In an update on lawsuits filed against the WWE in recent months, according to a report from PWInsider.com, the company have successfully moved to have the lawsuit brought against them by former WWE superstar Vito LoGrasso and developmental talent Evan Singleton moved out of Pennsylvania and into the United States District Court of Connecticut based on the fact that all parties agreed when they signed their WWE deals that any legal issues would be played out in the state of Connecticut where WWE is headquartered and that the decision on that was made on March 23rd.

The report notes that WWE has also filed for and received a motion extending their time to respond to the lawsuit, allowing them until May 7th to file their response. The lawsuit alleges that WWE ignored concussions suffered by talents that worked for the company and alleges that Singleton is now disabled due to brain trauma and that LoGrasso suffers from migraines, memory loss, depression and deafness after nearly a decade with the company and that both are seeking unspecified economic damages and medical monitoring.

Meanwhile, the same report notes that on March 27th, the company also filed a motion to move the lawsuit brought against them by Cassandra Frazier, the widow of former WWE superstar Nelson Frazier Jr. (Big Daddy V, Mabel, Viscera) from the Western District of Tennessee in Memphis to the United States District Court of Connecticut, while also filing for an extension in time to respond to the wrongful death lawsuit which alleges that Frazier Jr’s death from a heart attack was due to the trauma that he endured while working as a professional wrestler for the company. The judge approved the motion, informing the WWE that if the move to Connecticut is not approved, then they will have until 30 days past his ruling to file their response and that if it is approved, then the case will be moved to Connecticut.