Judge throws out Palin libel case against New York Times

Judge THROWS OUT Palin libel case against New York Times because her attorneys failed to prove ‘actual malice’

Sarah Palin’s libel case against The New York Times will be dismissed after the jury determines a verdict on Monday afternoonUS District Court Judge Jed Rakoff made the ruling as the jury deliberated whether the Times defamed her by linking her to a 2011 shooting spree in Arizona He said she hasn’t proven The New York Times had actual malice against her, stating on Monday: ‘I think that there is one essential element that plaintiff has not carried its burden with—the portion of actual malice’ Palin sued the newspaper for a 2017 editorial for incorrectly linking her to a mass shooting six years earlier that wounded Congresswoman Gabby Gilfords Palin had said that if she lost at trial, her appeal might challenge New York Times v. Sullivan’s decision that established the ‘actual malice’ for public figures  

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A New York judge has tossed Sarah Palin’s libel lawsuit against The New York Times because her lawyers failed to produce evidence the newspaper had actual malice against her.  

US District Court Judge Jed Rakoff made the ruling on Monday afternoon as the jury deliberated whether the Times defamed her by linking her to a 2011 shooting spree in Arizona.  

Rakoff said he will order the dismissal of Palin’s lawsuit, but enter his order after her jury finishes its own deliberations. He added that he expected Palin to appeal, and that the appeals court ‘would greatly benefit from knowing how the jury would decide it.’

Rakoff’s unusual order effectively preempted a potential jury verdict to the contrary.

Palin had sued the newspaper and its former editorial page editor James Bennet, arguing that a 2017 editorial incorrectly linked her to a mass shooting six years earlier that wounded Democratic US Congresswoman Gabby Giffords.

She claimed the newspaper had damaged her career as a political commentator and consultant with the editorial about gun control published after US Representative Steve Scalise, a Louisiana Republican, was wounded when a man with a history of anti-GOP activity opened fire on a Congressional baseball team practice in Washington.

In the editorial, The Times wrote that before the 2011 mass shooting in Arizona that severely wounded Giffords and killed six others, Palin’s political action committee had contributed to an atmosphere of violence by circulating a map of electoral districts that put Giffords and 19 other Democrats under stylized crosshairs.

The Times acknowledged that the editorial wrongly described both the map, and any link to the shooting, but said the mistake wasn’t intentional. 

DailyMail.com has contacted Palin’s lawyer for a comment.  

A New York judge has tossed Sarah Palin’s libel lawsuit against The New York Times because her lawyers failed to produce evidence of the newspaper had actual malice against her. Pictured: Palin arrives at court on Monday as the jury deliberated  

Palin was seen walking into court on Monday ahead of the judge saying he would throw out her case 

Palin looked glamorous in bold red earrings and an almost all-black outfit, outfitted with a white shirt and a pink bag on Monday

Court sketch shows a moody looking Palin sitting in court wearing a mask and looking at James Bennett, former editorial page editor of The New York Times, being embraced by his lawyers 

Judge throws out Palin NYT lawsuit – but concedes an appeal is likely 

A federal judge will dismiss the defamation lawsuit former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin brought against the New York Times after she and her legal team allegedly failed to prove the newspaper acted with ‘actual malice’. 

US District Court Judge Jed Rakoff, who made the ruling in his Manhattan courtroom on Monday, argued the case did not meet the ‘very high standard’ the law sets for malice.

He used his prerogative to toss the case after saying that the burden of proof had not been met in the former VP candidate’s case against the Times.  

In simple terms, he said Palin’s team hadn’t been able to prove that the New York Times error was a malicious error, rather than an honest mistake. 

The case is currently being decided by jurors, and hasn’t been formally dismissed. Even if they return a verdict against the Times, no conviction will stand. 

But Rakoff concedes an appeal is likely, and says he wants jurors to complete their deliberations so that judges asked to try the appeal have a wealth of information with which to make their decision. 

He cited a 1964 Supreme Court case – New York Times Co. v. Sullivan – which set a precedent to shield journalists from liability over ‘honest mistakes’ made when covering public officials. 

The 1964 case, which involved the same newspaper, established that the so-called actual malice standard means reporters can only be held liable for defamation if they knew the statement or information was false when they published it or if they had a ‘reckless disregard’ for its falsity.

