Fox News says loss in $1.6 billion defamation case would harm all media : NPR

Fox News says loss in .6 billion defamation case would harm all media : NPR

Posters bearing the images of Bret Baier, Martha MacCallum, Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity, from left, adorn the front of Fox Corp.’s headquarters in New York City. The stars’ panic as viewers fled after the 2020 elections has become a core element of a $1.6 billion defamation suit against Fox.

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Posters bearing the images of Bret Baier, Martha MacCallum, Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity, from left, adorn the front of Fox Corp.’s headquarters in New York City. The stars’ panic as viewers fled after the 2020 elections has become a core element of a $1.6 billion defamation suit against Fox.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Outside legal observers say the Fox News Channel finds itself in real legal jeopardy in a $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit brought by an election tech company over lies broadcast about the 2020 presidential race.

The amount and weight of evidence is perhaps without equal among other major, recent defamation cases.

“How often do you get ‘smoking gun’ emails that show, first, that persons responsible for the editorial content knew that the accusation was false, and also convincing emails that show the reason Fox reported this was for its own mercenary interests?” says Rutgers University law professor Ronald Chen, an authority on constitutional and media law.

Fox News has endured one humiliation after another from the rolling revelations in the case brought by Dominion Voting Systems. Private communications made public in legal filings demonstrate the network’s producers, stars and executives — even controlling owner Rupert Murdoch — knew the claims they were broadcasting were false, and at times unhinged. A trial in the case is slated for next month.

Fox attorney: “We don’t suppress the speech that we don’t think is right”

Fox’s legal team is grounding much of its defense in a claim that it was merely reporting allegations by the most newsworthy public official of all, then-President Donald Trump.

“We err on the side of speech because the more and more speech you have, the better chance of having people actually getting the opportunity to point out what’s right and what’s wrong,” attorney Erin Murphy, one of the senior figures on Fox’s defense team, tells NPR in an interview. “And that’s why we don’t suppress the speech that we don’t think is right.”

A loss for Fox would make it harder for all journalists to serve the public, she says.

“At the end of the day, it’s going to hinder the ultimate objective of the First Amendment, of getting to the truth,” Murphy argues.

The case may serve as a test for the elasticity of that argument.

Dominion alleges great reputational harm from false accusations

Fox News was the first major television outlet to project that then-Democratic nominee Joe Biden would win Arizona on election night 2020, which all but put victory out of Trump’s reach. Dominion has alleged that Fox embraced the conspiracy theories about election fraud to try to make up for angering millions of pro-Trump viewers with the Arizona call. Many peeled away to other right-wing outlets.

In the ensuing weeks, Fox repeatedly invited Trump ally and attorney Sidney Powell on its programs to allege Dominion’s voting systems had switched votes from Trump to Biden. Yet Fox hosts and executives privately dismissed her as unreliable and unhinged. Powell had shared with hosts Lou Dobbs and Maria Bartiromo a memo to justify her allegations. Even the memo’s author called the claims “pretty wackadoodle.”

Top executives, including Murdoch and Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott, told one another they could not bluntly confront their viewers with the facts because that could alienate them further.

Dominion says the baseless claims of fraud have destroyed its reputation for electoral integrity with much of the voting public.

“To simply say Fox is a bunch of liars … is a slippery slope”

Even with that record, set out with voluminous documentation, some media lawyers say Fox’s attorneys may be right in predicting that a loss would constrict the media’s freedoms.

“No matter how much I might personally deplore what Fox is alleged to have done, I worry a lot more about the longer term-ramifications,” says University of Minnesota media law professor Jane Kirtley, a former executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

“To simply say Fox is a bunch of liars — that they shouldn’t be allowed to get away with this and their wild speculations should not be reported and should not be protected — I just think that that is a slippery slope,” says Kirtley.

Were Fox to lose, “there would be a scramble by other news organizations to distance themselves from Fox’s techniques and Fox’s editorial decisions,” Kirtley says. “But the problem is that by lifting the veil on the editorial decision-making process, we are now going to see all news organizations called into question going forward.” She says she believes such a verdict finding Fox liable for defamation would encourage more such cases.

Dominion’s legal team shared a statement stating that the voting tech company believes in the First Amendment and its protections, but that Fox crossed a line after the 2020 election: “As long-settled law makes clear, the First Amendment does not shield broadcasters that knowingly or recklessly spread lies.”

