Author Topic: Even as Jury Deliberates, Judge Says He’ll Toss Palin Libel Suit Against New York Times  (Read 385 times)

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Offline mystery-ak

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Even as Jury Deliberates, Judge Says He’ll Toss Palin Libel Suit Against New York Times

Joel B. Pollak 14 Feb 2022

U.S. Judge Jed S. Rakoff, a Bill Clinton appointee, told lawyers in the courtroom in New York Monday he would dismiss Sarah Palin’s defamation suit against the New York Times for lack of evidence, even as the jury deliberated over the verdict.

The jury will not learn of the dismissal until after it has deliberated, creating the potential between a conflict between the verdict and the judge’s decision to dismiss the case — or to issue what courts refer to as a “directed verdict” to end the trial.

Palin sued the Times over a 2017 editorial in which it said that she had inspired the 2011 mass shooting in Tucson, Arizona. Judge Rakoff initially dismissed the case, but it was revived by a federal appeals court. After the presentation of arguments in initial motions, Rakoff decided that Palin had enough evidence to allow the case to go to trial — a rarity in defamation suits by public figures against the media, since the standard of proving “actual malice” is usually too high for plaintiffs to clear.

Moreover, Rakoff sent the case to the jury after closing arguments last week. But on Monday, as NPR’s David Folkenflik reported, he had second thoughts, and said Palin failed to meet the “actual malice” standard because of the Times‘s correction, and then-editorial page editor James Bennet’s contrition:


https://twitter.com/davidfolkenflik/status/1493321058723803139

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https://www.breitbart.com/the-media/2022/02/14/even-as-jury-deliberates-judge-says-hell-toss-palin-libel-suit-against-new-york-times/
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Offline Kamaji

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Winning a libel suit is very difficult.

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Winning a libel suit is very difficult.

Especially with a loaded Judge.
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Offline Kamaji

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Especially with a loaded Judge.


In this case, not really.

Offline mystery-ak

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Why did he even let it go to the jury?...is this normal?
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Offline Kamaji

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Why did he even let it go to the jury?...is this normal?

He apparently let it go to the jury, and then decided that he would grant a motion to dismiss.

It's not massively common, but it isn't radically uncommon, either.

Sometimes, if the motion to dismiss is decided on a single technical point of law, the trial judge may decide that she or he wants the jury to come back with a verdict on the rest of the case so that, if her or his decision to dismiss is overturned on appeal, the jury's verdict can simply be embodied in a new order, and it isn't necessary to go back and hold a second trial.

Offline mystery-ak

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He apparently let it go to the jury, and then decided that he would grant a motion to dismiss.

It's not massively common, but it isn't radically uncommon, either.

Sometimes, if the motion to dismiss is decided on a single technical point of law, the trial judge may decide that she or he wants the jury to come back with a verdict on the rest of the case so that, if her or his decision to dismiss is overturned on appeal, the jury's verdict can simply be embodied in a new order, and it isn't necessary to go back and hold a second trial.

Got it...thanks..
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Offline mountaineer

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Winning a libel suit is very difficult.
Especially for a public figure.
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Offline mystery-ak

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New York Times found not liable in Palin defamation case
By Dominick Mastrangelo - 02/15/22 02:40 PM EST

A jury found The New York Times not liable after the news organization was sued by former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) over an editorial it published linking her to a mass shooting in 2011.

The jury's decision Tuesday, which was unanimous, came a day after the judge in the case indicated he would dismiss the lawsuit against the newspaper, saying Palin's attorneys produced a lack of evidence to suggest the news organization acted recklessly or knowingly published false material about her.

"I think this [was] an example of very unfortunate editorializing on the part of the Times," U.S. District Court Judge Jed Rakoff said in court on Monday. "The law here sets a very high standard [for actual malice]. The court finds that that standard has not been met."

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https://thehill.com/homenews/media/594355-new-york-times-found-not-guilty-in-palin-libel-case
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Offline mystery-ak

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Palin jury learned of Judge's motion to dismiss case against NYT before giving verdict
By Dominick Mastrangelo - 02/16/22 01:43 PM EST

Several of the jurors who ruled against former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) in her civil case against The New York Times learned of a judge's decision to dismiss the case before handing down their verdict.

"These jurors reported that although they had been assiduously adhering to the Court’s instruction to avoid media coverage of the trial, they had involuntarily received “push notifications” on their smartphones that contained the bottomline of the ruling," a filing in U.S. District Court submitted on Wednesday read.

"The jurors repeatedly assured the Court’s law clerk that these notifications had not affected them in any way or played any role whatever in their deliberations."


On Monday, Judge Jed Rakoff indicated he would dismiss the libel case, which stems from an editorial the Times published in 2011 incorrectly linking Palin to a mass shooting in an Arizona parking lot where then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.) was shot and seriously wounded.

After the judge's move, several outlet sent the news out via push alerts  — a short message often sent in breaking news situations directly from a news organization to a person's cell phone or tablet or other subscribed personal device alerting them to a story.

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https://thehill.com/homenews/media/594555-palin-jury-learned-of-judges-motion-to-dismiss-case-against-nyt-before-giving
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Offline Kamaji

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Palin jury learned of Judge's motion to dismiss case against NYT before giving verdict
By Dominick Mastrangelo - 02/16/22 01:43 PM EST

Several of the jurors who ruled against former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) in her civil case against The New York Times learned of a judge's decision to dismiss the case before handing down their verdict.

"These jurors reported that although they had been assiduously adhering to the Court’s instruction to avoid media coverage of the trial, they had involuntarily received “push notifications” on their smartphones that contained the bottomline of the ruling," a filing in U.S. District Court submitted on Wednesday read.

"The jurors repeatedly assured the Court’s law clerk that these notifications had not affected them in any way or played any role whatever in their deliberations."


On Monday, Judge Jed Rakoff indicated he would dismiss the libel case, which stems from an editorial the Times published in 2011 incorrectly linking Palin to a mass shooting in an Arizona parking lot where then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.) was shot and seriously wounded.

After the judge's move, several outlet sent the news out via push alerts  — a short message often sent in breaking news situations directly from a news organization to a person's cell phone or tablet or other subscribed personal device alerting them to a story.

more
https://thehill.com/homenews/media/594555-palin-jury-learned-of-judges-motion-to-dismiss-case-against-nyt-before-giving

That may be treated as harmless error, on the basis that even if the jurors had returned a verdict for Ms. Palin, the judge would still have issued a ruling dismissing the case.

However, things get tricky if it turns out that she would have appealed the judge's decision to dismiss, because on the current footing, since the judge hasn't issued an order and opinion dismissing the case, she couldn't challenge that decision at this point in time.

So, what is likely to happen is that she will appeal from the verdict on the basis of a tainted jury, and the Court of Appeals will either (a) consider de novo the ground on which the judge was going to dismiss the case - if it is merely a matter of law, and not a matter of fact-finding, an appeals court can usually hear argument de novo on the point of law and make a decision on that point - which could either result in overturning the verdict and returning the case for a new trial, or a finding of harmless error, or (b) overturn the verdict and simply return the case to the trial court for further proceedings, at which point the trial judge could issue his decision and opinion dismissing the case, and Ms. Palin would then have to appeal that decision.

It's always more complicated than it seems at first.

Offline berdie

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All I can say is I were on this jury and heard that the case was dismissed before deliberation, I would be  9999hair out0000.