Vanessa, 39, who is the wife of late NBA star Kobe Bryant, vented her outrage at Nike on Instagram, hitting out at the brand after shoe photos appeared online.
USA TODAY
The widow of Kobe Bryant has “every right” to find out how and why Los Angeles County government employees shared pictures of her dead husband and daughter after they died in a helicopter crash last year, her attorney stated in a new court filing this week.
That is why she wants more time to investigate the case and is fighting back against the county’s “full-scale attack” on her last week in court filings, the attorney stated.
The filing from Vanessa Bryant’s attorney, Luis Li, comes in response to what county attorneys said about her last week as they pushed back against her lawsuit about the photos.
He s one of countless celebrities who have shared of themselves wearing Mambacita hoodies, honouring the late Kobe Bryant and his daughter Gianna in recent weeks.
And David Beckham, 45, took to Instagram to post an image of his youngest offspring Harper, nine, wearing his tie-dye top after stealing it from him .
The snapshot showed adorable Harper smiling as she posed for the camera with the hugely popular hoodie covering her her plaited hair.
Adorable: David Beckham, 45, took to Instagram to post an image of his youngest offspring Harper, nine, wearing his tie-dye Mambacita top after stealing it from him
Captioning the pic, David tagged Vanessa Bryant - the widow of late basketball player Kobe Bryant, who died alongside their daughter Gianna died in a Southern California helicopter crash back in January 2020.
Alberto LuperonMay 12th, 2021, 5:59 pm
Investigators are seen working at the crash site on January 28, 2020.
Two Los Angeles firefighters faced possible termination after the department determined they took pictures of victims at the
Kobe Bryant crash site, according to attorneys for widow
Vanessa Bryant. A third employee, who was helping with press relations, faced suspension.
“According to the reports and letters, two Fire Department employees took photos of victims’ remains at the crash site that ‘served no business necessity’ and instead ‘only served to appeal to baser instincts and desires for what amounted to visual gossip, ” wrote attorney
Craig Lavoie in a filing on Monday obtained by USA Today. “One of the employees, a safety officer who was at the site solely to monitor safety procedures, was observed taking graphic photos focused on the victims’ remains. Both of the employees who took photos of remains sent them to a third Fire Department employee