Nancy Grace attains her livelihood questioning invitees below the limelight of TV cameras on CNN.
Therefore it is humorous that the host of HLN’s highest-rated show does not need video recording or television camera to tape her while she’s interrogated in an illegitimate death case brought in by the estate of a previous guest on the “Nancy Grace” show.
The estate of Melinda Duckett, the mother of lost 2-year-old Leesburg, Fla., son Trenton Duckett, sued Grace, charging the legal reviewer and her show of deliberate imposition of emotional suffering that led to Duckett’s suicide.
Grace’s lawyers, who in addition to representing CNN in the Nancy Grace lawsuit, lodged a pressing motion in United States District Court in Ocala on Monday to debar television cameras on Grace’s regular deposition on Thursday. The judge is anticipated to rule on the apparent motion today. Keeping video recording cameras away, Grace’s attorney’s reason that they would avert annoying, embarrassment, subjugation, as well as unjustified damage should the tape be brought out before the trial run for intentions unconnected to the judicial proceeding of the Nancy Grace lawsuit. A spokeswoman for CNN refused to remark on the subject.
Grace was a prosecuting attorney for almost ten years in the Atlanta-Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney’s office on felony cases regarding serial execution, serial assault, serial minor harassment, as well as fire-raising.
Duckett’s parents along with her aunt charged Grace after two months of Melinda’s appearing on the Nancy’s show in September 2006
On Grace’s question, which comprised of Duckett on the telephone, the chat show host impounded her desk as well as asked where she was on that day. This resulted in the Nancy Grace lawsuit.



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