Jesse Ventura (Wrestler) – Overview, Biography

Jesse Ventura
Name:Jesse Ventura
Occupation: Wrestler
Gender:Male
Height:191 cm (6′ 4”)
Birth Day: July 15,
1951
Age: 71
Birth Place: Minneapolis,
United States
Zodiac Sign:Cancer

Jesse Ventura

Jesse Ventura was born on July 15, 1951 in Minneapolis, United States (71 years old). Jesse Ventura is a Wrestler, zodiac sign: Cancer. Nationality: United States. Approx. Net Worth: $6 Million.

Trivia

He was inducted into the WWF Hall of Fame in 2004.

Net Worth 2020

$6 Million
Find out more about Jesse Ventura net worth here.

Physique

HeightWeightHair ColourEye ColourBlood TypeTattoo(s)
191 cm (6′ 4”) N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A

Before Fame

He served in the US Navy from 1969 to 1975.

Biography

Biography Timeline

1951

Ventura was born James George Janos on July 15, 1951 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the son of George William Janos and his wife, Bernice Martha (née Lenz). Both his parents were World War II veterans. Ventura has an older brother who served in the Vietnam War. Ventura has described himself as Slovak since his father’s parents were from Slovakia; his mother was of German descent. Ventura was raised as a Lutheran. Born in South Minneapolis “by the Lake Street bridge,” he attended Cooper Elementary School, Sanford Junior High School, and graduated from Roosevelt High School in 1969. Roosevelt High School inducted Ventura into its first hall of fame in September 2014.

1970

Ventura served in the United States Navy from December 1, 1969, to September 10, 1975, during the Vietnam War, but did not see combat. He graduated in BUD/S class 58 in December 1970 and was part of Underwater Demolition Team 12.

1975

In 1975, Ventura made his debut in the Central States territory, before moving to the Pacific Northwest, where he wrestled for promoter Don Owen as Jesse “The Great” Ventura. During his stay in Portland, Oregon, he had notable feuds with Dutch Savage and Jimmy Snuka and won the Pacific Northwest Wrestling title twice (once from each wrestler) and the tag team title five times (twice each with Bull Ramos and “Playboy” Buddy Rose, and once with Jerry Oates). He later moved to his hometown promotion, the American Wrestling Association in Minnesota, and began teaming with Adrian Adonis as the “East-West Connection” in 1979. In his RF Video shoot in 2012, he revealed that shortly after he arrived in the AWA he was given the nickname “the Body” by Verne Gagne. The duo won the AWA World Tag Team Championship on July 20, 1980, on a forfeit when Gagne, one-half of the tag team champions along with Mad Dog Vachon, failed to show up for a title defense in Denver, Colorado. The duo held the belts for nearly a year, losing to “The High Flyers” (Greg Gagne and Jim Brunzell).

On July 18, 1975, three days after his 24th birthday, Ventura married his wife Terry. The couple have two children: a son, Tyrel, who is a film and television director and producer, and a daughter, Jade. With the exception of the first two WrestleManias, Ventura always said hello to “Terry, Tyrel and Jade back in Minneapolis” during his commentary at the annual event. Tyrel also had the honor of inducting his father into the WWE Hall of Fame class of 2004, and worked on Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura, including as an investigator in the show’s third season.

1983

Ventura underwent BUD/S training and was assigned to a UDT team. He received the NEC 5321/22 UDT designation given after a six-month probationary period completed with Underwater Demolition Team 12. He was never granted the Navy Enlisted Classification (NEC) 5326 Combatant Swimmer (SEAL) designation, which requires a six-month probationary period with SEAL TEAM ONE or TWO. In 1983, eight years after Ventura left the Navy, the UDTs were disbanded and those operators were retrained and retasked as SEALs.

1985

Ventura continued to wrestle until September 1984 after 3 back-to-back losses to world champion Hulk Hogan, when blood clots in his lungs effectively ended his in-ring career. He claimed that the clots were a result of his exposure to Agent Orange during his time in Vietnam. Ventura returned to the ring in 1985, forming a tag-team with Randy Savage and Savage’s manager (and real-life wife) Miss Elizabeth. Often after their televised matches Ventura taunted and challenged fellow commentator Bruno Sammartino, but nothing ever came of this.

Ventura participated in a six-man tag-team match in December 1985 when he, Roddy Piper, and Bob Orton defeated Hillbilly Jim, Uncle Elmer, and Cousin Luke in a match broadcast on Saturday Night’s Main Event IV. The tag match against the Hillbillies came about after Piper and Orton interrupted Elmer’s wedding ceremony on the previous edition of the show; Ventura, who later claimed that he was under instruction from fellow commentator and WWF owner Vince McMahon to “bury them”, insulted Elmer and his wife during commentary of a real wedding ceremony at the Meadowlands Arena, by proclaiming when they kissed: “It looks like two carp in the middle of the Mississippi River going after the same piece of corn.” According to Ventura, the wedding was real, for at that time the New Jersey State Athletic Control Board would not allow the WWF to stage a fake wedding in the state of New Jersey, so Stan Frazier (Uncle Elmer) and his fiancee had agreed to have a real in-ring wedding.

1987

In 1987, while negotiating his contract as a WWF commentator, Ventura waived his rights to royalties on videotape sales when he was falsely told that only feature performers received such royalties. In November 1991, having discovered that other non-feature performers received royalties, Ventura brought an action for fraud, misappropriation of publicity rights, and quantum meruit in Minnesota state court against Titan Sports, asking for $2 million in royalties based on a fair market value share. Titan moved the case to federal court, and Ventura won an $801,333 jury verdict on the last claim. In addition, the judge awarded him $8,625 in back pay for all non-video WWF merchandising featuring Ventura. The judgment was affirmed on appeal, and the case, 65 F.3d 725 (8th Cir.1995), is an important result in the law of restitution. As a result, Ventura’s commentary is removed on most releases from WWE Home Video.

1988

After a failed comeback bid, Ventura hosted his own talk segment on the WWF’s Superstars of Wrestling called “The Body Shop”, in much the same heel style as “Piper’s Pit”, though the setting was a mock gym (when Ventura was unavailable, “The Body Shop” was often hosted by Don Muraco). He began to do color commentary on television for All-Star Wrestling, replacing Angelo Mosca, and later Superstars of Wrestling, initially alongside Vince McMahon and the semi-retired Sammartino, and then just with McMahon after Sammartino’s departure from the WWF in early 1988. Ventura most notably co-hosted Saturday Night’s Main Event with McMahon, the first six WrestleManias (five of which were alongside Gorilla Monsoon), and most of the WWF’s pay-per-views at the time with Monsoon, with the lone exception for Ventura being the first SummerSlam, in which he served as the guest referee during the main event.

1989

In 1989, Ventura co-hosted the four episodes of the DiC Entertainment children’s program Record Breakers: World of Speed along with Gary Apple. In 1991, the pilot episode for Tag Team, a television program about two ex-professional wrestlers turned police officers, starred Ventura and Roddy Piper.

1990

Following his departure from the WWF, Ventura took advice from a former high school teacher and ran for mayor of Brooklyn Park, Minnesota in 1990. He defeated the city’s 25-year incumbent mayor and served from 1991 to 1995.

1991

Near the end of his wrestling career, Ventura began an acting career. He appeared in the movie Predator (1987), whose cast included future California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and future Kentucky gubernatorial candidate Sonny Landham. Ventura became close friends with Schwarzenegger during the production of Predator. He appeared in two episodes of Zorro filmed in Madrid, Spain, in 1991. He had a starring role in the 1990 sci-fi movie Abraxas, Guardian of the Universe. He had supporting roles in The Running Man, Thunderground, Demolition Man, Repossessed, Ricochet, The Master of Disguise (in which he steals the Liberty Bell), and Batman & Robin—the first and last of these also starring Schwarzenegger. Ventura made a cameo appearance in Major League II as “White Lightning”. He appeared as a self-help guru (voice only) in The Ringer, trying to turn Johnny Knoxville into a more confident worker. Ventura had a cameo in The X-Files episode “Jose Chung’s From Outer Space” as a Man in Black alongside fellow ‘MiB’ Alex Trebek. In 2008, Ventura was in the independent comedy Woodshop, starring as high school shop teacher Mr. Madson. The film was released September 7, 2010.

1992

In February 1992 at SuperBrawl II, Ventura joined World Championship Wrestling as a commentator. WCW President Eric Bischoff ultimately released him for allegedly falling asleep during a WCW Worldwide TV taping at Disney MGM Studios in July 1994, but it has been speculated that the move may have had more to do with Hogan’s arrival shortly before.

1994

Hogan and Ventura were at one point close friends, but Ventura abruptly ended the friendship in 1994 after he discovered, during his lawsuit against McMahon, that Hogan was the one who had told McMahon about Ventura’s attempt to form a labor union in 1984. Following a dispute with McMahon over the use of his image for promoting a Sega product, while McMahon had a contract with rival company Nintendo at the time, the promoter released Ventura from the company in August 1990.

1995

Between 1995 and 1998, Ventura had radio call-in shows on KFAN 1130 and KSTP 1500 in Minneapolis–Saint Paul. He also had a brief role on the television soap opera The Young and the Restless in 1999.

1998

Ventura ran for governor of Minnesota in 1998 as the Reform Party of Minnesota nominee (he later joined the Independence Party of Minnesota when the Reform Party broke from its association with the Reform Party of the United States of America). His campaign consisted of a combination of aggressive grassroots events organized in part by his campaign manager Doug Friedline and original television spots, designed by quirky adman Bill Hillsman, using the phrase “Don’t vote for politics as usual.” He spent considerably less than his opponents (about $300,000) and was a pioneer in his using the Internet as a medium of reaching out to voters in a political campaign.

He won the election in November 1998, narrowly and unexpectedly defeating the major-party candidates, Republican St. Paul mayor Norm Coleman and Democratic-Farmer-Labor Attorney General Hubert H. “Skip” Humphrey III. During his victory speech, Ventura famously declared, “We shocked the world!” After his election, bumper stickers and T-shirts bearing the slogan “My governor can beat up your governor” appeared in Minnesota. The nickname “Jesse ‘The Mind'” (from a last-minute Hillsman ad featuring Ventura posing as Rodin’s Thinker) began to resurface sarcastically in reference to his often controversial remarks. Ventura’s old stage name “Jesse ‘The Body'” (sometimes adapted to “Jesse ‘The Governing Body'”) also continued to appear with some regularity.

1999

In 1999, a group of disgruntled citizens petitioned to recall Governor Ventura, alleging, among other things, that “the use of state security personnel to protect the governor on a book promotion tour constituted illegal use of state property for personal gain.” The proposed petition was dismissed by order of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Minnesota. Under Minnesota law, the Chief Justice must review recall petitions for legal sufficiency, and, upon such review, the Chief Justice determined that it did not allege the commission of any act that violated Minnesota law. Ventura sought attorney’s fees as a sanction for the filing of a frivolous petition for recall, but that request was denied on the ground that there was no statutory authority for such an award.

In his 1999 autobiography I Ain’t Got Time to Bleed, Ventura suggested that he did not plan to run for president of the United States but did not rule it out. In 2003, he expressed interest in running for president while accepting an award from the International Wrestling Institute and Museum in Newton, Iowa. He spoke at Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul’s “Rally for the Republic”, organized by the Campaign for Liberty, on September 2, 2008, and implied a possible future run for president. At the end of his speech, Ventura announced if he saw that the public was willing to see a change in the direction of the country, then “in 2012 we’ll give them a race they’ll never forget!” In 2011, Ventura expressed interest in running with Ron Paul in the 2012 presidential election if Paul would run as an independent. On November 4, 2011, Ventura said at a press conference about the dismissal of his court case against the Transportation Security Administration for what he claimed were illegal searches of air travelers that he was “thinking about” running for president. There were reports that the Libertarian Party officials had tried to persuade Ventura to run for president on a Libertarian ticket, but party chairman Mark Hinkle said, “Jesse is more interested in 2016 than he is in 2012. But I think he’s serious. If Ron Paul ran as a Libertarian, I think he definitely would be interested in running as a vice presidential candidate. He’s thinking, ‘If I run as the vice presidential candidate under Ron Paul in 2012, I could run as a presidential candidate in 2016’.”

