Diaz topless snaps - photographer convicted
A photographer who took topless pictures of Cameron Diaz before she became a star was convicted of forgery, attempted grand theft and perjury today for a scheme to sell the images back to the actress 11 years later for millions of dollars.
Photographer John Rutter, 42, faces up to six years in prison.
Sentencing was set for September 15.
Diaz was not present in court for the reading of the verdicts.
The jury of seven women and five men deliberated for two-and-a-half hours on Friday and announced they had verdicts less than two hours after returning on today.
Both the ctress and the defendant testified during the trial, which began on July 13.
Rutter told the jury that while a model release form giving him ownership of the photos was forged, he didnât do it.
But under cross-examination, Rutter acknowledged lying to Diaz and in a court declaration.
He also admitted to asking Diaz to come up with 3.5 million dollars in two days or he would sell the photos to prospective buyers worldwide, in a campaign timed to coincide with the 2003 release of âCharlieâs Angels: Full Throttle.â
Rutter said he thought he had a right to do so and was simply giving the actress âright of first refusalâ.
Diaz testified that Rutter told her the buyers were âgoing to use this against youâ by portraying her as a âbad angelâ in a huge magazine spread and bus and billboard ad campaign.
When he wouldnât identify the purported buyers, she suspected blackmail and contacted authorities, who arranged a sting operation.
The actress was a 19-year-old aspiring model when the pictures were taken in 1992. She posed in leather boots and fishnet stockings in a warehouse. At one point she held a chain attached to a male modelâs neck.
She wore a top and black vest in some of the shots, which were published in European magazines at the time.
The topless photos have never been published and a judge has prohibited Rutter from releasing those and an accompanying video of the shoot.
Diaz, whose screen credits include âShrek,â âVanilla Skyâ and âThereâs Something About Mary,â testified that she wasnât ashamed of the shots. She initially offered to go into partnership with the photographer to release certain images.
Rutterâs theft charge was for the alleged blackmail scheme, forgery for the signature on the form and perjury for declaring in a separate civil case that the signature was authentic. That case is pending.


