New reporting casts Dianna Russini car crash heroine story into doubt
Page Six published a new story that contradicts their original reporting on Dianna Russini rescuing a man and his dog from a car crash.
Page Six published a new story that contradicts their original reporting on Dianna Russini rescuing a man and his dog from a car crash.
No private eye was necessary when you're talking about a 6'4" former NFL player and current head coach, Mike Vrabel.
Russini was unable to provide "sufficient evidence" to back up her claims to both Page Six and The Athletic.
Not exactly the Dianna Russini story we were expecting to see from Page Six on Friday.
"Dianna's in a space where it's moral and ethical. Mike's is moral."
According to Status, staffers have called the organization's public response "unnecessarily messy" as the investigation unfolded.
The photographer, who reportedly did not initially identify Russini, also tipped off TMZ.
The Page Six story was a masterclass in insinuation, allowing everyone to fill in the blanks based on their own presumptions.
"These photos are misleading and lack essential context."
This report raises bigger questions about why ESPN is annoyed that an analyst for them didn't leak a story that was well outside his job description to their reporters, and why their applied pressure has led to at least one senior member of Rodriguez's team saying he wants to give them a story.