In 1999, Ventura said in an NBC News interview that he was baptized a Lutheran but came out as an atheist on the Joe Rogan Experience. In a Playboy interview, Ventura said, “Organized religion is a sham and a crutch for weak-minded people who need strength in numbers. It tells people to go out and stick their noses in other people’s business. I live by the golden rule: Treat others as you’d want them to treat you. The religious right wants to tell people how to live.” In his 1999 bestselling memoir I Ain’t Got Time to Bleed, Ventura responded to the controversy sparked by these remarks by elaborating on his views concerning religion:

2001

Ventura has frequently referred to his military career in public statements and debates. He was criticized by hunters and conservationists for saying in a 2001 interview with the Minneapolis Star Tribune, “Until you have hunted men, you haven’t hunted yet.”

Ventura has been criticized by the press for profiting from his heightened popularity. He was hired as a television analyst for the failed XFL football league in 2001, served as a referee at a WWF SummerSlam match in 1999, and published several books during his tenure as governor. On his weekly radio show, he often criticized the media for focusing on these deals rather than his policy proposals.

2002

After a trade mission to China in 2002, Ventura announced that he would not run for a second term, saying that he no longer felt dedicated enough to his job and accusing the media of hounding him and his family for personal behavior and beliefs while neglecting coverage of important policy issues. He later told a Boston Globe reporter that he would have run for a second term if he had been single, citing the media’s effect on his family life.

Ventura greatly disapproved of some of the actions that took place at the 2002 memorial for Senator Paul Wellstone, his family, and others who died in a plane crash on October 25, 2002. Ventura said, “I feel used. I feel violated and duped over the fact that the memorial ceremony turned into a political rally”. He left halfway through the controversial speech made by Wellstone’s best friend, Rick Kahn. Ventura had initially planned to appoint a Democrat to Wellstone’s seat, but instead appointed Dean Barkley to represent Minnesota in the Senate until Wellstone’s term expired in January 2003. Barkley was succeeded by Norm Coleman, who won the seat against Walter Mondale, who replaced Wellstone as the Democratic nominee a few days before the election.

Ventura was also criticized for mishandling the Minnesota state budget, with Minnesota state economist Tom Stinson noting that the statewide capital gain fell from $9 billion to $4 billion between 2000 and 2001. In 2002, Ventura’s poor handling of the Minnesota state budget was also exploited at the national level by CNN journalist Matthew Cooper. When Ventura left office in 2003, Minnesota had a $4.2 billion budget deficit, compared to the $3 billion budget surplus when Ventura took office in 1999.

In 2002, Ventura was hospitalized for a severe blood clot in his lungs, the same kind of injury that ended his wrestling career.

2003

While Ventura has not held public office since the end of his term as governor in 2003, he has remained politically active and occasionally hinted at running for political office. In an April 7, 2008, interview on CNN’s The Situation Room, Ventura said he was considering entering the race for the United States Senate seat then held by Norm Coleman, his Republican opponent in the 1998 gubernatorial race. A Twin Cities station Fox 9 poll put him at 24%, behind Democratic candidate Al Franken at 32% and Coleman at 39% in a hypothetical three-way race. On Larry King Live on July 14, 2008, Ventura said he would not run, partly out of concern for his family’s privacy. Franken won the election by a very narrow margin.

Ventura was succeeded in office on January 6, 2003, by Republican Tim Pawlenty.

In October 2003 he began a weekly MSNBC show, Jesse Ventura’s America; the show was canceled after a couple of months. Ventura has said it was canceled because he opposed the Iraq War. MSNBC honored the balance of his three-year contract, legally preventing him from doing any other TV or news shows.

2004

In mid-1999, Ventura reappeared on WWF television during his term as governor of Minnesota, acting as the special guest referee for main event of SummerSlam held in Minneapolis. Ventura continued his relationship with the WWF by performing commentary for Vince McMahon’s short-lived XFL. On the June 4, 2001, episode of Raw which aired live from Minnesota, Ventura appeared to overrule McMahon’s authority and approve a WWF Championship match between then-champion Stone Cold Steve Austin and Chris Jericho. On the March 20, 2003, episode of SmackDown!, Ventura appeared in a taped interview to talk about the match between McMahon and Hogan at WrestleMania XIX. On March 13, 2004, he was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame, and the following night at WrestleMania XX, he approached the ring to interview Donald Trump, who had a front-row seat at the event. Trump affirmed that Ventura would receive his moral and financial support were he to ever reenter politics. Alluding to the 2008 election, Ventura boldly announced, “I think we oughta put a wrestler in the White House in 2008!”. Ventura was guest host on the November 23, 2009, episode of Raw, during which he retained his heel persona by siding with the number one contender Sheamus over WWE Champion John Cena. This happened while he confronted Cena about how it was unfair that Cena always got a title shot in the WWE, while Ventura never did during his WWE career. After that, Sheamus attacked Cena and put him through a table. Ventura then made the match a Table match at TLC: Tables, Ladders and Chairs. During the show, for the first time in nearly 20 years, McMahon joined Ventura ringside to provide match commentary together.

