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Peter Nygard files for dismissal of class-action lawsuit alleging he sexually assaulted women

Canadian fashion designer Peter Nygard is asking the Southern District Court of New York to dismiss the claims of 52 out of 57 plaintiffs who filed a class-action lawsuit alleging he sexually assaulted them.

Nygard says 50 of the 57 women involved in the class action lived outside of New York, where suit was filed

Fashion mogul Peter Nygard said a class-action lawsuit by 57 women who allege he sexually assaulted them should be dismissed because it was filed in the wrong jurisdiction. (Gustavo Caballero/Churchill Downs/Getty Images)

Canadian fashion designer Peter Nygard is asking the Southern District Court of New York to dismiss the claims of 52 out of 57 plaintiffs who filed a class-action lawsuit alleging he sexually assaulted them.

In the notice of motion sent to the media Thursday morning, Nygard says not only do 50 of the plaintiffs have no connection to New York, he argues the American court doesn't have jurisdiction over him or his companies named in the civil lawsuit.

"Due to the lack of connection between either defendant and New York and these plaintiffs claims and New York, any exercise of jurisdiction over defendants with respect to these plaintiffs' claims would violate due process," Nygard saidin court filings.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of 10 plaintiffs nine women from the Bahamas and one American in the Southern District of New York in February. Since then, 47 more women, including plaintiffs from Canada, have joined.

Their allegations against Nygard include rape, sodomy and drugging in locations that include New York, Winnipeg and Nassau.

The allegations date as far back as 1977, and some of the womenallege they were assaulted when they were as young as 14 or 15.

The FBI raided Nygard's New York offices shortly after the class action was filedas part of a criminal investigation. No charges have been laid.

Nygard saidhe lived in Nassau in the Bahamas from 1970 until 2018, before moving back to Canada.

The designer, who was raised in Manitoba, claims he's been a permanent resident of the province since January 2019, and hasn't been to New York since February of that year.

"Since at least January 2019, I have spent more time in Manitoba, Canada, than in any other location," Nygardwrote in a signed declaration attached to the motion to dismiss.

"Since at least February 14, 1958, my passport has been issued to me by the government of Canada. I have never voted in the United States. I have no family members who reside or work in New York," he said.

Nygard saidhe is not a citizen or permanent resident of the U.S., and has never owned or leased property there, nor does he pay taxes in New York.

According to the court filings, "New York City has been described as the Nygard 'world'or 'corporate'headquarters.

"This was done for promotional and marketing purposes, to connect the Nygard brand to New York City, arguably the most well-known city for fashion in the world, and to grow business and visibility for the brand in the United States."

Statute of limitations expired,Nygard claims

In the motion, Nygard also claimedthe statute of limitations has expired for 38 of the plaintiffs.

He saidthat according to the U.S. Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, the women should have come forward no later than 10 years after the alleged assaults, or 10 years after they turned 18.

Nygard saidthe 38 plaintiffs have failed to prove that they couldn't have filed their allegations before the statute of limitations ran out.

"Although most Canadian provinces do not have a statute of limitations applicable to sexual assault claims, under the circumstances here, plaintiffs' Canadian law claims are subject to the statute of limitations applicable to such claims in New York," which Nygard saidis five years.

"Accordingly, for the 38 plaintiffs who are asserting Canadian law claims, if their claims are time barred under the statute of limitations applicable to the claims in New York, the claims must be dismissed."

The motion to dismiss also saidthat 12 of the 57 plaintiffs' claims allegedly occurred outside of the United States and thus require "extraterritorial application" under the law.

None of the allegations against Nygard have been proven in court and no charges have been laid.

With files from Joanne Levasseur, Vera-Lynn Kubinec and Timothy Sawa