Tag: Dominion

  • Why Fox News had to settle the Dominion suit

    Why Fox News had to settle the Dominion suit

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    Dominion had alleged that the network defamed the election technology company in the wake of the 2020 election, focusing on a series of segments in which Fox hosts allowed lawyers affiliated with Donald Trump to falsely claim that the company had rigged the election against the former president. After two years of pretrial litigation, the network found itself struggling to defend itself: A recent decision by presiding judge Eric M. Davis substantially bolstered Dominion’s position heading into trial by concluding that the evidence from pretrial discovery had already established that several key issues — including whether the claims at issue were actually false — were indisputable at trial. The ruling was a major win for Dominion and a major loss for Fox, which no doubt helps to explain today’s settlement.

    Before the settlement was announced, there were some unexpected antics that appeared to provide even more reason to think that Fox was in for a very rough ride if the case had gone forward. Caley Cronin, a spokesperson for Fox News, was thrown out of the Wilmington, Del. courtroom after she violated a court order that prohibited taking photographs in the courtroom. It was just the latest embarrassing incident in which representatives for the network had antagonized the judge, who had otherwise drawn praise from observers for his steady hand and even temperament presiding over the case.

    The trial was expected to focus on whether Fox News or Fox Corporation acted with “actual malice” in disseminating the false claims against Dominion. Under Supreme Court precedent, this would have required Dominion to show that individuals responsible for broadcasting the segments either knew that they were false or acted with “reckless disregard” as to the falsity of the claims.

    This has traditionally been a very difficult standard for defamation plaintiffs to satisfy, since First Amendment law generally provides wide latitude to media organizations engaged in traditional newsgathering, but legal analysts broadly agreed that Dominion had put together an unusually compelling case on this point. In particular, the company’s lawyers amassed internal communications among Fox executives, hosts, and employees with editorial responsibilities in which they appeared to acknowledge in real time and to varying degrees that the claims aired against Dominion were false. Those communications involved some of the most prominent people at the network, including Rupert Murdoch himself and primetime hosts Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham. The prospect of these people taking the witness stand and having to explain them away could not have been appealing for Fox.

    One reason that Dominion succeeded in getting this far while other defamation plaintiffs have not is that the underlying false claims made against the company were unusually ridiculous — like the assertion that former Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez had played a key role in creating the company, or that Dominion had a secret algorithm that allowed it to switch votes from Trump to Joe Biden. The company’s lawyers also appeared to have succeeded in casting a wide net in the course of discovery, which allowed them to obtain the internal communications that became central to the case. Murdoch, for instance, at one point watched the infamous press conference hosted by Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell in November 2020 in which they peddled similar falsehoods. The network’s owner wrote, “Really crazy stuff. And damaging.” There were plenty more of these colorful and embarrassing exchanges among the network’s boldface names.

    In recent months, Fox had insisted that a victory for Dominion would pose a broader threat to media protections in this country, but it is not clear whether or to what extent this is correct. The reason is that, despite hundreds of pages of pretrial filings, Fox never managed to identify a single instance of legitimate newsgathering that would have been credibly endangered in the future if Dominion prevailed, as the company has now done. And, of course, the backdrop here is that Fox’s business model has for years drawn intense criticism from media analysts who have argued that the network routinely crosses the boundaries of responsible reporting by pandering to its mostly conservative audience and elevating dubious but politically convenient claims.

    The settlement appears to have less to do with other media outlets than it does with the particularly outrageous facts and circumstances surrounding the conduct of Fox, its executives, and employees toward Dominion. This was a stunning case of media malpractice, and Fox is now paying for it.

    This article first appeared in an edition of The Nightly newsletter.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • In Dominion v. Fox News, a legal test with echoes of Watergate

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    Dominion, which makes voting machines, is accusing the conservative network of knowingly spreading disinformation about its products in the days after the 2020 election to appease an audience hungry for conspiracy theories. It was a craven bid for profit, Dominion says, and the myth it fueled ultimately led to the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

    That Fox’s allegations about Dominion were dead false has already been decided — they were, according to Judge Eric Davis, who is presiding over the case in Delaware Superior Court. What Dominion must prove now is a tougher legal challenge. The company will put Fox’s key decision-makers on the stand and ask 12 jurors to assess their state of mind in November and December 2020.

    “It isn’t enough to show that Fox made a conscious decision to amplify election denialism generally in its coverage,” said RonNell Andersen Jones, a former newspaper reporter who is now a First Amendment expert at the University of Utah. “Dominion has to show that the people who were responsible for creating (or platforming) the false statements about Dominion had knowledge that those statements were false. It’s about connecting the dots.”

    After the 2020 election, Dominion’s suit contents, Fox News viewers were abandoning it for fringe outlets like Newsmax that were willing to indulge the most dangerous and deluded claims about why Donald Trump lost. Initially, Fox had actually stood out from the MAGA pack by suggesting the incumbent president was doomed when its Decision Desk called Arizona for Joe Biden. But the network soon changed course, the lawsuit says, embracing falsehoods about Dominion that left the company’s brand in tatters and its employees fearing for their lives.

    Payoffs to Georgia officials. Corporate ties to the Hugo Chavez regime. Shady remote operators switching votes to push Biden over the top.

    It is “CRYSTAL clear” that those allegations were false, Davis declared in a pre-trial ruling last month. So the jury won’t decide that question. But that’s far from the end of the case.

