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.”

Families reflect on healing after loss of sons in car accident | News

Families reflect on healing after loss of sons in car accident | News

On Feb. 3, three families lost a son and a sibling, when John “Luke” Fergusson, Joshua Mardis and Nicholas Troutman died in a car accident. 

The past few weeks have been difficult — and each of the families struggled to pinpoint exactly what the hardest part has been.

“Certain days are just unbearable,” Anne Fergusson, Luke’s mom, said, “and others are a little better.”

But the three families have banded together to support each other — they’re “forever bound,” as Joshua’s mom, Yvette Mardis, said. They’ve also received support from not only friends and family, but the JMU community as well. 

The Fergussons and Troutmans found out about the accident after police knocked on their doors at 3:30 a.m. the morning of Feb. 3. The Mardis family, in England at the time, said they were in suspense for hours trying to get home.

Yvette said her first thought was, “This can’t possibly be real.”

“That’s the mind at work,” Yvette said. “The news is too terrible to want to believe. So the mind doesn’t want to believe it, and you don’t.”

Joshua’s father, Kirk Mardis, added to his wife’s answer: “I think you think you’re in a nightmare, honestly, and you’re hoping to wake up.”

When Elizabeth “Liza” Fergusson, Luke’s younger sister, found out, she said it was something she never could’ve imagined and the “worst thing ever.”

“It was never something that crossed my mind, that I was gonna lose my brother,” Liza said.







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Joshua Mardis with his parents, Yvette and Kirk, and sister Haley during Christmas.




John Troutman, Nicholas’ father, said his son and his friends always took measures to keep everyone safe — “it didn’t make any sense,” he said.

Nicholas would’ve turned 20 years old Feb. 23, and Luke would’ve turned 20 on Feb. 18. Anne said those were “harder days.”

For Jessica Troutman, Nicholas’ mother, there’s no single thing that stands out as the hardest part of it all. It’s “everything,” she said. For Kirk, as others echoed, it’s knowing his son won’t physically be in his life anymore.

“Something beautiful’s been ripped out of your life forever, but you fight against that despair to try to go forward,” Kirk said.

Haley Mardis, Joshua’s sister, said the hardest part has been thinking about her future and all the parts of it that Joshua will miss, and all the things she’ll miss out on because he’s gone. Choking up, she listed several things that have come to mind in the past few weeks.

“Knowing that he’s not gonna be at my wedding and he’s not gonna be a groomsman … Just knowing that I’m an only child, kind of, now,” Haley said. “It’s just weird to think, like, all of these things that he’s supposed to be a part of, like, I don’t get to be an aunt to his kids and I don’t get to give his girlfriend a hard time.”

The Fergussons are coping in different ways, Anne said. She uses humor, like Luke. John Fergusson, Luke’s dad, has gone back to work and copes with a to-do checklist. Liza’s gone back to school, but Anne said she’s basically given up on homework. Liza agreed, saying when everyone else is slacking off in their last semester of high school, she slacks off a bit more and is “just spiraling.”

But each family has leaned on one another. Each set of parents attended all three memorial services on the weekend of Feb. 17-20. The moms and siblings have group text chains together to keep in touch.

Each family is in their own little world, “grieving and tired,” Jessica said. Yvette said they’re all attempting to “come out of the funk and the grief” and back to a “semblance of normal life.” But they still reach out to check in on each other.

This past weekend, Yvette said, Anne texted the other moms to say, “I hope everyone has a good tomorrow.”

“That’s it right now, we hope we have a good tomorrow,” Yvette said. “We hope we get up out of bed tomorrow, you know, and then we have, we can function and have a good day.”

Haley also said she’s been talking with Jack Troutman, Nicholas’ older brother, and Liza. She said it’s been comforting. They’re all only children now: Joshua, Nicholas and Luke were their only siblings.

Yvette said moving forward isn’t something anyone can do alone.

“We’re trying to find comfort and support with each other and trying to remember our boys and find comfort and remember their love,” Yvette said. “And hopefully, one day we’re gonna be more happy than sad having these memories right now. But we get support from each other that way as well because there were three families that lost their children that evening.”







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At John “Luke” Fergusson’s memorial service, a table was set up with pictures and other items representing Luke’s life.




Jessica said her family and Fergussons knew each other only a little bit before the accident, as Nicholas and Luke were roommates. Joshua was a new friend to Luke and Nicholas, so the Fergussons and Troutmans didn’t know the Mardises beforehand. But through their grief, she said, they’ve forged a lifelong bond.

“It has been … so supportive and so comforting in a way that you would never wish on anybody else,” Jessica said. “Like, the fact that these two other families are going through this as well is awful, that all three of us are having to go through this, but it’s been so supportive.”

John Fergusson said his family drove with the Troutmans to Joshua’s memorial service in Williamsburg, Virginia, so they were in the car together for a few hours.

Throughout the hardship, all three families said they’ve received overwhelming support — from each other, from their hometowns and from JMU.

John and Anne Fergusson said Hollie Hall, JMU’s dean of students, was a tremendous help keeping them updated on the day of the accident and working with them to bring their son back while crossing state lines from the accident in West Virginia. Jessica said JMU helped with things that hadn’t even crossed her mind. 

“JMU didn’t even blink,” Jessica said.

She got an email the day after the accident, Jessica said, saying their tuition payments had been stopped.

While the Mardises were in the U.K., Yvette and Kirk said they received so much support and help — not just from JMU, friends and family but also from their hotel and airline carrier. 

“Our refrigerators are full, we never have to think about meals, we never have to think about getting things that we need,” Yvette said. “If I need something … my friends are here, and they’re there supporting me and they’re supporting us, and this is the kind of thing you can’t do alone.”

Each family said the vigil held at JMU was helpful to them, and John Fergusson said seeing different colleges light up with JMU colors and the thousands of people who showed up for the vigil meant a lot to them. Anne said she thought it was really helpful for the kids and Luke’s, Joshua’s and Nicholas’ friends. 

Each family has received support from people within their home communities, too. The Troutmans got a letter from Nicholas’ friend from JMU in their mailbox, and Anne said the Fergussons received bags with plastic lights and messages about Luke on them. 

“Just hearing all those [stories] just helps us, you know, it feels really good to hear all those stories and things from his friends,” Jessica said.

Yvette, who works at NASA Langley Research Center, and Kirk, who works at FCN IT, said their places of work have been helpful accommodating them as they grieve and get everything settled. 

With the support of the community, friends and family, each of the families said seeing all of the photos and videos sent in of their sons gives them a great comfort, seeing how their boys were and the men they were becoming.

“Things that have been shared from [Joshua’s] friends and from the JMU community have made us so really, really proud of him and so sorry that, you know, he’s not going to be here to become the wonderful man that he was, he was becoming,” Yvette said.

Although Nicholas was known as a social butterfly, his dad said he often came home to recharge with his family. Jessica also said he was a hard worker who ran a business in the summer and took on jobs in the neighborhood to earn money before going back to school. Nicholas was a business major, but he was still figuring out what to do after college.

“He was different than … when he was in the videos and pictures we’ve seen. He, I think when he came home, he came home to recharge, you know? Slept late, and you know, kind of watch TV with us and stuff like that,” John Troutman said. “Of course he made time for his friends, but he also, you know, never slouched on doing things with us and his brother and his grandparents.”

The Fergussons said their son Luke was just an “easy baby,” that he was kind and funny and cared about his family. John Fergusson said Luke took Liza wherever she wanted to go — like Cookout and Starbucks — whenever he came back from college, and Anne said she’d purposefully take the long way back to JMU for vacations just to hear him speak.

“He would just talk, talk, talk and tell me everything,” Anne said, and he’d eventually notice and ask, “Where are we, and why is this drive taking so long?”

Yvette said Joshua loved JMU, and on the night of the accident, he told her about how much he loved it there and how happy he was.

“Josh was just very resilient and very kind,” Kirk said. “That’s the two things that kind of make his legacy, it was that he never gave up.”

Michael Dye, one of Joshua’s friends from Walsingham Academy, said during his memorial service that Joshua worked very hard to get into JMU and that it was where he wanted to be. Joshua was very proud of being a Duke, Dye said.

“He keeps me going every day,” Dye said. “I know we will keep his memory alive … As he wrote in my senior yearbook, ‘I love you, bro. Friends for life.’”

While they still don’t know exactly how or why the accident happened, the Fergussons, Mardises and Troutmans have found leaning on each other for support means a lot during this time of healing and moving forward.

Jessica said something Rabbi Mordy Leimdorfer said at JMU’s vigil stuck with her:

“You know, we can ask why a million times and … we may never know why … but we can ask the question, ‘What?’” Jessica said. “What can we do to support each other? What can we do to get through this? What can we do to honor Nicholas and Luke and Josh’s memories? Yeah, what can we do to support each other and heal? And so we can’t look back. We can’t change anything, but we can look forward.”

While the families didn’t know each other well before the accident, after losing their sons and brothers, each mom said it’s a bond they wouldn’t wish on any family.

“I think that’ll keep the Fergussons, Troutmans and Mardises together for a while,” Anne said. “We now share this forever.”

Allen crash: Wife of truck driver killed mourns loss of husband

Allen crash: Wife of truck driver killed mourns loss of husband

Gustavo Gomez, 71, had been driving semi-vehicles for practically 21 a long time, for every his spouse. He is lived in Dallas considering the fact that the early 80s and was a father of five.

DALLAS, Texas — The household of a Dallas truck driver who died Tuesday afternoon when his tractor-trailer flew off of U.S. 75 and burst into flames is inquiring for anybody with video clip of what led up to the fiery crash to come forward. 

Investigators with the Allen Law enforcement Division say 71-12 months-aged Gustavo Gomez collided with a different auto on the highway ahead of hitting the 32-inch freeway barrier and crashing on to the assistance road underneath. 

Sprint camera video caught the major rig plummeting to the ground. The video demonstrates its fuel tanks igniting and then landing upside down, wherever the 18-wheeler goes up in flames. 

The other vehicle’s driver was unharmed and was found cooperating with police by WFAA’s cameras. WFAA also captured the hurt to his auto — the suitable facet of his automobile was crushed inwards.

Gomez’s spouse, Helen Torres, instructed WFAA Wednesday afternoon that her partner was providing mail for the USPS to Missouri. She mentioned that he drove for Bancroft and Sons Transportation and that the firm experienced been contracted to make the shipping. 

She also stated that her spouse had been driving with the company for approximately 21 many years.

“He was a really really hard worker,” Torres explained. “He always has been for his household. Whatever it was, irrespective of whether it was driving throughout the place or not, he usually manufactured confident we have been taken care of and offered for.” 

“He was these a very good gentleman. Extremely witty, normally acting like a comedian earning sure no one was unhappy. He was kindhearted and would enable any one who required it. If it have been in his hands and he could support at that instant, he would,” Torres included. 

Torres advised WFAA that she’s been with her husband since 1987, in the long run marrying in 2001. 

She said that Gomez grew to become a father to three children she experienced from yet another romantic relationship. The couple then experienced two little ones of their very own.

Torres stated Gomez moved to Dallas in the early 80s, loved automobiles, driving, and located that driving semi-vehicles professionally was a wonderful suit. 

She also additional that you really don’t travel vans for two a long time with out prioritizing safety. 

Allen PD hasn’t said how her husband’s 18-wheeler collided with the other automobile or who was at fault. 

Torres finally thinks the blame for the incident need to not be put at her husband’s ft. 

“He was often so careful. He always manufactured sure his vehicles were superior when they were being driving or prior to he drove,” Torres said. 

“He often realized what he was driving, he knew that was a massive device and that he experienced to be seeing out for most people.” 

Torres, alongside with investigators in Allen PD, is asking for anybody with dash digital camera video of what transpired prior to the crash to occur forward. 

It may perhaps not deliver back again her husband, but it could bring closure and clarity to the crash investigation. 

“We’re broken appropriate now, and we’re dropped. We have to have some comprehending of what occurred so we can shift forward,” Torres mentioned. 

Torres has yet to see the dash digital camera movie of her husband’s truck bursting into flames and reported she would not want to see it. 

“I never want to see my husband’s loss of life. There is no coming back from that, and you can find no purpose for me to see it,” Torres claimed. 

She extra that the man she loves is someone she’ll miss out on. Torres explained she realized some thing was erroneous when her husband didn’t connect with her even though driving his route. 

When she tried to connect with him, it would go to voicemail. Torres just figured that her husband’s cell phone experienced died. 

On Wednesday early morning, Allen PD notified her of her husband’s loss of life. 

“I was contacting him to talk to if he needed me to make him meal when he got back, and I didn’t get to do that,” Torres reported. 

“He was meant to arrive household. This should not have transpired.” 

Torres included that Bancroft and Sons Transportation has generously provided to pay for his funeral. 

https://www.youtube.com/observe?v=x6CTGvCe0wo