se a qualcuno interessa ho trovato un 'intervista della ragazza
http://www.insideedition.com/GirlsGoneWild.htm
high school beauty queen from Louisiana, who is suing the owner of the popular "Girls Gone Wild" video series, tells Inside Edition when she was 17, she was given alcohol, offered drugs and asked to flash her breasts by the producer of the videos.
In the report, Jaime Capdeboscq says in her senior year of high school she and her friends went to Mardi Gras without their parents. While there, "Girls Gone Wild" owner, Joe Francis, met them on the street and offered to introduce them to popular rap musician Snoop Dog.
Speaking out for the first time, Capdeboscq tells Inside Edition she was whisked away and spent a fun filled evening with Francis and Snoop Dog, who was there to host a video. She tells Inside Edition she made it clear to Francis she was underage: "I actually showed him my drivers license to prove that I was 17, because he thought that I was lying."
In the lawsuit, Jamie says that didn't stop Francis from giving her alcohol -- and even offering her illegal drugs, including Ecstasy.
She tells Inside Edition she is not sure why he would do it, but has a theory: "Maybe to get girls to do things that they normally wouldn't do is my best guess."
She says she declined the Ecstasy, but, after a night of drinking and partying with Francis and Snoop Dog, she and her friend were talked into flashing for the cameras. She tells Inside Edition they were promised the scene would not appear in any videos.
But, she says, she was shocked when she was watching TV a few months later and saw her picture on the cover of a video called "Girls Gone Wild: Doggy Style."
"I couldn't believe it. I was just in astonishment. I couldn't do anything, oh my God, I can't believe that's me."
Her father, Jim, tells Inside Edition that, while he was disappointed in his daughter, his real anger is directed at Joe Francis.
"Joe, first of all, you lied to the girls. You told the girls a story. In my terminology, you hustled them."
Jamie tells Inside Edition she is coming forward to help others: "Maybe there's some little girl out there I can help, because Mr. Francis, obviously he's done it to me, he will probably do it again."
In response to the lawsuit, both Francis and Snoop Dog deny the Ecstasy allegation and say that anything the girls did was done willingly and in a public place, and there was a sign indicating "Girls Gone Wild" was taping. They also say the videos are protected by the First Amendment.
Michelle Padilla is also suing "Girls Gone Wild".
Capdeboscq is not the only one threatening the video kingpin with legal action. Michelle Padilla of Southern California tells Inside Edition she had no idea that when she pulled up the top of her bathing suit on a houseboat in Lake Havasu, Arizona, that someone was taking her picture. Now a mother of an eight-year-old, Padilla said she'd never even heard of "Girls Gone Wild" at the time, but today she's not only in one of their videos, she's on its cover. Her picture is also being used in commercials, and is even on the company's website.
Padilla is suing "Girls Gone Wild," saying that she's been humiliated and exploited by an invasion of her privacy. "I had an ex-boyfriend give me a call and let me know he saw a commercial for it, and I was on the cover without my permission," she told Inside Edition.
Lawyers for "Girls Gone Wild" claim the videos are documentaries, protected by the First Amendment and were all shot in public places.
In April, after an underage girl complained to her parents about being taped for one of his videos, Francis was arrested in Panama City, Florida. He was charged with 41 counts, including promoting sexual performance of a child, providing alcoholic beverages to a person under 21 years of age, and procuring a minor for prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges. A trial is expected sometime next year.
Francis refused to be interviewed for this report, but in a statement. He claimed the criminal charges in Florida are retribution for a lawsuit he filed against Panama City earlier this year. He says both the criminal and civil charges against him are baseless.