Lindsay Lohan doesn't want to be on camera, at least not when she's giving a
deposition.
Lawyers for Lohan filed a motion on Wednesday seeking a judge's order barring
any filming of the actress' upcoming deposition in a case filed by gal pal
Samantha Ronson.
She also doesn't want transcripts or other accounts of the deposition
introduced into public records. The documents state Lohan is afraid videotaping
the deposition will "unduly embarrass, oppress and burden her because of the
private subject matter of the expected testimony and the virtual certainty that,
unless access is significantly limited, the transcript and videotape of the
deposition will be illegally exploited by the media."
Her attorneys cited a judge's order barring videotaped depositions in Britney
Spears and Kevin Federline's recent custody dispute.
A judge is scheduled to consider Lohan's motion in November.
Civil depositions are not public records, but the motion states Lohan is
afraid that some media outlets would try to steal copies of the tape if the
questioning is filmed.
Ronson sued her former lawyers in May, claiming they failed to represent her
adequately when she sued bloggers, including Perez Hilton. Ronson claimed the
bloggers defamed her by writing that she had planted drugs in Lohan's car and
was exploiting the actress to the paparazzi.
The celebrity DJ's lawsuit states that her then-attorneys didn't properly
fight a motion by Perez Hilton, whose real name is Mario Lavandeira, to dismiss
the lawsuit. A judge granted Lavandeira's motion and ordered Ronson to pay him
nearly 85,000 U.S. dollars in legal fees.
In court documents filed earlier this week, Ronson claimed her former lawyer,
Martin Garbus, and a pair of law firms threatened to sue her over unpaid legal
fees in the days before Lavandeira's dismissal motion came before a judge.
Garbus has challenged the legal standing for several of Ronson's
claims.