Erin Andrews walks into tears before-seen videos nude jury

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A jury on Thursday watched nude videos secretly recorded a stalker Sportscaster and TV presenter Erin Andrews.

Jurors were grim when viewing images with a woman sometimes deviate from the projector. Andrews left the room in tears just before the videos shown.

Michael David Barrett was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison after admitting stalking Andrews in three different cities, altering peepholes in hotel rooms and record videos naked secret.

Andrews has filed a $ 75 million against Barrett, West End Hotel Partners, which owns the franchise of Marriott Nashville at Vanderbilt University, and Windsor Capital Group, which manages the hotel.

On Wednesday, the father of sportscaster Andrews testify that vomited before reluctantly agreed to view videos with the FBI to help identify the person who took them.
Jurors in the Circuit Court in Nashville Davidson County saw 4 1/2 minute video taken at the Marriott Nashville at Vanderbilt University in September 2008. They also viewed a video of a hotel in Columbus, Ohio.

A computer science professor said a conservative estimate is that at least 16.8 million people have seen some of the footage shot secretly online, including on pornographic websites.

Also Thursday, a psychotherapist testified that Andrews was anxiety and depression after Barrett was released from prison.

Loren Comstock told the jury that Andrews came for therapy in 2012 because she promised her parents she was going to seek help after the stalker was released.

Comstock, whose testimony video deposition played to the jury, said Andrews was worried videos would hurt his career.

At the time of stalking, Andrews was working for ESPN and hotel stay in Nashville to help cover a college football game for the network. Now he works for Fox Sports and a host for the TV show "Dancing With the Stars".

"She told me she had aspired to be a sports commentator from the time she was a child and had worked hard to establish itself, and is concerned that this incident was a mockery of it and that would have an impact people be taken seriously, "said the therapist.

Comstock Andrews describes so obsessed, saying the Internet was checked every day to see what is said about it. Andrews, the therapist said, did not want to be defined by the videos.

One of the issues the jury members will have to decide is the amount of emotional distress Andrews suffered as a result of the videos.

Comstock denied that the sportscaster disorder had post-traumatic stress, but only because his life was not in danger when the videos were made.

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