Raging Donald Sterling shouted toward the end of his second day of
testimony in the trial to determine his wife's right to make a $2
billion deal to sell the Clippers, 'I will never, ever sell this team,
and until I die I will be suing the NBA for this terrible violation
under antitrust.'
He was
followed to the stand by wife, Shelly, who tried to approach him in the
front row of the courtroom after she was done for the day.
Get away from me, you pig!' Sterling shouted. The judge then admonished him to make no further comments.
Sterling
began his testimony by saying he loved his wife, but then denounced
her.
He said she told him to have psychiatric and neurological exams
only because he had turned 80, and she was concerned for his health.
'She deceived me. I trusted her,' Sterling said. 'I never thought a wife wouldn't stand for her husband.'
Donald
Sterling's lawyers are challenging the authority of Shelly Sterling
under the family trust to unilaterally cut a deal for the team with
former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer.
During examination by his own lawyer,
Maxwell Blecher, Sterling was asked about his wife's position in the
trust if he were to be disqualified as a trustee.
'She has no rights whatsoever. She has no stock. She has no standing whatsoever,' Sterling said.
He
also lashed out at the NBA, saying: 'My wife was terrified. She's
frightened to death. She thinks the NBA will take away everything she
worked for. She was scared out of her mind.'
He denied he was a racist from the witness stand when asked on Wednesday.
Sterling at times yelled at his own lawyer as well as the lawyer for Shelly Sterling, and threw a paper down on the witness box.
He was followed to the stand by Shelly Sterling, who said she was a 50 percent beneficiary of the family trust.
When asked by her attorney Pierce O'Donnell if she was 'separated' from her husband of 58 years, she said 'sort of.'
'Do you love your husband?' O'Donnell asked.
'Yes, I do,' Shelly Sterling said.
But she then told of seeing him in an interview on CNN and becoming frightened at his personality change.
'I couldn't believe it, and I started crying,' she said. 'I felt so bad. I couldn't believe that was him.'
She
said she contacted a neurologist to examine him and later a
psychiatrist, thinking initially that he might have had a stroke.
She said she suggested radiological
tests or imaging to examine his brain, and was told eventually that he
had early signs of Alzheimer's.
She
became slightly tearful as she described her understanding of the
disease, which becomes progressively worse. Her testimony is scheduled
to resume on Thursday.
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