In what was intended to be the case’s final pretrial hearing in Roanoke on Tuesday, Judge Glen Conrad agreed that Eramo’s actions did violate the protective order, and granted Rolling Stone’s motion. While he has not yet imposed any of the proposed sanctions, he did rule that any deposition videos that Eramo gave to ABC are no longer permissible as evidence in the upcoming 12-day trial.

It was unclear whether Conrad will impose further sanctions on Eramo and her counsel before the trial starts Monday.

After the hearing, an attorney for Eramo said that the number of tapes that must now be excluded is “to be determined.” Based on Tuesday’s hearing, it is clear that the entirety of the deposition of Erdely — the author of the now-retracted article “A Rape on Campus” — will be thrown out. It also appears that the deposition of “Jackie” — the former U.Va. student whose debunked allegations of a gang rape at a fraternity house led to the article’s retraction — may still be in play, as it was not given to ABC.

Attorneys for Eramo have thus far declined to comment on the ruling.