It’s hard for plaintiffs to win defamation suits but that could change

Media outlets rarely lose defamation cases in court. Under a 1964 U.S. Supreme Court decision involving the New York Times, plaintiffs have to prove the claims made about them were false and damaging to their reputation. Additionally, they have to prove that those making the statements in question either knew the assertions were untrue or had good reason to know they were untrue, and willfully ignored that information. That’s known as “actual malice,” under the late Justice William Brennan’s decision.

Brennan also argued Americans should have latitude to get some things wrong in talking about public officials and politics, in order to ensure free and robust debate.

Two current Supreme Court justices, Neil Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas, have indicated they would be open to making it easier for plaintiffs to prevail in defamation suits. A third, Elena Kagan, published her own musings years before she joined the court that the protections for the press might be too strong.

The idea of “actual malice,” Murphy says, requires Dominion to prove specific people directly involved with the broadcasts knew the statements they aired were wrong. For instance, Murdoch’s sworn statements that he had dismissed the claims of election fraud as bogus, and affirmed under oath that some of his star hosts had nonetheless endorsed them publicly, carries no legal weight, she says.

“Anybody would have to acknowledge that what the president and his lawyers were doing was newsworthy in and of itself, regardless of whether the allegations were ultimately going to be anything they could prove,” Murphy says. She invoked what journalists consider the safe ground of “neutral reporting” — just telling their audiences what others are saying.

Law professor: The financial motives to present lies “probably destroy” Fox’s defense

In its legal briefs, Fox leans heavily on the idea that news organizations must be allowed to convey allegations by major public figures to their audiences — even wild allegations. Rutgers’ Chen says that doesn’t hold up if Fox was motivated by profit instead of the newsworthiness of the claims being presented in its programs.

“The fact that there was arguably a motive by Fox to publish these accusations against Dominion based on its own economic interests in retaining Trump viewers would, if believed by the jury, probably destroy that argument,” Chen says.

He’s not the only legal scholar skeptical of Fox’s argument that a loss would ripple through journalism.

“Even if Dominion makes their case and convinces a jury to shovel truckloads of Fox’s money to [the election tech company], nothing in this case presents a meaningful threat to the First Amendment,” says Charles Glasser, who was global media counsel for Bloomberg News for 14 years and now teaches journalism and media law at New York University. “It really comes down to the facts about how the story was crafted and disseminated.”

In his sworn responses to questioning from Dominion attorney Justin Nelson, Fox Corp. boss Murdoch acknowledged that four of his star hosts — Dobbs, Bartiromo, Jeanine Pirro and Sean Hannity — had endorsed the baseless claims of election fraud, at least “a bit” in the case of Hannity. He referred to them as commentators. Opinions have even more latitude under case law than straight-ahead reporting. (Dobbs left his post at Fox Business Network a day after a second election tech company, Smartmatic, filed its own $2.7 billion defamation suit against Fox. That case is not as far along as Dominion’s.)

Yet Fox News anchors Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum also were deeply concerned about the loss of viewers and deliberated about how to win them back, evidence uncovered by Dominion’s attorneys and separate reporting by the New York Times‘ Peter Baker show.

Legendary media lawyer sees Fox News case as “bizarre” exception to the norm

When news outlets do lose defamation cases, they often result in retractions or apologies and settlements while they’re still on appeal. The two most prominent defamation cases of recent years resulted in divergent outcomes.

In 2017, Rolling Stone magazine settled separate cases filed by a University of Virginia dean and a campus fraternity after a collapse of standards in reporting on what turned out to be a source’s fabricated account of campus rape.

A year ago, the New York Times prevailed against former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin after an editorial wrongly linked her advertisements from her political action committee to a mass shooting months later.

“Generally speaking, it is not a good idea to permit a wholesale inquiry into newsroom decisions as a whole, and also I include ownership as part of that inquiry,” James Goodale, the legendary New York Times general counsel who advised the paper to publish the Pentagon Papers, tells NPR in an email. “Newsroom decisions, including ownership decisions as to news judgment, should be protected by the First Amendment.”

Libel and defamation cases override such protections, he notes.

“The Dominion case is such a strange case it provides an exception to the general rule,” Goodale says. “Let us hope we don’t see such a bizarre case as this one again.”

Michigan judge dismisses school staff as defendants in lawsuits over mass shooting

Michigan judge dismisses school staff as defendants in lawsuits over mass shooting

March 3 (Reuters) – A Michigan choose on Friday dismissed a college district and its workers as defendants in two wrongful demise lawsuits stemming from a deadly 2021 mass capturing by a 15-yr-previous college student armed with a gun his mothers and fathers experienced bought him for Christmas.

