Tag Archive for: Lawsuits

Law Dept. Hack Slows Down Protester Lawsuits Against NYPD


(TNS) — The hack of the city Law Department is causing major delays in high-profile lawsuits over the NYPD’s response to racial protests last summer, a new court filing revealed Wednesday.

Lawyers for protesters and the state attorney general’s office wrote in a letter in Manhattan Federal Court that their adversaries in the Law Department seemed in the dark about the scope of the hack now in its fourth day.

“Defense counsel said that due to the disruption of the Law Department’s computer systems — which the Law Department says has shut down their entire computer system, making even the most basic litigation tasks impossible — she could not say when Defendants will begin producing documents. Counsel had no specific information concerning the technical issues in her office, which appear to be caused by a hacker, nor an expected timeline for resolving them,” lawyer Remy Green wrote, recounting a Tuesday phone call with a city attorney.


Green and other lawyers seek a hearing to address the delays and want a technical expert from the city to attend and answer questions about the hack.

Judge Colleen McMahon is overseeing lawsuits, including one filed by state Attorney General Letitia James, alleging the NYPD violated protesters’ civil rights last summer following the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

“My sense on the call was that they very much do not have it under control and do not know what’s going on,” said Joshua Moskovitz, another attorney on the protest cases.

Meanwhile, city officials continued to dodge questions about whether the Law Department used multifactor authentication, which is widely considered a cybersecurity best practice.

A policy memo issued by the New York City’s Cyber Command two years ago stated the security measure is a requirement for city workers with “restricted” or “sensitive” information access as of April 23, 2019.

But city officials refused to say whether the Law Department used multifactor authentication at the time of the hack.

A Law Department spokesman declined to comment on the matter aside from saying that discussing it in public is…

Source…

Judge Refuses To Dismiss Batch Of Nicholas Sandmann’s Media Lawsuits In The Laziest Defamation Ruling I’ve Ever Seen

I am perplexed. Nicholas Sandmann, the Kentucky teenager who had a highly publicized and widely debated encounter in Washington DC is somewhat of a Rorshach Test for how you view the media. There are all sorts of interpretations of his encounter, and all sorts of arguments about the media coverage of that encounter — and much of it is driven by people’s prior beliefs. What should not be controversial, however, is that his ongoing series of SLAPP suits about the media coverage of that encounter are an attack on the 1st Amendment.

We were a bit surprised that (after first having the case thrown out before it was reinstated on very narrow grounds), the Washington Post agreed to settle, as did CNN. Given the basis of the case, and the nature of defamation law, it seemed highly likely that the cases settled for what is known as a “nuisance fee.” Less than it would cost to actually bring the case to conclusion, but not a significant amount to either media property. Of course, Sandmann’s lawyer has threatened to sue some more journalists and end careers of some who speculated on the nature of the settlements, though as far as I can tell, no such lawsuits have been filed.

That said, there was a long list of other Sandmann lawsuits filed against major media companies for reporting on his DC encounter. All of them are under the same judge, William Bertelsman, and he has now refused to dismiss all of them. The opinions in the cases against the NY Times, ABC News, Rolling Stone and CBS News are all virtually identical.

I will admit that I am perplexed by the judge’s reasoning in these cases, which does not seem anything even remotely like any other defamation case I’ve ever seen. Because the rulings are all pretty similar (with just some slight differences), we’ll just go through the ruling against the NY Times and highlight some of the oddities. The judge summarizes the case and then just says “well, I found the statement to be libelous in previous cases, and therefore it is here.”

The Complaint is based on the defendant’s news coverage of an event that occurred on January 18, 2019, during a visit by plaintiff Nicholas Sandmann and his fellow Covington Catholic High School students to Washington, D.C.

Greatly summarized, the Complaint alleges that Sandmann was libeled by the defendant when it published a news article stating that Sandmann, while at the Lincoln Memorial, “blocked” Native-American activist Nathan Phillips and “prevented Phillips’ retreat while Nicholas and a mass of other young white boys surrounded, taunted, jeered and physically intimidated Phillips.”….

This news story is alleged to be false and defamatory…. Sandmann further alleges that this publication by defendant and similar stories by other news media caused him to be harassed by the public, causing him great emotional distress….. Sandmann also alleges that defendant’s article “is now forever a part of the historical Internet record and will haunt and taint Nicholas for the remainder of his natural life and impugn his reputation for generations to come.”…

The motion to dismiss argues that this publication is not libelous, but the Court has ruled in companion cases that it is libelous. The Court continues to hold that opinion for the reason stated in such preceding cases. See Sandmann v. The Washington Post, Cov. Case No. 19cv19 (Docs. 47, 64); Sandmann v. Cable News Network, Cov. Case No. 19cv31 (Docs. 43, 44); Sandmann v. NBCUniversal Media, LLC, Cov. Case No. 19cv56 (Doc. 43).

So, there are a bunch of oddities already in here, but I’ll just focus on that last paragraph, in which the judge says that “the Court has ruled in companion cases that it is libelous” and then points to those other cases. But, that’s not what actually happened. The key case that matters here is the one against the Washington Post. The judge points to two documents in that case: 47 and 64, neither of which have the judge saying that these statements are libelous. In fact, the only thorough analysis of the statements comes in document 47 and it concludes that… what was written by the Washington Post was not libelous. It goes through it all pretty thoroughly and notes that the claims of libel are either protected opinion or not about Sandmann himself.

More to the point, this ruling — again by the same judge — says that what constitutes “blocked” is a subjective matter of opinion and thus not defamatory:

This is kind of important, because it’s the exact same statement that is the basis of all of these lawsuits that the judge refused to dismiss.

Yet, he says that he found that statement to be defamatory… while pointing to a filing in which he did the opposite. Now, in the later ruling that reinstated a tiny, limited part of the case (filing 64) involving that same statement, the judge says that he will allow for more discovery before deciding on whether or not they’re defamatory.

The Court will adhere to its previous rulings as they pertain to these statements except Statements 10, 11, and 33, to the extent that these three statements state that plaintiff “blocked” Nathan Phillips and “would not allow him to retreat.” Suffice to say that the Court has given this matter careful review and concludes that “justice requires” that discovery be had regarding these statements and their context. The Court will then consider them anew on summary judgment.

The other cases that the judge mentions as proving he found these statements libelous only point back to the Washington Post filing… that again says the opposite. So the judge is basing his ruling on the fact that he already found these statements to be libelous when he didn’t actually do that. It’s the most bizarre thing I’ve seen from a federal judge.

From there he goes on to quote the same paragraph (oddly leaving out quotation marks where they obviously belong):

As in other cases, the Complaint herein alleges that the defendant’s article quoted the following statement by Phillips:

It was getting ugly, and I was thinking: I’ve got to find myself an exit out of this situation and finish my song at the Lincoln Memorial, Mr. Phillips told The Post. I started going that way, and that guy in the hat stood in my way and we were at an impasse. He just blocked my way and wouldn’t allow me to retreat.

The Complaint alleges that this statement was false in that Sandmann did not block Phillips or interfere with him in any way, and that it conveys a defamatory meaning because it imputes to Sandmann racist conduct.

Note that this is again the same statement that the court originally found to be not defamatory and then later said he would allow discovery on, but over which the case settled before going much further. So I’m completely lost as to how the judge can say he already found this to be defamatory.

The parties agree that Kentucky law applies to this case. Under Kentucky law, a writing is defamatory “if it tends to (1) bring a person into public hatred, contempt or ridicule; (2) cause him to be shunned or avoided; or (3) injure him in his business or occupation.”… The allegations of the Complaint fit this definition precisely.

Wait… what? This leaves out more than a few things about defamation under Kentucky Law (and the 1st Amendment). It leaves out that the statements need to be false statements of fact, for example. Statements of opinion cannot be defamatory. That seems, you know, kind of… important?

The judge then rejects the NY Times’ citation of another case in the same circuit, saying that that was under Ohio law rather than Kentucky law. But that ruling was using standard 1st Amendment standards for defamation law that still apply in Kentucky. And the reasoning the judge gives makes no sense at all.

In Croce, a newspaper published an article that included unflattering allegations against the plaintiff, a university professor and cancer researcher. The Court held that, in “full context,” a “reasonable reader would interpret the article as a standard piece of investigative journalism” which simply reported “newsworthy allegations with appropriate qualifying language.”

That holding is inapplicable under the allegations of the Complaint here. Defendant published a statement by Phillips that was made after Sandmann had departed for home, a statement to which Sandmann had no opportunity to reply in real time. While Sandmann had such an opportunity later, and such evidence might be admissible to show lack of malice, it is not a defense to the defamatory meaning of Phillips’ original statement itself.

WHAT?!? That’s not how defamation law works at all. The question of whether or not someone has the ability to “reply in real time” has nothing to do with the standards for defamation law. Notice that the judge here doesn’t cite anything for claiming this. He just… says it. And, again the other case that the NY Times points to is exactly on point, whether it’s talking about Kentucky or Ohio. The 1st Amendment still exists. The fact that Phillips said stuff after Sandmann went home is… totally and completely irrelevant.

Also, let’s be clear here. This is a case about Phillips’ statement that he made to the Washington Post, which were then repeated in the NY Times (attributed to the Post). If this case were against Phillips, you might be able to squint and kinda sorta, but not really, find a way to say that there’s an argument here (again, no, not really). If this were the case against the Washington Post, again, you might be able to squint and see that, which is why the allowance for more discovery was made in the first place. But, how does Sandmann’s inability to reply to the Washington Post quoting Phillips in real time have anything whatsoever to do with the question of whether or not the NY Times is liable for defamation? It doesn’t.

