Opinion Sarah Palin v. NYT: Exploring the line between bad journalism and libelous journalism
By Erik Wemple
January 21, 2022 at 2:16 p.m. EST | Read Original Article
First Amendment watchers, take note: Sarah Palin’s defamation claim against the New York Times will go to trial starting Jan. 24 in a New York federal courthouse. At issue is the elasticity of the protections that allow news organizations to present tough coverage of public figures.
Or, to put things a bit more sharply, the case will help demarcate the line between really bad journalism and libelous journalism.
The case got its start nearly five years ago on one of the darkest days in American political memory: James T. Hodgkinson on June 14, 2017, fired on a group of Republican lawmakers at a baseball practice in Alexandria, Va., injuring several people. In a deadline frenzy to comment on the matter, the New York Times published a piece titled, “America’s Lethal Politics.” The editorial attempted to draw a parallel between the Hodgkinson attack and the 2011 shooting attack in Arizona by Jared Lee Loughner that killed six and injured 12 others
“[T]he link to political incitement was clear,” wrote the Times editorial board of the Arizona shooting, which targeted then-Rep. Gabby Giffords. “Before the shooting, Sarah Palin’s political action committee circulated a map of targeted electoral districts that put Ms. Giffords and 19 other Democrats under stylized cross hairs.”
There was, in fact, no “link” between the ad of the Palin committee and the Loughner crimes. So the Times editorial board ran a correction, but it didn’t even mention Palin. She quickly sued. In August 2017, Judge Jed Rakoff tossed the suit. An appeals court subsequently reinstated the complaint and sent it to Rakoff for further consideration. He ruled in August 2020 that the case could proceed to a jury trial.
From the start, the Palin case has been a square-off over the most fundamental of media protections — namely, the “actual malice” standard. The 1964 case New York Times v. Sullivan and subsequent rulings established that if public figures wished to prevail in defamation actions against news organizations, they’d need to establish that the outlet knowingly published a falsehood or did so with “reckless disregard” to its truth or falsity. “In our view, this was an honest mistake,” New York Times deputy general counsel David McCraw told this blog in 2019.* “It was not an exhibit of actual malice.”
There was never any dispute that Palin — a former Alaska governor, former vice presidential candidate, Fox News contributor and reality-TV person — qualified under the law as a public figure. Her lawyers, however, argued that the actions of James Bennet, who at the time served as editor of the Times’s editorial board, met the stringent evidentiary standards of actual malice. “Mr. Bennet had actual knowledge that the false and defamatory statements he wrote and The Times published about Mrs. Palin were untrue,” argues Palin’s amended complaint. “Alternatively, Mr. Bennet and The Times published the Palin Article with reckless disregard for and a purposeful avoidance of the truth.” (Elizabeth Williamson, then a member of the Times editorial board, wrote the first draft of the editorial, though Bennet inserted the passage at issue in the suit, according to the factual record developed on the motion to dismiss.)
In hopes of documenting Bennet’s state of mind, Palin’s attorneys pointed out that when he previously worked as editor of the Atlantic, the company published journalism that debunked the Palin-Loughner incitement link. Yet Bennet testified that he didn’t recall reading those articles.
As we’ve written before, showing that a journalist acted with “reckless disregard” is a pain. It’s not enough to point out that industry standards weren’t followed or that facts weren’t checked. “There must be sufficient evidence to permit the conclusion that the defendant in fact entertained serious doubts as to the truth of his publication,” noted a key Supreme Court ruling on the matter
[…] Read the rest of the article.
Tags: First Amendment, Ken Turkel, New York Times, Reputation, Reputation and Privacy, Sarah Palin