On October 22, 2004, with Ventura by his side, former Maine Governor Angus King endorsed John Kerry for president at the Minnesota state capitol building. Ventura did not speak at the press conference. When prodded for a statement, King responded, “He plans to vote for John Kerry, but he doesn’t want to make a statement and subject himself to the tender mercies of the Minnesota press”. In the 2012 Senate elections, Ventura endorsed King in his campaign for the open Senate seat in Maine, which King won.

In November 2004, an advertisement began airing in California featuring Ventura, in which he voiced his opposition to then-Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s policies regarding Native American casinos. Ventura served as an advisory board member for a group called Operation Truth, a nonprofit organization set up “to give voice to troops who served in Iraq.” “The current use of the National Guard is wrong….These are men who did not sign up to go occupy foreign nations”.

2005

In August 2005, Ventura became the spokesperson for BetUS, an online sportsbook.

2008

Ventura wrote several other books after leaving office. On April 1, 2008, his Don’t Start the Revolution Without Me was released. In it, Ventura describes a hypothetical campaign in which he is an independent candidate for president of the United States in 2008. In an interview with the Associated Press at the time of the book’s release, Ventura denied any plans for a presidential bid, saying that the scenario was only imaginary and not indicative of a “secret plan to run”. On MinnPost.com, Ventura’s agent, Steve Schwartz, said of the book, “[Ventura is revealing] why he left politics and discussing the disastrous war in Iraq, why he sees our two-party system as corrupt, and what Fidel Castro told him about who was really behind the assassination of President Kennedy.”

2009

From 2009 to 2012, TruTV aired three seasons of the television series Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura.

On May 18, 2009, when asked by Sean Hannity of Fox News how George W. Bush could have avoided the September 11 attacks, Ventura answered, “And there it is again—you pay attention to memos on August 6th that tell you exactly what bin Laden’s gonna do.”

In December 2009, Ventura hosted TruTV’s new show Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura. “Ventura will hunt down answers, plunging viewers into a world of secret meetings, midnight surveillance, shifty characters and dark forces,” truTV said in a statement. On the program, Ventura traveled the country, investigating cases and getting input from believers and skeptics before passing judgment on a theory’s validity. According to TruTV, the first episode drew 1.6 million viewers, a record for a new series on the network.

2010

The first season was followed by a second season in 2010, and a third season in 2012. After three seasons, the show was discontinued in 2013, but as of 2017 is still shown worldwide on satellite TV.

2011

In November 2011, Ventura held a press conference in relation to a lawsuit he had filed against the Transportation Security Administration. During the press conference, he said he would “never stand for a national anthem again. I will turn my back and raise a fist the same way Tommy Smith and John Carlos did in the ’68 Olympics. Jesse Ventura will do that today.”

On December 29, 2011, Ventura announced his support for Ron Paul on The Alex Jones Show in the 2012 presidential election as “the only anti-war candidate.” Like Paul, Ventura is known for supporting a less interventionist foreign policy. But after Mitt Romney became the presumptive Republican nominee in May 2012, Ventura gave his support to Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson on June 12, 2012, whom Ventura argued was the choice for voters who “really want to rebel.”

On April 9, 2011, when Piers Morgan of CNN asked Ventura for his official view of the events of 9/11, Ventura said, “My theory of 9/11 is that we certainly—at the best we knew it was going to happen. They allowed it to happen to further their agenda in the Middle East and go to these wars.”

In January 2011, Ventura filed a lawsuit against the Transportation Security Administration, seeking a declaration that the agency’s new controversial pat-down policy violated citizens’ Fourth Amendment rights and an injunction to bar the TSA from subjecting him to the pat-down procedures. Ventura received a titanium hip replacement in 2008 that sets off metal detectors at airport security checkpoints.

