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Bride must pay $1 million for bashing photographer

Posted at 3:43 PM, Aug 02, 2017
and last updated 2017-08-03 13:53:19-04

When Neely and Andrew Moldovan got married in 2014, they were not happy with their wedding photographer. The Dallas couple claimed that the photographer, Andrea Polito, was withholding images from their special day unless they agreed to pay a $125 fee, although they had already paid for her services. The couple began to trash Polito and her business online and went so far as to appear on a local TV news station to air their grievances. After their appearance, multiple negative reviews of Polito's business started to pop up online, on platforms such as Yelp and WeddingWire. Now, a jury has ruled that the Moldovans must pay Polito $1.08 million in damages for defaming her, which ultimately cost the photographer her business. https://www.facebook.com/Dose/photos/a.643293552431853.1073741828.634388726655669/1481073405320526/?type=3&theater After receiving the proofs of the photos a month after the wedding, blogger Neely Moldovan began asking Polito for the high-resolution versions of the images. Polito said the contract Moldovan signed stipulatedthat once she sends the proofs, the couple must put in an order for their album, which has an additional $125 fee for the cover. The couple never submitted the order for their album. After several emails back and forth, Polito eventually waived the $125 fee in an effort to diffuse the situation. But the damage to Polito's business was already done. The couple's TV appearance in which they made disparaging remarks about Polito's business aired in January 2015. Polito said in a typical year, she would book between 75 and 100 weddings. In 2015, she managed to book only two. bride and groom photo She was eventually forced to move out of the studio she'd maintained for 10 years due to the lack of income. Despite the fact that her business was destroyed, Polito has taken some measure of comfort in the verdict. "I’m emotionally exhausted. This has been a very long battle," she told The Dallas Morning News. "Last Friday when the verdict was read I felt a little bit relieved, but most importantly, I feel my reputation was restored to myself. What’s been so hard the past couple of years has been feeling so ashamed of this story."

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