In the Article “Former employees accuse Kentucky accident lawyer of ‘monstrous’ sexual misconduct” the Louisville Courier Journal continues to prove they are willing to profit through ad revenue even by dragging a local respected attorney into the mud.
The writer, Andrew Wolfson, arguably of limited IQ, sophomorically tries to take a law suit filed by an attorney with a history of fraud and misrepresentation, and offers the reader a snarky, click bait story filled with unfounded allegations. He may have attempted to look deeper into if the plaintiffs attorney has use the threat of releasing potentially harmful information in an effort to secure a larger settlement.
Bonar writes in the complaint, which seeks punitive damages, that the alleged conduct was “so outrageous and intolerable as to offend generally accepted standards of morality and decency.”
This is the same tactic Bonar used in a wrongful termination claim against the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Covington. Which ultimately saw her fined $22,500 and found to be fraudulent in her representations, and public reprimand from the Kentucky Supreme Court.
At the start of the pandemic the two employees in question voluntarily abandoned their jobs in May of 2020, they then “joined forces” “to allege they were in effect discharged and suffered loss of income and benefits, severe emotional distress and mental anxiety, and loss of goodstanding in their community, for which punitive damages should be awarded.”
Over time and through discovery the article posted by the Courier Journal written by Andrew Wolfson has been shown to be filled inconsistencies and lies. That Shane Romines proved accurate when responding to Wolfson’s interview.
“We will file our answer in about two weeks and as time goes on the allegations will prove to be untrue.”
The Louisville Courier Journal and Andrew Wolfson continue to profit from ad revenue generated by lies and allegations.
