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Media|Landmark Trial Against Fox News Could Affect the Future of Libel Law

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/13/business/media/fox-dominion-libel-trial.html
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FOX NEWS V. DOMINION

 * Timeline of Events
 * A Landmark Trial
 * Who Is Judge Eric Davis?
 * Fox Sanctioned for Withholding Evidence

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LANDMARK TRIAL AGAINST FOX NEWS COULD AFFECT THE FUTURE OF LIBEL LAW

Jury selection starts on Thursday in Delaware Superior Court, where the
proceedings will tackle misinformation and the limits of journalistic
responsibility.

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The defamation case filed by Dominion Voting Systems has so far been notable for
its exposure of the inner workings of Fox News.Credit...John Taggart for The New
York Times


By Michael M. Grynbaum

Published April 13, 2023Updated April 14, 2023, 4:28 p.m. ET


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Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation case against Fox News, which goes to trial
in Delaware next week, is expected to stoke hot-button debates over journalistic
ethics, the unchecked flow of misinformation, and the ability of Americans to
sort out facts and falsehoods in a polarized age.

For a particular subset of the legal and media communities, the trial is also
shaping up as something else: the libel law equivalent of the Super Bowl.

“I’ve been involved in hundreds of libel cases, and there has never been a case
like this,” said Martin Garbus, a veteran First Amendment lawyer. “It’s going to
be a dramatic moment in American history.”

With jury selection set to begin on Thursday in Delaware Superior Court in
Wilmington, the case has so far been notable for its unprecedented window into
the inner workings of Fox News. Emails and text messages introduced as evidence
showed the Fox host Tucker Carlson insulting former President Donald J. Trump to
his colleagues, and Rupert Murdoch, whose family controls the Fox media empire,
aggressively weighing in on editorial decisions, among other revelations.



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Now, after months of depositions and dueling motions, the lawyers will face off
before a jury, and legal scholars and media lawyers say the arguments are likely
to plumb some of the knottier questions of American libel law.

Dominion, an elections technology firm, is seeking $1.6 billion in damages after
Fox News aired false claims that the company had engaged in an elaborate
conspiracy to steal the 2020 presidential election for Joseph R. Biden Jr. The
claims, repeated on Fox programs hosted by anchors like Maria Bartiromo and Lou
Dobbs, were central to Mr. Trump’s effort to persuade Americans that he had not
actually lost.

Lawyers for Fox have argued that the network is protected as a news-gathering
organization, and that claims of election fraud, voiced by lawyers for a sitting
president, were the epitome of newsworthiness. “Ultimately, this case is about
the First Amendment protections of the media’s absolute right to cover the
news,” the network has said.


FOX NEWS V. DOMINION VOTER SYSTEMS


DOCUMENTS FROM A LAWSUIT FILED BY THE VOTING MACHINE MAKER DOMINION AGAINST FOX
NEWS HAVE SHED LIGHT ON THE DEBATE INSIDE THE NETWORK OVER FALSE CLAIMS RELATED
TO THE 2020 ELECTION.

 * Running Fox: Emails that lawyers for Dominion have used to build their
   defamation case give a peek into how Rupert Murdoch shapes coverage at his
   news organizations.
 * Behind the Curtain: Texts and emails released as part of the lawsuit show how
   Fox employees privately mocked election fraud claims made by Donald Trump,
   even as the network amplified them to appease viewers.
 * Tucker Carlson’s Contempt: The Fox host’s private comments, revealed in court
   documents, contrast sharply with his support of Trump on his show.
 * Attacks on Dominion: Despite the stark warning that Dominion has sent by
   filing several lawsuits, including the one against Fox, unfounded assertions
   about the company are still proliferating online.

It is difficult to prove libel in the American legal system, thanks in large
part to New York Times v. Sullivan, the 1964 Supreme Court decision that is
considered as critical to the First Amendment as Brown v. Board of Education of
Topeka is to civil rights.

