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Com360: Defamation

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Title: Com360: Defamation


1
Com360 Defamation
2
Protection of Persons Reputation
  • Basic human dignity protection of ones
    reputation from unjustified invasion and wrongful
    hurt

3
Defamation of character
  • Wrongfully hurting a persons good reputation
    Slander and Libel
  • Defamation is a civil wrong (tort)
  • The most common legal problem faced by a person
    who work in the mass media about 75 lawsuits
    filed against the media

4
Libel suits are troublesome
  • Take a lot of money and time
  • Damage claims are often outrageous
  • Libel law is complicated and confusing (often
    judges make erroneous decisions)
  • Some plaintiffs file frivolous libel lawsuits to
    silence the critics in the media

5
Erroneous decisions
  • For most judges a libel case is a new experience
  • Jurors are confused by the legal concepts e.g.,
    actual malice
  • Thus
  • 75 of libel cases are overturned by appeal courts

6
The Lawsuit as a weapon
  • Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation
    (SLAPP) Run that story and we will take you to
    court
  • Although 90 of SLAPP lawsuits fail, they are
    intended to intimidate and silence a less
    powerful critic by so severely burdening them
    with the cost of a legal defense that they
    abandon their criticism.

7
Laws against SLAPP
  • In 1992 California enacted a statute intended to
    prevent the misuse of litigation in SLAPP suits.
  • It provides for a special motion to strike a
    complaint where the complaint arises from conduct
    that falls within the rights of free speech

8
Elements of defamation
  • Publication
  • Identification
  • Defamatory content
  • Falsity
  • Fault
  • Harm / Compensation

9
Publication
  • Who made the statement?
  • Who disseminated it?
  • Who repeated it?
  • Question of transmission No provider of an
    interactive computer service shall be treated as
    the publisher or speaker

10
Identification
  • Plaintiff explicitly named
  • Suggesting plaintiffs actual name
  • Picture, drawing, description
  • Similarities to fictional characters
  • Group Identification

11
Defamatory content
  • A communication which has
  • the tendency to so harm the reputation
  • of another as to lower him/her in
  • the estimation of the community or
  • to deter third persons from associating
  • with him/her

12
Defamatory content
  • Imputations of criminal behavior
  • Sexual references and implications
  • Personal habits (honesty, integrity, etc)
  • Ridicule (showing someone uncommonly foolish or
    unnatural)
  • Business reputation
  • Disparagement of property (product)

13
Falsity
  • Public Persons versus Private Persons
  • Public-Person plaintiff must prove that the
    libelous remarks are false
  • Private-Person plaintiff must prove the falsity
    of the libelous statement only when the subject
    of the statement is a matter of public concern

14
Fact versus Opinion
  • Expressions of pure judgments are not subject to
    libel lawsuits
  • But
  • Expressions of opinion may often imply an
    assertion of objective fact. Couching such
    statements in terms of opinion is often not
    sufficient.

15
Fault standard for truth/falsity
  • Straightforward in cases of private persons
  • Actual malice in cases of public persons

16
New York Times v. Sullivan (1964)
  • The debate on public issues should be
    uninhibited, robust, and wide open, and that it
    may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes
    unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and
    public officials
  • (from Justice Brennans opinion)

17
New York Times v. Sullivan (1964)
  • Public officials may not recover damages for
    defamatory falsehood relating to their official
    conduct unless they can prove actual malice
  • that the statement was made with knowledge that
    it was false or with reckless disregard of
    whether it was false or not.

18
Public persons and officials
  • Public figures are those who thrust themselves
    into the forefront of particular public
    controversies in order to influence the
    resolution of the issues involved
  • Public officials are those who have substantial
    government responsibility

19
Rosenbloom v Metromedia (1971)An expansion of
public
  • Public in reference not only to the person, but
    the content
  • If the content of the offending communication is
    of general public concern, the actual malice
    standard may be applicable.
  • Later the court clarified the standard in Gertz,
    limiting the Rosenbloom approach

20
The Gertz Ruling (1974) (the new standard)
  • Libel cases filed by private people can be judged
    by the standards imposed by individual state
  • Most states use negligence (lesser degree of
    fault)
  • A few states use actual malice

21
Classifying the Plaintiff A Rough Guide (from
your book)
  • Public Official Government Employee
    Substantial Control or Responsibility
  • All-Purpose Public Figure Career of Courting
    Media Pervasive Fame and Influence
  • Vortex Public Figure Public Controversy
    Voluntary Leadership Role
  • Involuntary Public Figure Pattern of Notorious
    Conduct Prior (Undesired) Media Coverage
  • Private Persons Most Others

22
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • In a parody that appeared in Hustler magazine the
    prominent fundamentalist evangelist Reverend
    Jerry Falwell was depicted as a drunk in a sexual
    liaison with his mother in an outhouse

23
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24
From the Campari Ad
  • But your mom? Isnt it a bit odd?
  • I dont think so. Looks dont mean that much to
    me in a woman.
  • Go on.
  • Well, we were drunk off our God fearing asses on
    Campari, ginger ale and soda And mom looked
    better than a Baptist whore with a 100 donation.

25
From the Campari Ad
  • Did you try it again?
  • Oh, yeah. I always get sloshed before I go out
    to the pulpit. You dont think I could lay down
    all that bullshit sober, do you?

26
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • Falwell sued for
  • 1. libel,
  • 2. invasion of privacy,
  • 3. intentional infliction of emotional distress.
  • In the trial court he lost on (1) and (2) but
    prevailed on (3). He was awarded 200,000
    damages for emotional distress

27
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • The Supreme Court reversed (8 to 0)
  • a public figure or official may not recover for
    intentional infliction of emotional distress
    arising from a publication unless the publication
    contains a false statement of fact that was made
    with actual malice.

28
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • That the material might be deemed outrageous and
    that it might have been intended to cause severe
    emotional distress were not enough to overcome
    the First Amendment.

29
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988)
  • Vicious attacks on public figures are part of the
    American tradition of satire and parody, a
    tradition of speech that would be hamstrung if
    public figures could sue them anytime the
    satirist caused distress.

30
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