Tiger Woods’ ex-girlfriend, Erica Herman, is attempting to have a Non Disclosure Agreement signed by the golfer nullified, glamsquad reports
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According to court documents released on Wednesday, March 8, Herman, 39, cited two federal laws that allow NDAs to become null and void if sexual harassment or sexual assault claims arise.
The federal Ending Forced Arbitration Of Sexual Assault And Sexual Harassment Act of 2021 and the Speak Out Act are the laws in question.
Herman has not yet publicly accused Woods of sexual assault or harassment, but the golfer has previously admitted to struggling with sex addiction.
The first public appearance of the ex-couple was at the President’s Cup in September 2017, one month after Herman signed Woods’ NDA.
According to the legal request obtained by PageSix, Herman is unsure whether Woods’ NDA is “valid or enforceable,” and she is seeking clarification from the court.
She also wants to know if the NDA can be enforced, if she has the right to speak out on a variety of issues, including her “own experiences,” the “experiences of her family members,” information learned by people “not covered” by the NDA, and whether she has the right to respond to statements Wood has “made or published about her.”
She also stated in court that she is “unsure whether she may disclose,” among other things, “facts giving rise to various legal claims she believes she has.”
“She is also currently unsure what other information about her own life she may discuss or with whom,” the document also states.
Herman did not specify which public statements or information she wishes to address in her legal filings.
Herman and Woods were previously involved in a high-profile car accident that resulted in a fatality.
In May 2019, the parents of Nicholas Immesberger, who died in a car accident after drinking too much at The Woods Jupiter restaurant in Jupiter, Fla., which is owned by Woods and managed by Herman, sued both Woods and Herman.
According to court documents, the family claimed that their son, a bartender, was “over-served” at the golfer’s establishment.
Woods was removed from the case in June 2019, and Herman was removed later that year.