Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Trial of accused Uma Thurman stalker begins

Lawyer argues Jack Jordan’s letters to actress were ‘creepy,’ not criminal

Image: Uma Thurman
The trial for a former mental patient who is accused of stalking actress Uma Thurman began Monday. A lawyer argues that Jack Jordan's messages to the star were creepy, but not criminal.
Peter Kramer / AP
updated 4:11 p.m. ET April 28, 2008

NEW YORK - A former mental patient’s note that his hands should be on Uma Thurman’s body “at all times” may be creepy but it is not criminal, a lawyer said Monday in defense of a man accused of stalking the “Kill Bill” actress.

George Vomvolakis told the state Supreme Court jury in his opening statement that defendant Jack Jordan, who is charged with misdemeanor stalking and aggravated assault, “does not think the way you and I think. He doesn’t know the boundaries you and I know. He thinks it’s romantic.”

But Assistant District Attorney Colleen Walsh told jurors that Jordan had tried to communicate with Thurman sporadically for more than two years, “with the intent to harass, annoy, threaten and alarm” her.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

Walsh said Jordan used “emotional blackmail” to try to get to the “Pulp Fiction” star. She said he sent her family an e-mail saying, “I will kill myself if I do not get to see Uma Thurman within 24 to 48 hours.”

Slide show
Image: Richard Gere and Diane Lane
  The week in celebrity sightings
Gere and Lane toast to new flick, Bill Murray goes underground, Buffy meets a bottlenose dolphin

more photos

Walsh said Thurman’s family kept that and several other e-mails from the actress because they knew the messages would cause her fear. The prosecutor said Thurman, 37, and her family members will testify about the messages from Jordan.

Walsh said Jordan escalated his contact attempts by showing up at a Lower Manhattan movie set on Nov. 8, 2005, where Thurman was filming “My Super Ex-Girlfriend” and tried to get into her trailer.

The prosecutor said Jordan also appeared at Thurman’s Greenwich Village home, where she lives with her two children, and rang her doorbell. At one point, one of Thurman’s employees came out and found him sitting on her steps, Walsh said.

Vomvolakis said his client had no intention of harassing or threatening Thurman because he loved her, and he said so in a letter to her.

“Creepy? Yes. Obsessed? Yes. Criminal? No,” the defense lawyer told the jury.

Jordan, 37, was arrested in October 2007 after being accused of following and trying to contact Thurman from early 2005 until just before his arrest. He is free on $10,000 bail.


Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Find a business to start

Try for Free

Search Jobs

Find Your Dream Home

$7 trades, no fee IRAs

Find your next car