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FILM SUIT DISMISSED A violent movie's content is protected under the First Amendment of the US. Constitution and its director did not intend to incite violence, a Louisiana state court judge ruled last week. Judicial District Court Judge Bob Morrison in Amite, La., threw out a portion of the closely watched media liability case against the Warner Bros. studio and Oliver Stone, the director of the movie "Natural Born Killers." The 1994 film was a violent depiction of a man and a woman who drive across America on a crime spree and become media stars. Mr. Stone and Warner Bros. were sued after a couple went on a similar rampage in 1995 in two states and told authorities they had done so after repeatedly watching the film. The suit was brought by the family of a Louisiana woman who was left paralyzed by a gunshot and later died of cancer. The couple remains jailed for their crimes. Although the judge dismissed the portion of the case against the director and movie company, the suit against the couple that committed the copycat crime and the homeowner insurer of the parents of the woman involved in the crime spree was allowed to continue. USAA Life Insurance Co. in San Antonio wrote a homeowners liability policy on a cabin in Oklahoma from which guns used in the crime spree were taken, according to Timothy Schafer, an attorney with Schafer & Schafer in New Orleans who is representing the insurer. Mr. Schafer would not reveal the limits of the coverage.