Oxford Community Universities and its workers are shielded from this sort of civil litigation by state regulation underneath the doctrine of governmental immunity, Oakland County Circuit Judge Mary Ellen Brennan ruled in a person nine-webpage belief.

Remaining as defendants in the civil lawsuits are the gunman, Ethan Crumbley, who has since pleaded guilty to murder costs, and his dad and mom, James and Jennifer Crumbley, who have been charged with involuntary manslaughter in the capturing.

Armed with a semi-automatic pistol, Crumbley opened hearth at Oxford Significant University, north of Detroit, on Nov. 30, 2021, killing 4 classmates and wounding six other students and a trainer.

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Authorities reported the teenage assailant had been provided the gun by his parents as a Christmas current days in advance of inspite of signs that he was emotionally disturbed.

The lawsuits sparked by the taking pictures also accuse lecturers, counselors and directors of the Oxford college district of failing to correctly respond to warning signals in the youth’s conduct the working day ahead of and on the day of the violence.

Prosecutors have explained that on the morning of the taking pictures, a instructor found out a drawing by Crumbley depicting a handgun, a bullet, and a bleeding figure future to the worlds “Blood almost everywhere” and “The feelings will not likely halt – enable me.”

The moms and dads were right away summoned to the school and ended up urged to enter their son into counseling within 48 hrs, but they resisted the plan of taking him house from university, and no one searched the boy’s backpack, in which the gun was concealed, or questioned him about a weapon.

As an alternative, he was returned to course, and emerged from a lavatory a limited time afterwards to go on his rampage.

University districts cannot be sued in excess of “the physical exercise or discharge of a governmental perform,” and none of the exceptions acknowledged underneath statutes or case regulation use, the choose wrote.

Specific governmental staff members can be matter to civil legal responsibility only if their carry out is considered to be “grossly negligent,” as the lawsuits claim, as well as the “proximate result in of the plaintiffs’ injuries,” Brennan explained.

Finally, even so, “Ethan Crumbley’s act of firing the gun, instead than the alleged perform of the personal Oxford defendants” was the proximate bring about of injuries, the choose held.

A law firm for 1 team of plaintiffs, Ven Johnson, vowed to appeal the ruling and urged Michigan legislators to amend point out law, contacting governmental immunity “completely wrong and unconstitutional.”

Apart from the two lawsuits in Michigan state court, at the very least 50 percent a dozen comparable instances connected to the capturing are pending in federal court, however none of the defendants named in individuals issues has been dismissed on grounds of immunity as nevertheless, Johnson explained.

Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles Modifying by Himani Sarkar

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Rancho Gordo faces discrimination lawsuit

Rancho Gordo faces discrimination lawsuit

A former worker who packaged shipments of beans at Rancho Gordo in Napa has sued the cult-favorite company, alleging she was discriminated against at work and fired for being pregnant.

The lawsuit, which Martha Martinez filed in July 2021 in Napa County Superior Court, accuses Rancho Gordo of discrimination based on sex, national origin and pregnancy; retaliation and wrongful termination. She is seeking financial damages for lost wages and benefits and emotional distress, as well as “punitive damages in an amount sufficient to punish and deter (Rancho Gordo’s) conduct, and to set an example for others,” the complaint states.

The case is set to go to trial in Napa on Tuesday. Rancho Gordo, a nationally renowned darling of the food world and a company that publicly positions itself as a supporter of workers’ rights, has denied and fought the claims in court for nearly two years. 

Rancho Gordo, which owner Steve Sando started in Napa 20 years ago, is known for its hit bean club, which sends members a box of dried legumes several times a year. The popular club has a waiting list of more than 40,000 people.

Sando declined to comment on the suit. In legal documents, the company says that the employees involved in deciding to end Martinez’s employment were unaware she was pregnant and that she has failed to provide enough evidence for the alleged discrimination.

Rancho Gordo, a wildly popular bean company, is facing discrimination allegations from a former temporary worker.

Rancho Gordo, a wildly popular bean company, is facing discrimination allegations from a former temporary worker.

Jessica Christian/The Chronicle

Martinez began working at Rancho Gordo’s Napa warehouse during the holiday rush in November 2019. She had never heard of the wildly popular bean company before, she said in an interview with The Chronicle. A temporary staffing agency had placed her there as a shipping clerk, she said, assembling packages of heirloom beans to be shipped to thousands of customers across the country. 

The job was good at first, Martinez said. But soon, her lawsuit alleges, co-workers and supervisors made offensive comments about her background. Martinez is Salvadoran.  

