Porn Company, College Drop Lawsuit
National American University has agreed to drop its lawsuit accusing a California pornography provider of trademark violations and cyber piracy for its use of Naughty American University and the acronym NAU, an attorney for the school said Wednesday.
The school's parent company, Dlorah Inc., filed the federal complaint in Rapid City, where the company is based, against La Touraine Inc., a Nevada corporation based in San Diego.
National American University offers online degrees and has 16 campuses in South Dakota, Colorado, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, New Mexico and Texas.
Sam Kerr, general counsel for National American University, said Wednesday that La Touraine has agreed to stop using the school's trade mark. La Touraine's owner and lawyer didn't return calls seeking comment.
The privately owned NAU announced last month it's merging with Baltimore-based Camden Learning Corp. The $162 million deal is to be completed in November. The new publicly held company will be known as NAU Holdings Inc.
The lawsuit, filed in May, sought to prevent the use of the school's trademark and asked for financial damages.
According to the complaint, La Touraine registered a domain name in 2003 and started offering pornographic and sexually explicit adult entertainment services under a Web site called Naughty American University. In 2004, the company began selling sexually explicit content with college and academic themes under a Web site named Fast Times at NAU, the lawsuit states.
The first site has since removed college themes, though it still sells porn. The other site is now under construction.
Both parties filed a joint motion to dismiss the lawsuit on Monday indicating a resolution had been reached. If approved by a judge, each side would cover its own attorney fees and the lawsuit would be dismissed.