In other words, anyone who wishes to examine the identity of the unknown person in the picture presented by the defendant as representing the "villain" will go by the name "Amit". The plaintiff's name. The defendant did not explain how the same figure of an unknown person he found on the Internet as representing the villain answered exactly the plaintiff's name, Amit. All the defendant claimed was that it was "absolute chance" (p. 82; para. 22 of the protégé).
It's a version that's hard to trust. that only a rare coincidence led to the fact that a random picture chosen by the defendant was of a person whose name was identical to that of the plaintiff. In the absence of such an explanation, it is hard to believe that we are dealing with nothing more than chance. In the absence of such an explanation, there is no escaping the conclusion that the defendant had a deliberate intention. The intention is to connect the character of the villain in the book in another way with the plaintiff.
- The combination of these facts, the fact that you typed the plaintiff's name refers to the book, and the fact that an examination of the picture that the defendant uploaded as the villain leads to a name identical to that of the plaintiff, leads to the conclusion that the defendant did indeed seek to create such a connection.
The defendant created the character of the villain, the inspiration for which is clearly the plaintiff. The defendant described the character of the villain with such characteristics that a reasonable sale of the plaintiff would identify the villain as a character that describes the plaintiff. The plaintiff made sure to include in the book offensive, defamatory and degrading descriptions of the villain, along with details that violate the plaintiff's privacy. And the defendant was not satisfied with all of this, but acted in such a way that an anonymous surfer wishing to find out information about the plaintiff would come to the book and discover that the plaintiff was connected to the book. Connected to the act of "The Bulgarian Fraud" and the fictional villain.