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Senators sued by bus driver in harassment case

BUFFALO, N.Y. -- A former Ottawa Senators assistant general manager and the NHL team were sued Friday for negligence over allegations he harassed a hotel shuttle bus driver last year in Buffalo.

Also named as a defendant in the lawsuit along with Randy Lee and the Senators is a bar and grill called (716), where Lee had been a patron on the night of the incident. The suit seeks unspecified damages.

Lee had already pleaded guilty to a criminal violation stemming from the encounter with the then-19-year-old driver that occurred while he was a passenger on the shuttle bus and still working for the Senators. The driver said Lee inappropriately touched himself while making lewd comments and rubbing the driver's shoulders.

As a result, the plaintiff "was injured externally, internally and permanently in and about the head, body, limbs and nervous system so that he became and will continue to be disabled and will continue to suffer pain, discomfort, disfigurement, distress and psychological adjustment, distress and trauma," the lawsuit says.

The suit says the Senators should be found liable because the team was aware of Lee's alleged history of lewd behavior and didn't do enough to stop it. Finally, it says the owners of the sports bar and grill should share blame because employees there continued to serve drinks to Lee after he was visibly drunk.

Lee's lawyer, Paul Cambria, said in a text message Friday that he hadn't yet read the lawsuit and declined comment. An attorney for the Senators, Dennis Vacco, said the team would "vigorously fight" what he called a "frivolous" civil complaint.

There was no immediate comment from the owners of the sports bar.

The AP does not generally identify victims of a sex crime.