Shocking Details On Former WCW Star's Legal Troubles
Date Added: November 06, 2007
Story By: Marc Middleton
- As posted this morning, MyFoxAtlanta.com has an article up this morning with an update on former WCW star Hardbody Harrison's legal troubles. Harrison is currently on trial in federal court on sex trafficking charges. He was arrested in 2005 after three women said he held them against their will and forced them into prostitution. Harrison, real name Harrison Norris, claims he was just trying to help the girls and that he is the real victim. He claims the girls were prostitutes when he met them and took them off the street to train them as professional wrestlers.
Norris is acting as his own legal representation in the jury trial. One woman testified yesterday that he literally grabbed her off the street one day, held her at his home and forced her into prostitution. Currently their are three women making allegations against the former WCW star and five more are expected to be called as witnesses in the federal trial that is expected to last two and a half weeks. If found guilty, Norris faces life in prison.
Date Added: November 06, 2007
Story By: Marc Middleton
- As posted this morning, MyFoxAtlanta.com has an article up this morning with an update on former WCW star Hardbody Harrison's legal troubles. Harrison is currently on trial in federal court on sex trafficking charges. He was arrested in 2005 after three women said he held them against their will and forced them into prostitution. Harrison, real name Harrison Norris, claims he was just trying to help the girls and that he is the real victim. He claims the girls were prostitutes when he met them and took them off the street to train them as professional wrestlers.
Norris is acting as his own legal representation in the jury trial. One woman testified yesterday that he literally grabbed her off the street one day, held her at his home and forced her into prostitution. Currently their are three women making allegations against the former WCW star and five more are expected to be called as witnesses in the federal trial that is expected to last two and a half weeks. If found guilty, Norris faces life in prison.