Rakoff argued Palin and her attorneys did not provide enough evidence to prove that former New York Times editorial page editor James Bennet knew the statement was false or that he deliberately avoided learning the truth.

The judge said ‘sloppy, irresponsible or negligent reporting’ is not enough to prove actual malice. 

‘My job is to apply the law. The law here sets a very high standard for actual malice and in this case the court finds that standard has not been met,’ Rakoff told the courthouse, according to Buzzfeed News.

‘The standard is very high and the same standard applies here.’  

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It is rare for a major media outlet to defend its editorial practices in court, as the Times had to do in this case.

Palin had said that if she lost at trial, her appeal might challenge New York Times v. Sullivan, the 1964 US Supreme Court decision establishing the ‘actual malice’ standard for public figures to prove defamation.

The judge said she did not prove ‘actual malice.’ 

‘I think that there is one essential element that plaintiff has not carried its burden with—the portion of actual malice relating to belief in falsity or reckless disregard in falsity,’ he said on Monday. 

‘My job is to decide the law,’ he continued. ‘The law sets a very high standard, the court finds that that standard has not been met.’ 

He argued that the case regarded negligent journalism, not knowingly writing falsehoods to degrade a public figure, according to the Washington Post’s Erik Wemple

The lawsuit at the center of the case concerned a June 14, 2017, editorial headlined ‘America’s Lethal Politics,’ that addressed gun control and lamented the rise of incendiary political rhetoric.

It was written the same day as a shooting at a congressional baseball practice in Alexandria, Virginia, where Scalise was wounded.

One of Bennet’s colleagues prepared a draft that referred to the January 2011 shooting in a Tucson, Arizona, parking lot where six people were killed and Giffords was wounded.

Bennet inserted language that said ‘the link to political incitement was clear’ between the Giffords shooting and a map previously circulated by Palin’s political action committee that the draft editorial said put Giffords and 19 other Democrats under crosshairs. 

Times attorney David Axelrod asked Palin at her trial on February 9 about a map put out by her PAC, SarahPac, in 2010, that put crosshairs on the congressional districts for Democrats she wanted to unseat.  

Palin initially called the gun symbols an ’emoji’ but admitted that a ‘reasonable person’ could interpret them as a rifle sight. 

Axelrod asked Palin about a tweet she sent in March 2010 urging her supporters: ‘Don’t retreat, reload’.

He asked: ‘Reload is a word that’s often used in connection with firearms.’

Palin responded: ‘It’s a word I have used all my life.’

Palin sued The New York Times and James Bennett (pictured in January), who was the editorial page editor at the time 

Court sketches show Bennett being embraced by his lawyers as Palin looks on in the background 

In her earlier testimony Palin claimed that the Tweet she sent in March 2010 telling her supporters ‘don’t retreat, reload’ was not about guns – but intended as a motivational speech.

She said: ‘My dad was a coach for years. It was a motivational saying, one of a few.

‘It meant don’t back down. My parents were marathon runners and they’d use it (the saying) for themselves.

‘Don’t back down, buck up, refuel, get back out there and try harder. We were all obsessed with sports so things like this were commonplace.’

Axelrod asked if she put this tweet out even though she was already being criticized for the crosshairs map, and she confirmed her PAC did.

Before the jury came in, Axelrod referred to the Tweet as he told the judge: ‘The evidence will show that Miss Palin likes to make provocative statements she knows are going to lead to criticism. 

‘The one who makes provocative comments like this don’t retreat, reload in the face of criticism about using violent gun imagery has a hard time proving she has sustained emotional damage when the criticism comes back’.

This map by Palin’s PAC came out months before the 2011 shooting that killed six and injured Representative Gabby Giffords. It was used in a 2017 NYTimes editorial to link Palin to the shooting. Palin is now suing the publication for defamation over the article 

Considering the issue, Judge Rakoff said that Axelrod had a right to ask on cross examination: ‘What are you talking about?’

Judge Rakoff continued, suggesting Axelrod’s possible line of questioning to Palin: ‘You love this kind of language, you love the heat of political turmoil, you relish your opponents making statements so you can say: ‘Look at what jerks they are?’