The U.S. district court dismissed the suit for lack of jurisdiction in November 2011, ruling that “challenges to TSA orders, policies and procedures” must be brought only in the U.S. courts of appeals. After the court’s ruling, Ventura held a press conference in which he called the federal judges cowards; said he no longer felt patriotic and would henceforth refer to the U.S. as the “Fascist States of America”; said he would never take commercial flights again; said he would seek dual citizenship in Mexico; and said he would “never stand for a national anthem again” and would instead raise a fist.

In April 2011, Ventura said on The Howard Stern Show that he is an atheist and that his beliefs could disqualify him for office in the future, saying, “I don’t believe you can be an atheist and admit it and get elected in our country.” In an October 2010 CNN interview, Ventura stated religion as being the “root of all evil”, remarking that “you notice every war is fought over religion.”

2012

In September 2012, Ventura and his wife appeared in an advertisement calling for voters to reject a referendum to be held in Minnesota during the November elections that amend the state constitution to ban same-sex marriage. The referendum was defeated.

Ventura also wrote DemoCRIPS and ReBLOODlicans: No More Gangs in Government, which was released on June 11, 2012. The book expresses Ventura’s opposition to the two-party system and calls for political parties to be abolished.

During an interview on Opie and Anthony in January 2012 to promote his book American Sniper, former Navy SEAL Chris Kyle claimed that he had punched Ventura in 2006 at McP’s, a bar in Coronado, California, during a wake for Michael A. Monsoor, a fellow SEAL who had been killed in Iraq. According to Kyle, Ventura was vocally expressing opposition to the War in Iraq. Kyle, who wrote about the alleged incident in his book but did not mention Ventura by name, said he approached Ventura and asked him to tone down his voice because the families of SEAL personnel were present, but that Ventura responded that the SEALs “deserved to lose a few guys.” Kyle said he then punched Ventura.

Ventura filed a defamation suit against Kyle in January 2012. He initially considered dropping the suit, but said several retired Navy SEALs (including the owner of McP’s) demanded that he pursue it, which he did after Kyle refused to retract his allegations against Ventura. In a motion filed by Kyle’s attorney in August 2012 to dismiss two of the suit’s three counts, declarations by five former SEALs and the mothers of two others supported Kyle’s account. But in a motion filed by Ventura, Bill DeWitt, a close friend of Ventura and former SEAL who was present with him at the bar, suggested that Ventura interacted with a few SEALs but was involved in no confrontation with Kyle and that Kyle’s claims were false. DeWitt’s wife also said she did not witness a fight between Kyle and Ventura.

2013

In 2013, Ventura announced a new show, Jesse Ventura: Uncensored, which launched on January 27, 2014, and later renamed Off the Grid, and aired until 2016 on Ora TV, an online video on demand network founded by Larry King.

While the lawsuit was ongoing in 2013, Kyle was murdered in an unrelated incident on February 2. In May, Ventura substituted Taya Kyle, the executor of Chris Kyle’s estate, as the defendant, with his lawyers arguing that “it would be unjust to permit the estate to continue to profit from Kyle’s wrongful conduct and to leave Governor Ventura without redress for ongoing damage to his reputation.”

2014

On July 31, 2014, Ventura launched a weekly podcast, We The People, distributed by Adam Carolla’s “Carolla Digital”, which ran until March 4, 2015. Guests included Larry King, Bill Goldberg, Chris Jericho, Roddy Piper, Donald Trump, Mark Dice, and leading members of the 9/11 Truth movement.

The jury trial started on July 8, 2014. Testimony and arguments were heard until July 22, 2014. On July 29, 2014, after a three-week trial in Federal Court in Saint Paul, including six days of jury deliberations, and upon the agreement of both plaintiff and defendant to accept a divided jury verdict, the jury arrived at an 8 to 2 divided verdict in Ventura’s favor, and awarded him $1.85 million, $500,000 for defamation and $1,345,477.25 for unjust enrichment.

On August 7, 2014, U.S. District Judge Richard H. Kyle (no relation to Chris Kyle) upheld the jury’s award of $500,000 in defamation damages and adopted the jury’s advisory award of $1,345,477.25 in unjust enrichment as “reasonable and supported by a preponderance of the evidence.” Attorneys for Kyle’s estate said that the defamation damages would be covered by HarperCollins’s libel insurance. The unjust enrichment award was not covered by insurance and must be paid from Kyle’s estate assets. Following the verdict, HarperCollins announced that it would pull the sub-chapter “Punching out Scruff Face” from all future editions of the book.

