This made me quite curious!!!!
OK, I am very curious to know what "very special bonding moments you don't want others to see … Fun stuff. Girl stuff. Bonding" goes on in Cheerleaders locker rooms!!!
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The director of the Nashville Kats cheerleading squad criticized the management company at the Gaylord Entertainment Center for destroying videotapes of the women changing clothes in their dressing room and for not informing the women before a hidden-camera scandal became public.
Laura Cording, director of the 13-woman squad, said the women were upset that Powers Management failed to inform them of the voyeuristic taping that two Powers employees at the arena performed. The men installed a hidden video camera in a wall clock and taped the cheerleaders on a game night in August, Powers officials said.
''We were directly involved,'' Cording said. ''It's incredibly frustrating. We don't understand why we weren't told before now.''
The camera was found Aug. 28, and a secret inquiry was conducted by investigators hired by Powers. The investigators consulted with Davidson County District Attorney General Torry Johnson, who said he gave them the OK to destroy the four tapes. The cheerleaders learned about the incident during a news broadcast earlier this week.
Cording said the team is very unified on the matter and is consulting with a lawyer. She wouldn't rule out any legal action. When asked how she and the team were doing after learning of the taping and how Powers handled it, she said:
''Disappointed, angry, hurt — all those things. There's a sense of violation. Not only do we change our clothes in there, we're incredibly close as a team. We had very special bonding moments you don't want others to see … Fun stuff. Girl stuff. Bonding.''
Laura Cording, director of the 13-woman squad, said the women were upset that Powers Management failed to inform them of the voyeuristic taping that two Powers employees at the arena performed. The men installed a hidden video camera in a wall clock and taped the cheerleaders on a game night in August, Powers officials said.
''We were directly involved,'' Cording said. ''It's incredibly frustrating. We don't understand why we weren't told before now.''
The camera was found Aug. 28, and a secret inquiry was conducted by investigators hired by Powers. The investigators consulted with Davidson County District Attorney General Torry Johnson, who said he gave them the OK to destroy the four tapes. The cheerleaders learned about the incident during a news broadcast earlier this week.
Cording said the team is very unified on the matter and is consulting with a lawyer. She wouldn't rule out any legal action. When asked how she and the team were doing after learning of the taping and how Powers handled it, she said:
''Disappointed, angry, hurt — all those things. There's a sense of violation. Not only do we change our clothes in there, we're incredibly close as a team. We had very special bonding moments you don't want others to see … Fun stuff. Girl stuff. Bonding.''
Full Story!
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