Screen writer Founded Seymour Hoffman Dead is Suing National Enquirer For Outing Seymour



Somehow I believe that since most courts have ruled that being gay should not be shameful, outing is not illegal. So by suing the friend and alleged boyfriend of Seymour can only bring more attention and more facts into the light. He is not defending the “manhood” of Seymour if he had any, he (Bar Katz) is trying to defend his own.  

Thinking that homosexuality is so shameful to him that the mere accusation calls for money to give him  back what? To make him “whole” which is what the courts use as bullseye for justice? Making him whole was if the courts could make someone straight and happy with that determination but even if it had that power to make a broken individual full of demons of guilt because of his double life, this would be making him whole? You can’t defend a dead man, but thanks to a homophobic boyfriend Mr. Bar Katz we are going to get to know Rock Hudson’s life all over again, It’s always the homophobic boyfriend that cracks the case wide open. The butler stop being guilty since we  found out that gay celebrities in the closet have someone else other than the butler to leed the double life. It’s now the boyfriend who is done it.


 This should tell something to closeted folks but then is hard to hear let alone understand what is being said outside of the closet.(words of the publisher)
Adam Gonzalez

  •  Boyfriends

WEST VILLAGE — The screenwriter pal of Philip Seymour Hoffman who found the Oscar-winning actor dead from a apparent heroin overdose is suing the National Enquirer for $50 million, accusing the supermarket tabloid of “yellow journalism” and for writing lies that the two friends were homosexual lovers.
David Bar Katz filed the defamation lawsuit on Tuesday in Manhattan Supreme Court, flatly denying the Enquirer’s claim that it got an  “exclusive interview” with Katz in which he confessed to watching Hoffman freebase cocaine the night before his death.
“The media coverage of Hoffman’s death has been highly regrettable and insensitive to Hoffman’s family and friends,” Bar Katz says in the lawsuit. “But the generally unseemly coverage of Hoffman’s death now seems restrained in light of this new outrage by the Enquirer.”
Hoffman was found dead in his West Village apartment with a syringe in his arm and dozens of bags of heroin. He was 46 and had three children with his partner, Mimi O’Donnell.
Bar Katz says in the lawsuit that he was a close friend of the “Capote” actor and “will forever be haunted by the fact that he was the one who discovered Hoffman’s body.”
The lawsuit refers to a Feb. 17, 2014 edition of the Enquirer that purports to have an interview with Bar Katz in which he confesses to being gay lovers with Hoffman and having seen him use heroin on a number of occasions.
“The story is a complete fabrication: There was no interview,” the lawsuit says. “Bar Katz has never spoken to anyone at the Enquirer about Hoffman. Bar Katz did not see Hoffman freebasing cocaine the night before he died, or at any other time. Bar Katz never saw Hoffman use heroin or cocaine.”
The lawsuit adds that Bar Katz "never had a homosexual relationship or encounter with Hoffman ever."
Radar Online on Wednesday published a press release about the story from theEnquirer, its sister publication, directing people to read the story in this week's edition.
The National Enquirer could not immediately be reached for comment.

By James Fanelli
Another one of Hoffman’s great performances was his portrayal of rock critic Lester Bangs in “Almost Famous,” who in this scene gives some life advice to a young aspiring music critic who just had his heart broken and dreams shattered:









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