Defamation/Libel Definition: The publication or broadcast of something that injures a person ’ s reputation or lowers someone ’ s esteem in the community…

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ITS BETTER TO BE AN OUTLAW THAN AN IN- LAW. AT LEAST OUTLAWS ARE WANTED. Media Law.
Advertisements

Mass Media Law 18th Edition
Mass Media Law 2009/2010 Don Pember Clay Calvert Chapter 6.
Unprotected Speech: Libel What is libel? Occurs when a published or broadcast statement unjustly exposes someone to hatred, makes that person seem ridiculous,
Case Number 376 U.S. 254 By Jerry Stieg.  Court case involving libel Directly impacted Civil Rights Movement  Spurred by advertisement written in the.
Torts True or False Torts Defined Torts Completion.
Public Communications Law Lecture 4 Slide 1 Slander and Libel Under the common law, there was a major distinction: –Slander was oral defamation. Damages.
Libel and the media Times v. Sullivan ushers in an uncertain new age of press freedom.
TORTS INTENTIONAL AND NEGLIGENT. INTENTIONAL TORTS Intentional torts share the requirement that the defendant desires the result or knows to substantial.
1 Media Law JMC 201 Nov. 13, First Amendment Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise.
Chapter 3 Tort Law.
Libel: Summary Judgment
DEFAMATION LAW IN IRELAND Augustine O Connell MSc (Comp Sc) MBCS.
Times v. Sullivan: The sequels A landmark libel decision leads to years of defining its reach.
2 Crimes & Torts Crimes Intentional Torts
ISP Liability for Defamation and Copyright Violation Richard Warner.
Torts and Cyber Torts Chapter 4.
Original Version: Defamation Defined  A false and unprivileged statement of fact that is harmful to someone's reputation, and published " with fault,"
DEFAMATION. WHAT IS DEFAMATION?  Defamation law exists to protect a person’s reputation, either moral or professional, from unjustified attack.  Libel.
Legal & Ethical Issues Questions to Ask. Libel Every article starts with a piece of information.
What is a public figure? In United States law, public figure is a term applied in the context of defamation actions (libel and slander) as well as invasion.
Defamation of Character Intentional Torts. Defamation Injury to a person’s reputation or good name by either libel or slander Often with high profile.
Defamation and Civil Libel JOUR3060 Communication Law & Regulation.
Chapter 17 Perils of defamation. Introduction – the aims of this lecture are to help you understand: Australian defamation law The three components of.
First Amendment to the Constitution Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging.
Gerri Spinella Ed.D. Elizabeth McDonald Ed.D.
Defamation Elements of a Libel Claim A false statement Of and concerning an identifiable person or entity Defamatory Published to any third party Fault.
Week 10 LWB133 Defamation Establishing the Action 1.Identify the possible defamatory material Defamatory on its natural and ordinary meaning Innocent.
Legal & Ethical Issues in News. Anyone can sue...  Tort -- a wrong other than breach of contract for which an injured party is able to bring a lawsuit.
Teachers and the Law, 8 th Edition © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Teachers and the Law, 8e by David Schimmel, Leslie R. Stellman,
Chapter 2 Ethics in Journalism. The Functions of a Journalist Political– watch over government to see that corruption is not happening Political– watch.
1 st Amendment Presentation By: Group Two. New York Times Company v. Sullivan Final Ruling States: “debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust,
TORTS INTENTIONAL AND NEGLIGENT. The Elements of an Intentional Tort 1. An intentional tort. 2. An injury. 3. Tort was the proximate cause of injury.
