
The following article was written by The Associated Press:
HARTFORD, Conn. — Pro wrestler Bret "The  Hitman" Hart said he supports World Wrestling Entertainment's  release of a new video featuring his late brother, Owen, despite his  sister-in-law's lawsuit against the company and its leaders, including  Connecticut U.S. Senate candidate Linda  McMahon.
In a telephone interview Friday with The Associated Press,  Hart said the video that prompted Martha Hart's lawsuit is a tribute to  his family and its long history in professional wrestling.
"It was done with really good taste," he said from his home in  Calgary, Canada. "As a family, we're really proud of it and Martha's  lawsuit sort of makes it seem like there's something bad or wrong about  it. It's just a bunch of brothers and sisters celebrating the memory of  the whole family."
Last month, Martha Hart announced she had filed the lawsuit  claiming that Stamford-based WWE,  McMahon and her husband Vince used images of Owen Hart in at least 37  videos, including "Hart & Soul: the Hart Family Anthology," without  her knowledge or permission.
She said she had made it clear she did not want her late  husband's likeness associated with WWE.
Owen Hart died May 23, 1999, after falling from an apparatus  about 80 feet high before a crowd of 16,500 people at Kemper Arena in  Kansas City, Mo. Hart, who was making an aerial descent into the ring,  fell after the device that connected his body harness to the rigging  malfunctioned, according to WWE.
A WWE attorney has called Martha Hart's lawsuit "a political  stunt" coming as Linda McMahon campaigns as the Republican Party's  endorsed candidate to replace U.S. Sen. Chris Dodd.
Bret Hart, who returned to work for WWE about six months ago,  said he didn't know Martha Hart was planning to file the lawsuit. He  said they don't speak and he hasn't seen his brother's two children in  10 years, "for what reasons, I couldn't begin to tell you."
In a posting on his website this week, Bret Hart said his  brother "would turn in his grave watching Martha erase every single  thing he ever did, all for spite."
A representative for Martha Hart said Friday she was not  available to comment on Bret Hart's remarks.
At a June 22 news conference in Hartford, she accused the WWE  of seeking to profit from her husband's death, calling it "morally,  ethically and legally wrong." According to her suit, Owen Hart's estate  is seeking any profits due from the late wrestler's appearances on any  videos and other materials.
Martha Hart denied her lawsuit was politically motivated but  said Connecticut voters should question Linda McMahon's moral character.
McMahon stepped down as CEO of the WWE last fall to run for  the Senate. Her opponents, both fellow Republicans and Democrats, have  made controversies surrounding WWE an issue in the Senate race.
Bret Hart said believes his sister-in-law was treated fairly  by the McMahons and doesn't think WWE has misused his brother's image.  He said he hopes his brother's career "is opened up and people can see  it, remember it, enjoy it again."
"As much as I sympathize with Martha, I also think time's gone  by enough that it's time to start celebrating what my brother Owen  was," he said. 
 
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