The lawsuit states they made remarks such as, “Las Salvadoreans son bien calientes,” or “Salvadorans are very horny” and “Las Salvadoreans son como putas y les gusta quitarle los maridos a las otras,” which means, “Salvadorans they are like whores. They like to take husbands away from others.” Her supervisor “participated in these offensive remarks and also observed co-workers engaging in derogatory, harassing treatment” of Martinez, the lawsuit alleges. 

Martinez said she tried to ignore the comments and did not report the alleged behavior to anyone at Rancho Gordo at the time. She feels badly, she said, that she didn’t speak up.

“I feel emotional. It’s affected me a lot,” she said in Spanish. “It’s affecting me right now.”

Martha Martinez has filed a discrimination lawsuit against popular bean company Rancho Gordo.

Martha Martinez has filed a discrimination lawsuit against popular bean company Rancho Gordo.

Carlos Avila Gonzalez/The Chronicle

Rancho Gordo says in court documents that these “negative” comments were limited to a single occasion when Martinez was first hired, and that they were not directed at Martinez personally. Martinez testified that they occurred on one day, but that on other occasions co-workers made comments about her body and how she dressed, though it’s unclear whether that was related to her background. 

NFL, Raiders face federal lawsuit after allegedly threatening Las Vegas law firm over Super Bowl LVII ad

NFL, Raiders face federal lawsuit after allegedly threatening Las Vegas law firm over Super Bowl LVII ad

Steve Dimopoulos, a personal injuries law firm in Las Vegas, has submitted a federal lawsuit versus the NFL and the Las Vegas Raiders right after they allegedly threatened “heightened authorized penalties” thanks to his Super Bowl LVII advertisement. 

Dimopoulos aired a business in the Las Vegas media industry and on YouTube endorsing his law business, Dimopoulos Personal injury Law, which featured Raiders defensive finish Maxx Crosby, Vegas Golden Knights ahead Williams Karlsson and UFC fighter Jon Jones. 

The advertisement showed every single athlete teaching and Dimopoulos prepping to go to court. 

The NFL and Raiders despatched a joint cease-and-desist letter to Dimopoulos Feb. 22, demanding he halt airing the professional or he will face lawful penalties for trademark infringement. They gave him a deadline of March 1 to respond, and he did so with his federal lawsuit. 

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Maxx Crosby (98) of the Las Vegas Raiders reacts during a game against the New England Patriots at Allegiant Stadium Dec. 18, 2022, in Las Vegas.

Maxx Crosby (98) of the Las Vegas Raiders reacts through a recreation against the New England Patriots at Allegiant Stadium Dec. 18, 2022, in Las Vegas. (Michael Owens/Getty Images)

Dimopoulos informed Fox News Digital you can find no trademark infringement in his professional. 

“I’ve been using the silver and black colors right before the Raiders declared they were transferring to city several years in the past,” Dimopolous claimed, referring to Crosby placing on a black and silver jersey and helmet during the commercial. Dimopolous claims he’s been employing those shades given that 2012.

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“[The Raiders] appear to city, and they have the exact same colour plan. And they’re getting this place that I just can’t use my possess colours in this Tremendous Bowl ad I just ran for the reason that it’s trademark infringement,” the lawyer mentioned.

“We were really careful not to use any Raiders logos. The only logos that show up in the commercial are my legislation firm’s logos. Some people today say that kinda resembles the Raiders’ mark. It truly doesn’t. To the extent that it does, it’s the same evaluation: I was working with that exact emblem listed here in Vegas extensive right before they came in this article.”

The Las Vegas Raiders logo at the Super Bowl Experience Feb. 8, 2022, at the Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles.

The Las Vegas Raiders emblem at the Tremendous Bowl Expertise Feb. 8, 2022, at the Los Angeles Convention Middle in Los Angeles. (Ric Tapia/Icon Sportswire by using Getty Pictures)

Dimopoulos’ reasoning driving the lawsuit is not to just protect his Super Bowl ad.

“I realized ample that this is kinda preposterous, and I did a minimal little bit of investigation and I swiftly realized that the NFL has a status for kinda becoming abusive and overreaching on their intellectual property rights,” he discussed. “Suing smaller businesses, attacking people today in small business that do not have the understanding or the resources to defend on their own. That was kinda portion of my motive. I just want to stand up for these people today.”

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A Las Vegas Raiders helmet during a preseason game against the Miami Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium Aug. 20, 2022, in Miami Gardens, Fla.

A Las Vegas Raiders helmet throughout a preseason match against the Miami Dolphins at Tough Rock Stadium Aug. 20, 2022, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (Kevin Sabitus/Getty Illustrations or photos)

“The NFL has been a trademark bully for way too extended,” Dimopoulous’ lawyer, Marc Randazza, claimed in a assertion. “Everyone just caves in when they threaten them. … All Dimopoulos is in search of in this circumstance is to be left by yourself. The NFL does not personal the colors silver and black, and my customer has a right to carry on working with his shade scheme.”

As for Crosby’s involvement in the industrial, Dimopolous reported the two-time Pro Bowler “signed off on the fact that this arrangement did not conflict with, or violate, any third-social gathering agreements.”

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The NFL and the Raiders did not quickly response a ask for for comment. 

Alec Baldwin sued by ‘Rust’ crew: Explaining the shooting lawsuits

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DeSantis, Florida officials move to have lawsuit over Martha’s Vineyard migrant flights dismissed

DeSantis, Florida officials move to have lawsuit over Martha’s Vineyard migrant flights dismissed

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The Florida governor took credit score past year for an operation that flew 49 migrants from Texas to Massachusetts.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. Ronda Churchill/Bloomberg

Past tumble, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and other officials from his condition organized the transportation of 49 migrants from San Antonio to Martha’s Winery in a shocking move that built countrywide information. 

Now, DeSantis and his workforce have submitted a motion to dismiss a lawsuit introduced versus them in the aftermath of the flights. 

The class action lawsuit was submitted in September by Boston-based Legal professionals for Civil Legal rights on behalf of some of the migrants. At the time, the team claimed that the operation to move the migrants was “fraudulent and discriminatory.” It was submitted towards DeSantis, Florida Section of Transportation Secretary Jared Perdue, the Point out of Florida, and other “accomplices.”

In legal filings, Florida officials argued that the lawsuit must be dismissed for the reason that the Massachusetts federal court does not have jurisdiction and mainly because migrants have been explained to in which they were currently being flown, The Wall Street Journal described. 

The girl who the migrants said recruited them for the excursion, Perla Huerta, also submitted a different motion Tuesday to dismiss the scenario, the Journal claimed. The defendants requested that the circumstance be transferred to a federal courtroom in Florida.

When initial submitting the lawsuit, LCR alleged that the migrants had been created to cross condition traces under phony pretenses and that they ended up particularly specific. 

Florida operatives focused on migrants that experienced lately been produced from shelters, LCR alleged. They have been lured with bogus claims of work options, training, and immigration assistance, according to the business. 

Some of the migrants reported afterward that they realized they have been likely to Massachusetts, but did not exclusively know that they would be dropped on Martha’s Winery. DeSantis’ operation arrived at the end of the vacationer period, meaning that get the job done prospects were drying up on the island. Neighborhood leaders reported they have been not notified in advance, and the Vineyard lacked the capability to accommodate the migrants long-time period. 

“This cowardly political stunt has placed our purchasers in peril. Many rules have been overtly violated to secure media headlines,” stated Oren Sellstrom, the Litigation Director of LCR, in a assertion at the time. 

Defendants argued that the migrants had been explained to they ended up heading to Massachusetts, and cited a sort that every single migrant signed ahead of their trips. The varieties were being composed in equally English and Spanish, but did not exclusively say that the migrants would be brought to Martha’s Winery, the Journal documented. 

This 7 days, Florida officials argued that the transfer was necessary to mitigate troubles seasoned by states that acquire a massive number of migrants, like Florida and Texas. 

“For the confused states and localities, transporting migrants to other sections of the nation that do not bear the brunt of this dilemma alleviates the anxiety, spreads the load, and offers superior residing circumstances for the migrants them selves,” the filing from Mr. DeSantis and other state officers claimed, in accordance to the Journal

Iván Espinoza-Madrigal, Government Director of LCR told the Journal that the move by Florida officials is only an try to stay away from culpability. 

“It is not stunning that Gov. DeSantis and his co-defendants are throwing up each procedural argument they can assume of, in a determined attempt to stay away from facing the songs for this callous political stunt,” Espinoza-Madrigal explained to the Journal

The procedure is also the matter of a prison investigation led by Javier Salazar, Sheriff of Bexar County, Tex. The metropolis of San Antonio is in Bexar County. 

“They ended up promised perform, they ended up promised the answer to a number of of their issues. They ended up taken to Martha’s Winery, from what we can acquire, for very little more than a image op, video op,” Salazar mentioned all through a September press conference. “Then they ended up unceremoniously stranded in Martha’s Vineyard.”