Ethics and the Law in Journalism. Key Concepts Understand the ethical principles of journalism Understand libel laws and what defenses journalists have.
Chapter 15.  A false & defamatory attack in written form  On a persons reputation or character  Be careful if ▪ You are negligent in publishing ▪ Uncertainty.
Editing and the law. First Amendment rights provide that people may speak and write free of censorship from the federal government. “Congress shall make.
ETHICAL AND LEGAL RESPONSIBILITIES Scholastic Journalism.
New York Times v. Sullivan The Case: Advertising space was purchased in the New York Times by a coalition of civil rights leaders The advertisement described.
A Free Press A Free People Journalism Seminar Mrs. Demos.
From the Associated Press Stylebook.  At its most basic, libel means injury to reputation. Words, pictures, cartoons, photo captions and headlines can.
Jennifer Koch Civics and Economics Block 2.   Official Name: New York Times Company vs. Sullivan  Case Heard: January of 1964  Case Decided: March.
LS 500 Unit Nine Town Hall Saturday, February 11, 2012 John Gray Welcome! Are there any questions about the material.
Public Communications Law Lecture 5 Slide 1 Actual Malice This Requires: Knowledge of Falsity –This includes knowing that there is no basis for the story.
New York Times v. Sullivan (1963) By: Carmen Vaca.
Freedom of Press. “The press was to serve the governed, not the governors.” – Justice Black (NYTimes vs. U.S.) What does this statement mean?
Libel. Libel and the Court DEFINITION: Written falsehoods that lead to defamation of character (being false AND damaging is key). This is NOT a case of.
Media Law. Media law You are the online editor of your campus newspaper. A person using a pseudonym has posted a message on your website that could be.
Libel Different types, how to avoid it This is how you keep your job.
COMMUNICATION LAW Chapter 20. Communication Law Preview Libel— –Libel is defamation (injury to someone’s reputation) by written words or by communication.
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم. DEFAMATION Defamation according to Somali penal code  Art (Defamation). –  Whoever other than in the cases referred to.
Libel 101 A brief introduction.
A Crash Course in Press Law For the High School Press.
Mario was driving when he carelessly threw a banana out in front of Luigi. Luigi hit the Banana, spun out of control and hit the side wall of the track.
Chapter 14.  A false & defamatory attack in written form  On a persons reputation or character  Be careful if ▪ You are negligent in publishing ▪ Uncertainty.
Harmonizing Constitutional Rules with Common Law Privileges “Fair report” privilege and “fair comment” privilege require a degree of accuracy Qualified.
COURT CASE BRIEFINGS XAVIER CUMMINS MICHAEL VIZZI CHRISTIAN DALUSUNG ALYSSA NEWSOM.
Damage to Reputation: Defamation, slander and libel.
Defamation: Common-Law Defenses and Privileges 1. The Truth Defense 2. Absolute Privileges a. Judicial Proceedings b. Legislative Business c. Executive.
Mass Media Law 17 th Edition Don Pember Clay Calvert Chapter 4.
Defamation: Constitutional. Defamation: The Constitution New York Times v. Sullivan 376 U.S. 254 (1964) Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc. 418 U.S. 323 (1974)
Defamation.
Tort law: Defamation.
Chapter 13 – The Writer & the Law
Legal & Ethical Issues in News
Ethical and Legal Guidelines
Limits to the Freedom of Speech
Ethical and Legal Guidelines
Nuisance – Elements Nuisance is the cause of action you use when someone is interfering with your right to enjoy your property; but trespass is not applicable.
Warm Up Although each person's rights are guaranteed by the Constitution, no one has the right to do anything he or she wants. For example, the Supreme.
Presentation transcript:

Defamation/Libel Definition: The publication or broadcast of something that injures a person ’ s reputation or lowers someone ’ s esteem in the community… and is FALSE.

Character vs. Reputation Character is part of your personality Reputation is what other people think of you

Important fact… In USA: PLAINTIFF BEARS THE BURDEN OF PROOF In most other countries the DEFENDANT BEARS THE BURDEN OF PROOF

ELEMENTS OF LIBEL In USA—these elements must be proved by the plaintiff in order to win a libel case: 1.Identification 2.Defamation 3.Publication 4.Falsehood 5.Fault

ELEMENTS OF LIBEL IDENTIFICATION – Plaintiff must be clearly identified – Group identification?

ELEMENTS OF LIBEL DEFAMATION – Must damage reputation – Must be PROVED to damage reputation – Representative minority in the community believes publication damaged reputation

ELEMENTS OF LIBEL PUBLICATION Writer or producer of the material in question Viewer, listener, witness (need only one) Person who was libeled

ELEMENTS OF LIBEL FALSEHOOD – Must be able to be PROVEN false

ELEMENTS OF LIBEL FAULT FAULT (unique aspect of U.S. libel law) Need to prove either: Actual Malice ~ or ~ Negligence

ELEMENTS OF LIBEL FAULT FAULT (unique aspect of U.S. libel law) Need to prove either: Actual Malice (public person) ~ or ~ Negligence (private person)

Actual Malice …needs to be proven if plaintiff is PUBLIC person knowledge of falsity reckless disregard for the truth

Negligence … is proven if plaintiff is PRIVATE PERSON failure to exercise reasonable care reliance on untrustworthy source not reading or misreading pertinent documents failure to check with obvious source carelessness in editing

NY Times v. Sullivan US Supreme Court Case oZ0 oZ0

NY Times v. Sullivan (1964) Public official standard recognized What was happening at the time? Some factual errors 35 copies in Alabama L.B. Sullivan Police Commissioner of Alabama Advertisement Montgomery County Sheriff urging civil rights demonstrators to disperse in March L. B. Sullivan, plaintiff in a celebrated defamation case, stands hatless to left of horse.

Times-Sullivan Rule “ Prohibits a public official from recovering damages for a defamatory falsehood relating to his official conduct unless s/he proves that the statement was made with actual malice—that is, with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard whether it was false or not. ” ( Justices Black, Douglas and Goldberg wanted ABSOLUTE protection for speech critical of the government )

Rationale for Times/Sullivan ruling Longstanding tradition of robust political discussion Case was the same as seditious libel Brennan “ breathing space ” Government officials should expect criticism

ELEMENTS OF LIBEL FAULT asks… Public official? All-Purpose public figure? Limited-purpose public figure? Private Person?

Public official Elected Persons who have control over government affairs Story related to the job and the fitness of the plaintiff to do the job

All-purpose public figure Movie stars Celebrities Persons who occupy persuasive power

Limited-purpose public figure Votex-public figures (thrust oneself into the votex of an issue) Public controversy BEFORE libel published Plaintiff participated in attempting to resolve the controversy Plaintiff was actively seeking publicity

Private person No public recognition Not seeking publicity

Defamation in cyber space CONTENT PROVIDERS ARE DIVIDED INTO THREE CATEGORIES – Publishers (KNOW content) – Distributors (Not as aware of content) – Common carriers or conduits (Have NO knowledge of content)

Defamation in cyber space – Publishers (KNOW content) Can be held responsible – Distributors (Not as aware of content) Not responsible (section 230 Telecom Act of 1996) – Common carriers or conduits (Have NO knowledge of content) Not responsible

DEFENSES IN LIBEL Proof of TRUTH--FACTS Privileged Statements – Absolute – Qualified requires fairness and accuracy Opinion – rhetorical hyperbole--too absurd to be true – pure opinion (Ollman test) true/false common meaning of the words journalist and social context

DEFENSES IN LIBEL Fair comment and criticism – opinion? – legitimate public interest? – factual basis for the comment?

Common libel danger zones A media outlet can be held libel for reprinting or re-broadcasting comments made by others. – Remaining neutral is NOT sufficient – Obtaining denial from the subject may not be sufficient

Defamation Law in Azerbaijan aijan-defamation-osce.pdf aijan-defamation-osce.pdf Suggestions that the law should be changed… l l

Case studies Super market owner Aydin Nanimanov said yesterday he had paid MP Rovshan Illiad 10,000 manat over five years to ask a series of questions in Parliament relating to planning policy. Angry mother, Sabina Garafanov said yesterday her son, Ashan, eight, had to undergo an emergency operation after a school nurse blundered. She said nurse Jala had not realized Ashan’s leg had been broken when he limped off in a futbal match and sent him back to play on after bandaging his shin.

Case Study: McLibel sheet.html sheet.html

Case Studies USA Ambassador, Matthew Bryza, was see stealing a car near Sahil metro station. Police fraud officers are understood to be investigating a senior council officer employed at the Baku civic centre. The woman, who has not been named, is understood to work in the housing department.