The Sullivan case set a high legal bar for public figures to prove that they had
been defamed. A plaintiff has to prove not just that a news organization
published false information, but that it did so with “actual malice,” either by
knowing that the information was false or displaying a reckless disregard for
the truth.



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The question of that motivation is central to the Dominion case. The trial
judge, Eric M. Davis, has already concluded in pretrial motions that the
statements aired by Fox about Dominion were false. He has left it to the jury to
decide if Fox deliberately aired falsehoods even as it was aware the assertions
were probably false.

Documents show Fox executives and anchors panicking over a viewer revolt in the
aftermath of the 2020 election, in part because the network’s viewers believed
that it had not sufficiently embraced Mr. Trump’s claims of fraud. Dominion can
wield that evidence to argue that Fox aired the conspiracy theories involving
Dominion for its own financial gain, despite ample evidence that the claims were
untrue. (Fox has responded that Dominion “cherry-picked” its evidence and that
the network was merely reporting the news.)


Image

Lawyers on their way out of Delaware Superior Court. Fox suffered some setbacks
this week before the trial.Credit...Hannah Beier for The New York Times


Mr. Garbus, the First Amendment lawyer, has spent decades defending the rights
of media outlets in libel cases. Yet like some media advocates, he believes that
Fox News should lose — in part because a victory for Fox could embolden a
growing effort to roll back broader protections for journalists.

That effort, led mainly but not exclusively by conservatives, argues that the
1964 Sullivan decision granted too much leeway to news outlets, which should
face harsher consequences for their coverage. Some of the leading proponents of
this view, like the Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas and Gov. Ron DeSantis
of Florida, are conservative heroes who are sympathetic to the right-wing views
of Fox programming. But if Fox prevails in the Dominion case, despite the
evidence against it, the result could fuel the argument that the bar for
defamation has been set too high.



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Not all media lawyers agree with this reasoning. Some even think a loss for Fox
could generate problems for other news organizations.

Jane Kirtley, a former executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom
of the Press, who teaches media law at the University of Minnesota, said she
detected from Fox critics “an intense desire for someone to say definitively
that Fox lied.” But she added, “I don’t see a victory for Dominion as a victory
for the news media, by any means.”

“As an ethicist, I deplore a lot of what we’ve learned about Fox, and I would
never hold it up as an example of good journalistic practices,” Ms. Kirtley
said. “But I’ve always believed that the law has to protect even those news
organizations that do things the way I don’t think they should do it. There has
to be room for error.”

Ms. Kirtley said she was concerned that the Dominion case might lead to copycat
lawsuits against other news organizations, and that the courts could start
imposing their own standards for what constituted good journalistic practice.

Dominion’s effort to unearth internal emails and text exchanges, she added,
could be reproduced by other libel plaintiffs, leading to embarrassing
revelations for news outlets that might otherwise be acting in good faith.



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“It’s an intense scrutiny into newsroom editorial processes, and I’m not sure
that members of the public will look at it very kindly,” she said. “Maybe the
emails show they’re being jocular or making fun of things that other people take
very seriously.”

Journalism, she said, “is not a science,” and she said she felt uncomfortable
with courts determining what constituted ethical news gathering.

Fox suffered some setbacks this week before the trial. On Tuesday, Judge Davis
barred the network from arguing that it aired the claims about Dominion on the
basis that the allegations were newsworthy, a crucial line of defense. On
Wednesday, he imposed a sanction on Fox News and scolded its legal team after
questions arose about the network’s timely disclosure of additional evidence.
The judge said he would probably start an investigation into the matter; the
network said its lawyers had produced additional evidence “when we first learned
it.”

The trial may feature testimony from high-profile Fox figures, including Mr.
Murdoch, Mr. Carlson, Ms. Bartiromo and Suzanne Scott, the chief executive of
Fox News Media.

Audio produced by Parin Behrooz.







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Landmark Trial Against Fox News Could Affect the Future of Libel LawSkip to
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