    Libel suits are notoriously difficult to win in the United States, thanks to the New York Times v. Sullivan decision of 1964, in which the Supreme Court ruled that it wasn’t enough for a public figure — in this case, Dominion — to show a news organization published something false about them to win a defamation case. Instead, accusers have to show “actual malice”: a legal term meaning that the outlet either knowingly published a falsehood or published one with reckless disregard for the truth. It’s an inherently subjective question that focuses on what the publisher actually believed.

    What’s remarkable about the Dominion case is that, thanks to incredibly juicy pre-trial discovery unearthing caches of messages among Fox employees, it’s already fairly clear that many of them at the very least had their doubts about what their network was peddling.

    There were Tucker Carlson’s candid characterizations of “Stop the Steal” attorney-in-chief Sidney Powell, whom he labeled a liar — an “unguided missile” who was “dangerous as hell” and even tantamount to “poison.”

    There was a Lou Dobbs Tonight producer who, in January 2021, called Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani “so full of shit” — weeks after Laura Ingraham suggested the ex-NYC mayor was “such an idiot” and Sean Hannity labeled him “an insane person.”

    And there was a senior vice president of programming for Fox Business, the network that aired Dobbs’ adamantly anti-Dominion show, referring to Stop the Steal cheerleader and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell as being “on the crazy train with no brakes.”

    And much more. As far as defamation plaintiffs’ attorneys are concerned, this is the stuff dreams are made of.

    “It’s hard to get evidence to prove that someone in the media knew something was false. What’s so unusual in this case is that there’s all this evidence,” said Noah Feldman, a Harvard legal historian.

    In a statement, a Fox spokesperson said, “Dominion’s lawsuit is a political crusade in search of a financial windfall, but the real cost would be cherished First Amendment rights. While Dominion has pushed irrelevant and misleading information to generate headlines, FOX News remains steadfast in protecting the rights of a free press, given a verdict for Dominion and its private equity owners would have grave consequences for the entire journalism profession.”

    Reports of a possible last-minute settlement emerged around the same time that Davis announced a 24-hour delay in the trial late Sunday, pushing the end of jury selection into Tuesday morning. (Opening arguments are expected shortly after the jury is seated.) Among the outlets dangling an 11th-hour resolution was the Wall Street Journal, a crown jewel in Fox News owner Rupert Murdoch’s media empire. Murdoch himself may be called to testify in the trial.

    To Andersen Jones, the Utah law professor — who remarked that “this whole litigation is one really interesting season of Succession”the late settlement scramble was not exactly shocking.

    But, she said, Dominion has “made clear that a piece of its litigation goal is public-facing: that it wants Fox to be required to have public accountability for leaning into election denialism.” A trial is probably the best way to make that happen.

    In other words, unlike Nixon, who was able to avoid a House impeachment and a Senate trial by resigning, Fox may have just missed out on its last chance to steer out of the courtroom.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Judge sends Dominion lawsuit against Fox News to trial

    Judge sends Dominion lawsuit against Fox News to trial

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    Some uncertainty remained about who at Fox authorized specific broadcasts and what those people knew or believed at the time, Davis continued.

    “The Court does not weigh the evidence to determine who may have been responsible for publication and if such people acted with actual malice – these are genuine issues of material fact and therefore must be determined by a jury,” the judge wrote in his 81-page ruling.

    Fox reacted to the ruling by insisting that the company is standing up for free-speech principles.

    “This case is and always has been about the First Amendment protections of the media’s absolute right to cover the news. Fox will continue to fiercely advocate for the rights of free speech and a free press as we move into the next phase of these proceedings,” the company said.

    A spokesperson for Dominion welcomed Davis’ ruling. “We are gratified by the Court’s thorough ruling soundly rejecting all of Fox’s arguments and defenses, and finding as a matter of law that their statements about Dominion are false. We look forward to going to trial,” the firm said.

    Davis has set jury selection for April 13 and the trial to begin in April 17 in Delaware Superior Court in Wilmington, assuming that the sides don’t reach a financial settlement in the meantime.

    The trial is expected to feature testimony from top Fox personalities including Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham and others. The pre-trial litigation has already uncovered documents showing that the hosts and anchors did not believe many of the charges being leveled on their programs and that, in the wake of President Donald Trump’s loss in the 2020 race, the company was desperately looking for ways to keep its Trump-supporting viewers from defecting to rivals like Newsmax and One America News.

    Dominion filed the suit in 2021, contending that Fox gravely damaged the voting company’s reputation by repeatedly airing false charges about it even after being given details about the misstatements.

    In recent court filings, Fox’s attorneys argued that the network wasn’t endorsing the claims leveled by Trump and allies like Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, but was simply conveying newsworthy statements being issued by important public figures. The judge rejected those arguments.

    “Fox dedicates little to its argument on falsity. It claims that ‘[t]he question is whether the press reported the “true” fact that the President made those allegations,’” Davis wrote. “However, falsity refers to the content of the statement, not the act of republishing it. Therefore, the question of falsity is whether the content of the allegations was true, not whether Fox truthfully republished the allegations.”

    Davis also said Fox’s reports and interviews often aired the claims without rebuttal or context, further undercutting the network’s arguments.

    “The evidence does not support that FNN conducted good-faith, disinterested reporting….FNN’s failure to reveal extensive contradicting evidence from the public sphere and Dominion itself indicates its reporting was not disinterested,” the judge wrote.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )