Photo: Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via Getty

Vanessa Bryant arrives at Federal Court to testify Friday in the lawsuit over graphic photos taken by first responders at the scene of the helicopter crash that killed her husband, basketball legend Kobe Bryant, their teenage daughter and seven others. Bryant photographed at her arrival at U.S. Federal Courthouse on Friday, Aug. 19, 2022 in Los Angeles, CA.

A lawyer forVanessa Bryanton Tuesday delivered a powerful closing argument in her civil case against Los Angeles County over pictures taken and shared from the 2020 helicopter crash site where her husband, Kobe, and daughter, Gianna, were killed.

On behalf of Vanessa, attorney Craig Lavoie opened his statement with a reminder that Kobe would have turned 44 years old Tuesday if he was still alive. “Forty-four years ago today in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Kobe Bryant was born. Today is his birthday,” Lavoie began, adding what an honor it is to represent Vanessa. He asked for “justice and accountability” for Kobe and Gianna, who would have turned 16 in May.

Lavoie described the January 2020 helicopter accident as “devastating and life-shattering” before he condemned the conduct of the sheriff and fire department defendants, “who were supposed to protect the dignity of those who perished on that hillside.” More than once during his closing statements, Lavoie said the behavior “shocks the conscience.”

Vanessa Bryant arrives at Federal Court to testify Friday.Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via Getty

Vanessa Bryant arrives at Federal Court to testify Friday in the lawsuit over graphic photos taken by first responders at the scene of the helicopter crash that killed her husband, basketball legend Kobe Bryant, their teenage daughter and seven others. Bryant photographed at her arrival at U.S. Federal Courthouse on Friday, Aug. 19, 2022 in Los Angeles, CA.

Lavoie added, “The truth is, the county has no idea who had the photos and who they sent them to.” At least nine first responders had them originally, he noted.

Jackson told the jury Chester is “fighting to get his life back” from this tragedy, which “compounded his already overwhelming grief.” Jurors were asked to consider the lifelong impact the defendant’s actions will have on the victims' families. “The defense has no right to say they have nothing to worry about. As long as they’re alive, they’ll always have someone claiming to have these photos.”

Jackson asked for damages of a combined $75 million for both families.

Vanessa took the stand on Friday togive an emotional three-hour testimonyabout what she experienced following the deaths of her husband and daughter. She said she felt helpless after learning members of the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department and other emergency personnel allegedly shared graphic images of Kobe, Gianna, and the seven other victimsof the January 2020 accident.

RELATED VIDEO: Inside Vanessa Bryant’s Heartbreaking and Powerful Testimony About Kobe and Gianna’s Deaths

“I want to remember my husband and my daughter the way that they were,” explained Vanessa, who also shares Capri, 3, Bianka, 5, and Natalia, 19, with Kobe. “I don’t ever want to see these photographs. I have three little girls!” The revelation, she told a Federal Court, has caused her to “live in fear every day of being on social media and having these photos pop up.”

While on the stand, the 40-year-old recalled visiting the Lost Hills Sheriff Station the morning of the accident and asking Sheriff Alex Villanueva to protect the Calabasas crash site from the paparazzi. “If you can’t bring my babies back, can you please secure the area?” Vanessa recalled telling Villanueva at the station.

Just three days later, the photo-sharing allegations amongst the first responders came to light in an article in theLos Angeles Timespublished on Feb. 27, 2020. “I trusted them not to do these things,” the bereaved mother said during her testimony, adding that she was angry with the sheriff and fire departments for not telling her about the pictures being shared.

During his testimony, Chester recounted learning about the crash while driving to Lost Hills sheriff’s station after texts to Payton and Sarah went unanswered. “Lots of things were going through my head, but I thought I was going to a hospital,” he explained, believing Payton and Sarah would be injured but still alive. But the station was alarmingly quiet, he said, and “I had started to get an eerie feeling.”

Chester was taken to an area with the other families, including Vanessa, where they were eventually told that there were no survivors. “It was heavy,” he said. “My life will never be the same.”

Payton and Sarah Chester.Facebook

Kobe Bryant helicopter crash other victims: Sarah Chester and daughter Payton Instagram no credit

Ever since, Chester said, he has suffered high anxiety at the thought of the images leaking to the public. He has also suffered from depression since the crash, he said.

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Former Los Angeles fire captainBrian Jordantook the stand during the trial, where he said the trauma of seeing the remains of the accident pushed him to retire. Jordan is accused of taking graphic, closely-cropped photos of body parts on the scene but testified that he was only doing as he was instructed. “It was horrifying and what put me off the job,” he said.

Los Angeles County previously tried to dismiss Vanessa’s lawsuit in December 2021, but a judge refused their request. In her declaration filed in response to a motion, Vanessa said she’s felt “tremendous pain and distress.”

The January 2020 helicopter crash also claimed the lives of 14-year-oldAlyssa Altobelli,Keri Altobelli, 46,John Altobelli, 56,Christina Mauser, 38, and pilotAra Zobayan, 50.

The trial will continue on Wednesday with closing arguments for the defense.

source: people.com