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Jury reaches verdict after judge tosses Sarah Palin's libel suit against New York Times
2022-02-15 00:00:00.0     ABC新闻-美国新闻     原网页

       

       A federal jury in New York on Tuesday has rejected former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's libel suit against the New York Times a day after a judge said he will dismiss the case no matter what verdict was reached.

       The jury informed Judge Jed Rakoff that after a little over two days of deliberations it found The New York Times was not liable for defaming Palin.

       The jury's decision follows Rakoff's announcement on Tuesday to attorneys in the case that he will set aside the verdict and dismiss the lawsuit because Palin had not met the high standard of showing The Times had acted with "actual malice" when it published an editorial that erroneously linked Palin's political action committee to a mass shooting.

       In explaining his decision, Rakoff said he believed it was inevitable the case will be appealed and that such an action would benefit from knowing how the jury's deliberations turned out.

       Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

       Sarah Palin, 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate and former Alaska governor, arrives for her defamation lawsuit against the New York Times, at the United States Courthouse in the Manhattan, Feb. 15, 2022.

       As she left the courthouse on Monday, Palin said she was puzzled by the judge's decision.

       "This is a jury trial and we always appreciate the system," Palin told news reporters. "So whatever happened in there usurps the system."

       In a statement published in The Times, the newspaper's spokeswoman, Danielle Rhoades Ha, called Rakoff's decision "a reaffirmation of a fundamental tenet of American law" protecting freedom of the press.

       "Public figures should not be permitted to use libel suits to punish or intimidate news organizations that make, acknowledge and swiftly correct unintentional errors," Ha said.

       Palin, 58, sued The Times in 2017, roughly nine years after she was tapped to be Sen. John McCain's GOP vice presidential nominee, claiming the newspaper deliberately ruined her burgeoning career as a political commentator and consultant by publishing an erroneous editorial she said defamed her.

       MORE: Sarah Palin says she hopes the media treats Kamala Harris 'fairly,' but with 'no kid gloves'

       The editorial that prompted the lawsuit was published on the same day a gunman opened fire on GOP politicians practicing for a congressional charity baseball game in a Washington, D.C., suburb, injuring six, including Republican Rep. Steve Scalise.

       Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

       Sarah Palin, 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate and former Alaska governor, arrives for her defamation lawsuit against the New York Times, at the United States Courthouse in the Manhattan, Feb. 15, 2022.

       Under the headline "America's Lethal Politics," The Times' editorial board wrote on June 14, 2017, that prior to the 2011 Arizona mass shooting that killed six people and left then-Arizona Rep. Gabby Giffords with a traumatic brain injury, Palin's political action committee had fueled a violent atmosphere by circulating a map that put the electoral districts of Giffords and 19 other Democrats under stylized crosshairs.

       Two days later, The Times published a correction saying the editorial had "incorrectly described" the map and "incorrectly stated that a link existed between political rhetoric and the 2011 shooting."

       MORE: THROWBACK THURSDAY: Sarah Palin resigns as Alaska governor

       During the trial in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, Palin portrayed herself as the biblical David going up against the Philistine giant Goliath with just a slingshot. Palin, in her testimony, accused The Times of deliberately fabricating lies to sully her reputation.

       MORE: Sarah Palin says she hopes the media treats Kamala Harris 'fairly,' but with 'no kid gloves'

       MORE: Video Obama: 'I Don't Think About Sarah Palin'

       The Times' former editorial page editor, James Bennet, testified that while he was responsible for the erroneous information in the editorial, it was an honest mistake and that he meant no harm.

       ABC's Aaron Katersky reports:

       


标签:综合
关键词: editorial     New York     Sarah     Giffords     lawsuit     Palin     former Alaska gov     Times     Palin's libel suit    
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