On September 4, 2014, attorneys for Taya Kyle, as executor of Chris Kyle’s estate, filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law or a new trial with the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota. On September 26, 2014, Ventura’s attorneys filed their reply: that Ventura had proven Kyle’s story was “materially false”, that there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find actual malice and that there should not be a new trial. Taya Kyle’s attorneys filed a reply to Ventura’s response on October 3, 2014. This motion had to be ruled on before an appeal to the U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals could be filed. On November 25, 2014, in a 24-page order, Judge Kyle denied all of the motions from Chris Kyle’s estate, writing that “[a]t bottom, the Court concludes Defendant received a fair trial and that the jury’s verdicts were supported by substantial evidence. Defendant is obviously disappointed in those verdicts, but her disappointment does not lay a foundation for a new trial or for judgment as a matter of law. Having found all of Defendant’s arguments wanting, and based on all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS ORDERED that Defendant’s Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law or New Trial (Doc. No. 404) is DENIED.” On December 23, 2014, attorneys for Taya Kyle, as executor of Chris Kyle’s estate, filed notice of intent to appeal the district court’s opinion to the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. On October 20, 2015, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments. On June 13, 2016, the appeals court vacated and reversed the unjust-enrichment judgment, and vacated and remanded the defamation judgment for a new trial. On November 1, 2016, Ventura’s attorney David Olsen filed a motion to appeal the Appeals Court ruling to the US Supreme Court. On January 9, 2017, the US Supreme Court rejected this motion.

On December 16, 2014, Ventura’s attorneys filed a lawsuit against HarperCollins. The suit claimed that publicity created by Chris Kyle’s telling of the alleged incident “increased sales” and generated “millions of dollars for HarperCollins.”

2015

In late 2015, Ventura publicly flirted with the idea of running for president in 2016 as a Libertarian but allowed his self-imposed deadline of May 1 to pass. He also expressed an openness to be either Donald Trump’s running mate or Bernie Sanders’s running mate in 2016. Ventura tried to officially endorse Sanders but his endorsement was rejected.

On June 16, 2015, Ventura’s attorneys filed suit against Taya Kyle, Case # 2:2015mc00206 in the California Central District Court. The nature of the lawsuit is “Other Statutory Actions”.

2016

On September 6, 2016, Jesse Ventura’s Marijuana Manifesto was released, making the case for the legalization of cannabis and detailing the various special interests that benefit from keeping it illegal.

2017

On December 4, 2017, Ventura held a press conference in Minneapolis, announcing he had accepted a settlement from HarperCollins and would drop the suit.

2020

Ventura expressed interest in running for president again in 2020, but said he would do so only under the Green Party banner. “The [Green Party] has shown some interest. I haven’t made a decision yet because it’s a long time off. If I do do it, Trump will not have a chance. For one, Trump knows wrestling. He participated in two WrestleManias. He knows he can never out-talk a wrestler, and he knows I’m the greatest talker wrestling’s ever had.”

On April 27, 2020, Ventura submitted a letter of interest to the Green Party Presidential Support Committee, the first step to seeking the Green Party’s presidential nomination. In May, he announced that he would not run for health reasons, explaining that he would lose his employer-provided health insurance.

Ventura said he would write in his own name in the presidential election, but would support Green candidates in down-ballot races. He said he “refuse[s] to vote for ‘the lesser of two evils’ because in the end, that’s still choosing evil.” Ventura received seven presidential delegate votes at the 2020 Green National Convention, having been awarded them through write-in votes in the 2020 Green primaries. Despite the national Green Party nominating Howie Hawkins for president and Angela Nicole Walker for vice president, the Green Party of Alaska nominated Ventura and former representative Cynthia McKinney, a member of the Libertarian Party.

Upcoming Birthday

Currently, Jesse Ventura is 71 years, 10 months and 24 days old. Jesse Ventura will celebrate 72nd birthday on a Saturday 15th of July 2023.

Find out about Jesse Ventura birthday activities in timeline view here.

Jesse Ventura trends


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