Lawyers representing the woman whom a jury found had been raped by Conor McGregor is to make an application to cross-examine him over his efforts to destroy key CCTV evidence that was used in the trial.
McGregor had been ordered by an Irish court not to share the CCTV footage which was used in the civil case against him, in which a jury found he had raped the woman in Dublin six years ago.
Nikita Hand, also known as Nikita Ni Laimhin, won her claim for damages against Mr McGregor after accusing the professional fighter of raping her in a Dublin hotel in December 2018.
Ms Hand, 35, was awarded damages and costs after a three-week trial last year.
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Last month, the High Court in Dublin made an order directing him not to disseminate the footage and to give back or destroy any copies he had.
Mr Justice Alexander Owens ordered McGregor to make a sworn statement setting out in…