Just over an hour ago, there was a major development in one of the concussion-related lawsuits filed against WWE. Back on October 30th, WWE had requested a stay on discovery (document production) and it was granted on November 10th. Today, that all changed, as Judge Vanessa Bryant lifted the stay, granting limited discovery as it pertains to the claims of Vito Lograsso (Big Vito) and former developmental talent Evan Singleton. Besides the discovery being confined to Singleton and Lograsso’s claims and not the other lawsuits, the judge limited it to these questions:

(1) whether WWE had or should have had knowledge of and owed a duty to disclose to those plaintiffs the risks of long -term degenerative neurological conditions resulting from concussions or mild traumatic brain injuries to wrestlers who performed for WWE in the year 2005 or later, (2) whether and when WWE may have breached that duty, and (3) whether such a breach, if any, continued after Singleton and LoGrasso ceased performing for WWE.

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While the scope of the discovery could change if pending the outcome of WWE’s motions to dismiss, this is a huge win for the wrestlers’ side and their lawyer, Konstantine Kyros. The complaints in the lawsuits have heavily pushed the idea that WWE, like the NFL, hid information about developments in concussion science from the talent. While no real proof of that has surfaced as of yet, if anything like that were to exist within WWE’s archives of internal communication, that would deal a huge blow to their defense. That’s a big “if,” though.

The NFL class action lawsuit could very well have ended differently without the existence of such “smoking gun” evidence. Besides the league trying to quiet links between football and brain damage, they had privately given credit to such neurological trauma ending some players’ careers. Again, there’s no known evidence that WWE has engaged in anything like this, but at least the LoGrasso/Singleton lawsuit is now at the point where the plaintiffs can dig to find out if there is.

While most of the documents that Kyros, LoGrasso, and Singleton get in discovery will probably never be made public, some could show up as exhibits in various filings down the line. That’s how, for example, Hulk Hogan’s 1998 WCW contract was made public: The plaintiffs in the racial discrimination lawsuit against WCW got it in discovery and later attached it as an exhibit to one of their pleadings.

Here’s the full text of the judge’s order (I did not touch the actual text, but I did adjust the line spacing to make it more readable):