'Price is Right' lawsuit over pregnancy overturned

'Price is Right' lawsuit involving a model for the long-running game show was overturned by a California judge Wednesday. Brandi Cochran, who worked on the 'The Price is Right, was awarded damages last year after convincing a jury that the show's producers discriminated against her after she became pregnant.

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Monty Brinton/CBS/AP/File
In this publicity image released by CBS Entertainment, host Drew Carey hosts pauses during a taping of of 'The Price is Right Million Dollar Spectacular.' A Los Angeles judge on Tuesday, March 12, 2013, overturned an $8.5 million jury verdict awarded to a former model on the show after determining that he had not properly instructed the panel. A retrial will be scheduled in Brandi Cochran's case versus the show's producers.

A judge has overturned an $8.5 million verdict awarded to a former "Price is Right" model in a pregnancy discrimination case and ruled a new trial is necessary.

Judge Kevin Brazile ruled Tuesday that he didn't properly instruct the jury that ultimately came to a 9-3 decision in Brandi Cochran's favor last year, City News Service reported. He based his ruling on new legal guidance from the state's Supreme Court.

Cochran convinced jurors that the show's producers discriminated against her after she became pregnant and they refused to allow her to return to the show.

Her attorney, Carney Shegerian, said Wednesday that Brazile's ruling was proper and he expects the damages to go higher in the case.

"I think on re-trial I'll get triple or quadruple that," he said.

Brazile determined he should have instructed the jury to decide whether pregnancy discrimination was a substantial factor in the producers' decision to keep Cochran from rejoining the cast after her child was born. He cited the divided verdict as a factor warranting a new trial, which will likely occur later this year.

A spokesman for show producers FremantleMedia declined to comment on the ruling.

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