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This Article is From Jul 17, 2012

Monaco Prince sues New Yorkers, nightclub over brawl

Monaco Prince sues New Yorkers, nightclub over brawl
Prince Pierre Casiraghi of Monaco (R) with Prince Albert II
New York: Monaco's Prince Pierre Casiraghi, who was punched in the face during a brawl in New York in February, is suing two men and a popular Manhattan nightclub over the incident and seeking unspecified damages.

Casiraghi, third in line to the throne in the principality, filed the complaint on Saturday in civil court in New York saying that he and three other men were attacked by former restaurateur Adam Hock, 47, at The Double Seven club in New York's trendy Meat Packing District.

The 24-year-old prince, whose Mediterranean country is smaller than New York's Central Park, also accused the club and owner Jeffrey Jah of negligence.

The lawsuit seeking compensation comes months after the prince and three of his friends filed criminal complaints against Hock accusing him of hitting them in the face in a fight that erupted in the club in the early morning hours of February 18.

Casiraghi and the three friends, including Stavros Niarchos, a Greek shipping scion and former boyfriend of hotel heiress Paris Hilton, were drinking with Hock and Jah in the Double Seven's VIP area.

"On February 18, 2012, plaintiffs were assaulted, struck and attacked by defendant Adam Hock," the complaint said. "Plaintiffs did not consent to the physical contact."

Hock's lawyer Sal Strazzullo maintained that Hock had acted in self-defense and that they would respond within a month to the complaint.

"My client was the one who was attacked by three individuals and we're going to stand by those facts," he said. That the prince was filing a civil complaint while the criminal complaints were still pending indicated those allegations were likely to be dismissed, he added.

The complaint said Hock was obviously drunk and blamed the club and Jah for serving him alcohol. Jah and representatives for The Double Seven were not immediately available for comment.

The prince accused Hock of defamation for calling him and his friends "drunk entitled guys who felt they deserved the prime table with the most beautiful girls" and saying he and his friends were inappropriately touching and "grabbing" women.

He also lodged a defamation charge against Strazzullo for allegedly saying the prince and his entourage had struck first.

Casiraghi, who lives in Italy, did not state how much he was seeking in compensatory and punitive damages.

He is the son of Princess Caroline of Monaco and her second husband, who was killed in a boating accident when Pierre Casiraghi was a young child. He is also the grandson of the late Hollywood actress Grace Kelly.

© Thomson Reuters 2012

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