strictly a civil thing and the shoving case will be civil.NDAs aren't used in criminal cases...
I'm not sure what you're saying.
Might be thinking of publication bans. Of course NDAs are strictly a civil thing and the shoving case will be civil.NDAs aren't used in criminal cases...
I'm not sure what you're saying.
Sexual assault is criminal and there is a NDA in place so I can't give you the details.NDAs aren't used in criminal cases...
I'm not sure what you're saying.
Sexual assault is criminal and there is a NDA in place so I can't give you the details.
And NDAs are the result of a settlement, not a trial. That means everything reverts to basic contract law. A violation of NDA essentially voids the contract, meaning that cash settlement could all be clawed back (as you imply).Even if the NDA can't be made to stick (in court) the cost to defend will be a significant punishment for violating it alone. Also given the NDA likely came with a cash settlement. Even if one wins they lose.
In order to sue the victim and/or witnesses.. the assailant would have to file a claim in a court.. making it public knowledge.. which is exactly what the NDA was trying to prevent in the first place.
That doesn't make sense. If the assailant is suing the victim, it would be because the horse is already out of the barn (the victim broke the NDA and spoke about the event to the press). The crime now being public knowledge would be the reason for suing them.
but if the person only told other people
Tuition runs ~ $30K so not the Walmart crowd.Who told other people. Who told other people. And it's now common knowledge.
A student Trudy was banging at West Point Gray Academy signed a NDA when he cut her a cheque for $2.5M. Her relatives didn't, some of them spilled the beans, and here we are. Can Trudy sue her? No (and he's still denying the story, so there's that).
Assuming the "Victim" was at or near 18 YO
was it a crime other than the position of responsibility factor.
Canada was 14 at the time for legal age.17
Why not ask if he just put the tip in? It’s the same equivalency. If you have sex with someone under 18 and you’re in a position of authority you are guilty of statutory rape. There is no gray area “she told me she was 19” wiggle room.
Canada was 14 at the time for legal age.
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In Canada, the ages of consent are:The law is 18 for anyone of authority like a teacher, doctor, police officer, religious leader, etc.
So why did this get covered by a NDA? It's not as if she was 18 and he only broke the school rules, a civil matter.17
Why not ask if he just put the tip in? It’s the same equivalency. If you have sex with someone under 18 and you’re in a position of authority you are guilty of statutory rape. There is no gray area “she told me she was 19” wiggle room.
So why did this get covered by a NDA? It's not as if she was 18 and he only broke the school rules, a civil matter.
Remember the glacial efficiency of our court system. What happens at 17 likely doesn't get resolved until you're 19+.Anyone under the age of consent cannot enter into a legally binding contract... like a NDA.