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Saturday 23 of November 2024

Stuntman pinned under SUV driven by Sizemore settles lawsuit


FILE - In this Aug. 11, 2014 file photo, actor Tom Sizemore arrives at the premiere of
FILE - In this Aug. 11, 2014 file photo, actor Tom Sizemore arrives at the premiere of "The Expendables 3" in Los Angeles. A stuntman who was pinned beneath an SUV driven by Tom Sizemore on a TV production has settled a lawsuit with the actor and Paramount Pictures. Court papers show a notice of settlement was filed March 29. No terms were disclosed. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File),FILE - In this Aug. 11, 2014 file photo, actor Tom Sizemore arrives at the premiere of "The Expendables 3" in Los Angeles. A stuntman who was pinned beneath an SUV driven by Tom Sizemore on a TV production has settled a lawsuit with the actor and Paramount Pictures. Court papers show a notice of settlement was filed March 29. No terms were disclosed. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)
A stuntman who was pinned beneath an SUV driven by Tom Sizemore on a TV production has settled a lawsuit with the actor and Paramount Pictures. Court papers show a notice of settlement was filed March 29. No terms were disclosed. Stuntman Steve De Castro alleged Sizemore was intoxicated at a desert airport north of Los Angeles in July 2016 while filming the USA Network's "Shooter" when he pinned and dragged de Castro, leaving him with serious injuries that he said have hurt his ability to work.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A stuntman who was pinned beneath an SUV driven by Tom Sizemore on a TV production has settled a lawsuit with the actor and Paramount Pictures.

Court papers show that a notice of settlement was filed March 29, and the sides are scheduled to appear in court in July to finalize it. No terms of the deal were disclosed.

The stuntman, Steve de Castro, alleged Sizemore was intoxicated at a remote desert airport north of Los Angeles in July 2016 while filming the Paramount-produced USA Network show “Shooter” when he pinned and dragged de Castro.

De Castro had to be airlifted from the set and left with broken bones and other serious injuries that he said have hurt his ability to work.

State records obtained by The Associated Press showed that Sizemore, 56, was only supposed to be sitting in the unmoving SUV for the scene.

“When, after rehearsals, the scenes were filmed for live action, Mr. Sizemore improvised at the end of the scene and drove away in his car,” said a Paramount investigative report given to the workplace safety agency Cal/OSHA. “Mr. Sizemore’s decision to drive was not in the script, and not expected to occur.”

The agency issued no citations over the accident after determining it didn’t have jurisdiction because the stuntman was an independent contractor, not a studio employee.

Lawrence B. Castro, attorney for the defendants, declined comment. Lawrence Grassini, attorney for de Castro, did not immediately reply to a message.

Sizemore, whose addiction struggles have plagued his career and derailed comeback attempts, was fired from the show before the suit was filed.

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