The judge also rejects the Times’ statute of limitations claim, which under Kentucky law is one year. The lawsuit was filed 14 months after the incident. The judge says that since Sandmann is a minor, the statute of limitations is effectively extended until he turns 18. The Times argues that at the very least, the statute of limitations should have started ticking when he filed the original lawsuit against the Washington Post, but again the judge just says “nope.” Even though the NY Times pointed to previous rulings that agreed with their analysis of the statute of limitations the judge says that the procedural history in that other case was different (he doesn’t explain how or why) and that he “does not believe” that the original case the Times point to would be upheld if it were appealed. Which… is a take.

Anyway, this does not mean that Sandmann has yet won. It just means that these cases can move forward. And that’s dangerous for a few reasons. I’m not 100% sure, but it’s possible that the media defendants won’t be able appeal on this point (this gets beyond my knowledge of Kentucky civil procedure — but some laws allow for “interlocutory appeal” in which you can appeal specific aspects of a ruling, while others want you to wait until the court makes a final ruling on the case before it can go up on appeal). If that’s the case then appeals would have to wait until later in the case, after the case has gone on through more expensive stages — and that means that many of the media companies (and their insurance companies) may feel a lot of pressure to just throw a bit of money at Sandmann to make the case go away for less than it will cost to go through to the next round.

The NY Times has a history of not caving in cases like this, recognizing that it has to set the standard, so I hope it continues fighting. But it would not surprise me to see some of the other media companies also do “confidential settlements” that many people will judge as some huge victory for Sandmann.

All in all this is a very, very, very odd ruling that does not fit with any other defamation case I’ve seen, appears to go against plenty of precedent and, most bizarrely, has the judge citing his own rulings in a different case that say the exact opposite of what he claims it says in this case.

Techdirt.

Why Is Fox News Acting As State Media, Announcing Trump’s Lawsuits Before They’re Filed And Failing To Point Out How Frivolous They Are?

As we’ve been pointing out, the Trump campaign, with the help of lawyer Charles Harder, has been suing a list of media enemies over the past week. There was the NY Times, followed by the Washington Post and (probably not) finally, CNN. We’ve detailed why each lawsuit is frivolous, and how they appear to be playing to Trump’s base in a performative manner, attacking the credibility of the media which has done critical reporting on his Presidency, and doing so in a manner that potentially serves two purposes: gets his fans riled up about the media while simultaneously creating a chilling effect on fairly typical journalistic analysis of the Trump administration and campaign.

But I wanted to focus in on a separate point: the effective “state media” of Fox News reporting on these lawsuits in absolutely ridiculous ways. Reporter Gregg Re wrote about the NY Times case, and at least included a link to the filing and noted that “lawsuits for libel against media organizations by public figures must clear a high bar.” But the reporting on the next two lawsuits, done by reporters Brian Flood and Brooke Singman, were terrible. Both of them claimed that reporting on the filing of a federal lawsuit was a Fox News “exclusive.” That’s not what exclusive means, guys.

Also, while Fox News eventually added a link to the filing in the story about the CNN lawsuit and the NY Times one, it initially did not link to the CNN one, and as of this writing has still not linked to the Washington Post filing. Indeed, as you can see above, the reporters almost gloat over the fact that Fox News “obtained” access to the lawsuit — and then failed to provide it to their readers. And with the CNN lawsuit, a search of PACER a couple of hours after the Fox News article went live showed no evidence that the case had actually been filed yet. In other words, it’s likely that someone associated with the campaign or the lawsuit handed the complaint over to Fox News to “break” the “exclusive” story.

And perhaps that explains why the reporting by Flood and Singman is so, so bad. Unlike the story by Re regarding the NY Times lawsuit, this one makes no effort to explain why this lawsuit faces a huge barrier (known as the 1st Amendment). Even worse, it repeats a blatantly false statement from the campaign’s “legal adviser” Jenna Ellis:

“False statements are not protected under the U.S. Constitution; therefore, these suits will have no chilling effect on freedom of the press. If journalists are more accurate in their statements and reporting, that would be a positive development, but not why these suits were filed,” Ellis added.

There is some irony in this statement about false statements being false, but it is. There’s plenty of precedent here, including (most clearly) the United States v. Alvarez (a case we’ve been pointing to a lot lately), which says:

The Court has never endorsed the categorical rule the Government advances: that false statements receive no First Amendment protection.

A good reporter would perhaps point that out in response to Ellis. But it appears that Fox News is less interested in employing good reporters, and more interested in acting as state media, and boosting the President it supports.

This is especially sickening, given that these are attacks on the very 1st Amendment that protects Fox News — and its long history of misleading, inaccurate, and occasionally false statements, that the network is somewhat infamous for. You would think, if it wasn’t subsumed in cultish adherence to the President, that it would recognize the importance of actually continuing to defend the part of the Constitution that allows them to exist. At the very least, you might hope that its reporters would be careful enough to accurately report the law. Apparently that is too much to ask.

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Techdirt.

LifeLabs Hit With Several Lawsuits Over Data Breach of 15M Patients – HealthITSecurity.com

LifeLabs Hit With Several Lawsuits Over Data Breach of 15M Patients  HealthITSecurity.com
“data breach” – read more