Skip navigation

Myskina files $8 million federal lawsuit

French Open champ claims GQ allowed topless photos of her
to be used in Russian magazine without her permission

MYSKINA
French Open champion Anastasia Myskina claims in a lawsuit that she never intended for two photographs of her appearing shirtless to be published anywhere, her attorney said Saturday.
Christophe Ena / AP
Slideshow
  Record performances
Take a look at players who have won and put themselves in the record books at the U.S. Open.

NBCSports.com

Slideshow
The Championships - Wimbledon 2009 Day Thirteen
  Career highlights
Take a look back at key moments in Roger Federer's tennis career.

NBCSports.com

Off the court
US Open Day 15
Getty Images
  Celebrity tennis fans
A look at some well-known fans in the world of tennis.
Britain's Andy Murray gestures as he pla
AFP/Getty Images
  Who's hot on Twitter?
Check out which of your favorite athletes have the best pages and most followers!
17th Annual ESPY Awards - Backstage And Audience
Getty Images for ESPY
  Stylin' sisters
Check out the fashion choices Venus and Serena Williams made on and off the court.
  Love matches
Take a look at a number of the players who found love -- at least temporarily -- with fellow tennis competitors.
updated 9:18 p.m. ET Aug. 7, 2004

NEW YORK - French Open champion Anastasia Myskina filed an $8 million federal lawsuit against GQ magazine, claiming it allowed topless photographs of her to appear in a Russian magazine without her permission.

The Russian tennis star said she never intended for two shots of her appearing shirtless to be published anywhere, her attorney said Saturday. The lawsuit was filed Friday in Manhattan federal court.

The photos were taken by GQ photographer Mark Seliger for a spread in the October 2002 GQ edition, and one approved photo of her fully clothed was published along with a profile of the tennis player.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Myskina’s lawyer, Alexander Berkovich, said his client retained the right to approve the photos prior to publication and resale was not permitted in the contract.

“These were photos were taken in a closed environment and this was not the arrangement,” he said.

The lawsuit against Seliger, GQ and its corporate parent Conde Nast alleges that Seliger sold the photos to Medved magazine and that GQ failed to stop him.

“The photos published in the July/August 2004 issue of the Medved are highly embarrassing and have caused Ms. Myskina great emotional distress and economic harm and injury to her reputation,” she says in the lawsuit filed in Manhattan Federal Court.

A message left for a Conde Nast spokeswoman on Saturday was not immediately returned.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

  MORE FROM TENNIS  
  
Tennis Section Front
 
Add Tennis headlines to your news reader:
 

Sponsored links