This famous early 90’s wrestler during the steroid trial has his doubts about the Vince McMahon NDA Sex Trafficking Civil Lawsuit

Tommy Jackson
The Slammy Bulletin
2 min readFeb 6, 2024

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The uproar about the Sex trafficking lawsuit against Vince McMahon and the WWE was spread among multiple media outlets once the 60-plus-page document was released. Not just wrestling sites but major news outlets including in the UK and Ireland. However, there was one wrestler, along with his co-host on his podcast, who decided to throw a controversial wrench into the media storm and slammed other podcasters in the process for irresponsibly jumping into the uproar.

Copywrite and Photo Credit: Chris Buck of Variety

“If these things were done to me by a 77-year-old man, I wouldn't be looking for a payoff, I would be looking for him to die in prison on criminal charges”, said Kevin Nash on his Kliq This podcast this week. He followed up by saying that “once you get the criminal charges, you can still go back and get civil (charges)”.

His co-host John Oliver had various questions, on why this wasn’t brought up a year and a half ago when the first ‘hush money’ allegations came out. He said he would think her defense lawyer should have had the allegations investigated immediately based on the lawsuit alone and they should have told her to call the police immediately. He wasn’t surprised The Rock was made a board member the same week this came down. Nash also made a point that Vince was a minority owner of WWE stock and was an easy target after selling some of his stock late last year.

As controversial as their stance is, it wasn’t that Nash or Oliver were denying the allegations of the lawsuit either, but thought other podcasters were all over it with outrage too quickly before Vince was even brought to court or investigated by the police. It should be noted that Nash is closely connected with the McMahon family and simply said he just “doesn’t want it to be true” and doesn’t want any harm towards them. Nash said that Vince was somewhat of a father figure to him (when his real father wasn’t around), saying he saw star power in Nash during the steroid trial period and when he was given the WWE belt in 1994. Nash also stated in a past Kliq This episode that he was one of the few big wrestlers who would test negative for steroids.

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