Jury rules against man who claimed he created Kung Fu Panda

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This image released by DreamWorks Animation shows characters Po, voiced by Jack Black, left, and his long-lost panda father Li, voiced by Bryan Cranston, in a scene from "Kung Fu Panda 3." (DreamWorks Animation via AP)

A Massachusetts man was found guilty by a federal jury on Friday of back-dating drawings he relied on as evidence in his lawsuit against DreamWorks Animation that claimed he had invented the title character in the 2008 film Kung Fu Panda.

A federal jury in Boston convicted Jayme Gordon, 51, on four counts of wire fraud and three counts of perjury after prosecutors accused him of lying in a 2011 lawsuit against the Hollywood studio, the US Attorney’s Office in Massachusetts said in a statement.

Prosecutors charged that Gordon back-dated drawings of a high-kicking bear named Po in 2008 after seeing an early trailer for the film, and then used them to try to extract a $12 million settlement from DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc.

Some of the drawings Gordon relied on had been traced from a colouring book featuring Walt Disney Co characters from the 1994 film The Lion King, prosecutors said.

Gordon agreed to dismiss his lawsuit after DreamWorks, which also produced the Madagascar and How to Train Your Dragon films, discovered the tracing. By that time, though, the company had spent $3 million defending itself against the litigation.