FAIR LAWN, N.J. (AP) -- When MaryAnn Sahoury agreed to appear
with her month-old daughter in a breast-feeding instructional video, she
saw an opportunity to help women who had trouble getting their babies
to nurse.
Instead, Sahoury found herself in a
nightmarish situation: Someone took the footage of Sahoury nursing her
daughter and spliced it with pornography posted on the Internet.
"It was terrifying," Sahoury told The Associated Press.
Last
week, a federal court judge in New Jersey ruled that a lawsuit Sahoury
filed against Meredith Corp., an Iowa-based media and marketing company
that shot and produced the video for Parents TV, could proceed.
The
lawsuit claims Sahoury was verbally assured her full name would not be
used in the video; instead, it displayed Sahoury's full name on screen,
the suit said. Meredith claims Sahoury signed a release on behalf of
herself and her daughter allowing the company to use their "image, voice
and name."
"While Meredith is not responsible
for this," the Des Moines-based company said in a statement, "we deeply
regret that this has occurred to Ms. Sahoury and her family."
When
her daughter was born in December 2009, Sahoury had trouble nursing and
used a lactation consultant. The following month the consultant asked
Sahoury if she wanted to appear in an instructional video to talk about
her breast-feeding experiences and demonstrate nursing techniques.
Sahoury agreed because she wanted to help other women overcome their
fears about breast-feeding.
"I didn't get paid to do this. I didn't want to be some sort of celebrity," said Sahoury, 35. "I did this to help other moms."
Sahoury
said she was asked to sign a piece of paper while she was leaving the
shoot with the baby. She admits to not reading the document and said she
believed it backed up the assertion that her full name would not be
used.
In July 2010, Sahoury - who had not yet
seen the video - Googled herself. She was shocked by what she saw:
numerous links to pornographic sites and videos containing her name. She
clicked on one and saw the video edited to include a woman with
"similar features and stature" performing sex acts. Sahoury then Googled
her infant daughter's name, and the search returned pornographic links.
The
lawsuit claims the video was posted on YouTube, when Sahoury was told
it would only appear on Parents TV and cable. The video has since been
removed from all Meredith properties, including Parents TV, and YouTube,
the company said.
The lawsuit also states a video filmed with another woman that day did not use her full name.
The
suit seeks an order prohibiting Meredith from using the video featuring
her and her daughter for any purpose; it also seeks attorney fees.
Sahoury
said the emotional toll was immense. She described spending days and
nights sitting on her couch, searching the Internet trying to identify
and report websites. She was successful at removing some and believes
she found the perpetrator, the lawsuit states, but was unable to shut
him down.
Meredith initially "exhibited a
sense of urgency and a willingness" to help Sahoury, the suit said,
sending her daily updates on where the video was being shown and what
got shut down. The suit claims the company's "interest in attempting to
mitigate the damage" started to wane. Sahoury then sued.
In
a statement, Meredith said it is "appalled" that the video was misused
and it has hired lawyers to file take-down demands and Internet
specialists to clear online caches and has helped improve Sahoury's
online reputation. It continues to provide the services, the statement
said.
"We are confident that the steps we have
taken are helping to mitigate the issue," the statement said. "We have
taken these actions even though Ms. Sahoury signed a full release for
herself and her daughter."
Sahoury said she
hopes her situation leads to a greater awareness of Internet safety and
exploitation and increased protections for breast-feeding mothers.
"Sometimes
I want to crawl into bed and say, `God I wish it wasn't me,' but it was
me for a reason," she said. "I need to be as strong as I was when I
made the video and say, look, I'm still supporting mothers everywhere,
our rights to breast-feed wherever and whenever we want and not be
exploited by major corporations or any kind of perverts."
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.