The warrant seeks information from the service provider T-Mobile. It’s a move aimed at verifying claims made by WWL Radio and its parent company, Pennsylvania-based Entercom Communications, that a homophobic message aimed at Dunlap and sent from the radio station’s account was actually sent by Dunlap himself.
Seth Dunlap |
The radio station has said Dunlap sent the tweet and then demanded nearly $2 million from the station, citing the insult and threatening workplace harassment-related litigation. Dunlap was facing significant personal financial strain, according to the station.
The station told the NOPD that the forensic investigation found an IP address — a unique number given to a piece of hardware, such as a cellphone — connected to the tweet that was associated with Dunlap’s phone.
Megan Kiefer |
She has also said that WWL Radio went to the police only after the breakdown of negotiations to settle Dunlap’s complaints about a work culture he perceived as homophobic.
Dunlap, a Washington state native, began to host “The Last Lap With Seth Dunlap,” on WWL Radio in 2017. He had previously co-hosted a sports show after beginning his career at the station as a sales representative.
The tweet at the center of the case went up Sept. 10.
Dunlap shared a link on Twitter to his analysis of the Saints’ Week 1 win against Houston last month, and someone using WWL Radio’s account then retweeted Dunlap’s link while referring to him as a “fag.”
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