Axelrod said that Palin was a ‘public figure’ who ‘uses hyperbole’ and did so as well after 2010.

Under cross examination Palin admitted that she didn’t seek help from a doctor for the emotional distress she claims to have suffered as a result of the Times article.

Asked by Axelrod if she got any kind of counseling, Palin replied: ‘No, I holistically remedy issues that are caused by stress. Running, hot yoga, and other healthy things’.

Palin maintained that the effect of the article on her wellbeing was ‘quite impactful’ but she didn’t speak to a therapist because she has ‘never operated like that.’

She said; ‘I have a women’s prayer group and we prayed about it.’

Palin testified that the NYTimes article left her feeling ‘powerless’ and ‘devastated.’

Palin’s lawyer Kenneth Turkel asked how she felt ’emotionally’ after the article came out in 2017 and Palin said she felt ‘mortified’.

Wearing a white blazer, black top, black pants and black stiletto, Palin said: ‘Well, I was devastated to read again false allegations I had anything to do with murder. Murder of innocent people. I felt powerless. I knew I wanted to respond and get the word out against these untruths.’

She spoke with a clear confident voice as she said earlier this month, ‘Once again I was up against Goliath – I was David.’

Court drawings from last week show the title of The New York Times’ June 14, 2017, editorial headlined ‘America’s Lethal Politics,’ which she is suing over as it wrongfully connected her to murder 

Palin said it was hard to ‘figure out what were the stones’ she could throw at the Goliath, meaning the Times.

Palin said that the Times was an organization that ‘buys ink by the barrel’ and she ‘had my No.2 pencil on my kitchen table in Alaska.’

Turkel asked how the Times article affected Palin and in particular, her sleep.

She said: ‘It’s hard to lay your head on a pillow and have a restful night’s sleep when you know that lies are being told about you, specifically a lie that’s not going to be fixed.

‘That caused some stress…it was tough to get a good night’s sleep.’

On the stand, Palin revealed that when she heard about the shooting of former Representative Gabby Giffords in 2011, she suffered death threats against her family because her critics thought she was responsible somehow. 

Palin said she wanted to correct ‘negative comments, a lot of false accusations and lies that I had somehow incited the murders of innocent people.’

She claimed that the ‘media was politicizing the deaths of a nine-year-old girl,’ referring to Christina-Taylor Green, the youngest victim.

She also got ‘disturbing’ death threats that ‘ramped up’ including against her own daughter Kimberly, who was around the same age as Green.

Palin said: ‘They were wishing the same thing happened to Piper as happened to Christina.’

Reeling off the names of those injured or killed, Palin said that they had been ‘impacted by this horrible, horrible tragedy.’

She said: ‘I felt for them and I wanted to get the message out…at the same time I wanted to respect the fact that they were grieving families who deserved comfort and the last thing politics provides is comfort.’ 

Describing her reaction to first hearing about the Times’ editorial in 2017, Palin said that in 2011, she was ‘inundated’ with comments from people.

She said she was appalled that ‘The New York Times had lied again.’

Judge Jed Rakoff asked Palin what she meant and she said: ‘They lied before. The New York Times took a lot of liberties and wasn’t always truthful. That’s what I meant by again’.

Palin added she could not point to a specific article which showed the Times had lied about her before.

She said: ‘I remember immediately thinking: ‘Oh no. First realizing how significant and horrible this incident was and mortified again that there would be linkage,’ referring to the idea she had a role in the shooting.

Palin said that in 2017 she did not have her Political Action Committee to support her, nor did she have any TV contracts.

Palin described the New York Times as the ‘be all and end all, the loud voice in the media’ and felt like they were ‘scoring political points’ by claiming she incited violence.

Asked by Turkel if the Times ever reached out to her before publication, Palin scoffed: ‘No.’

Palin said she did read the two corrections the Times published but none mentioned her by name.

This made it feel like they were trying to ‘double down’ on their allegations.

James Bennet, a former Times editorial page editor, testified on February 9 that changes he made to a draft of the editorial, which the Times later corrected, were not meant to hold Palin or her political action committee responsible for the 2011 shooting.

‘Did you intend to cause Ms. Palin any harm through any of your edits to the draft?’ the Times’ lawyer David Axelrod asked Bennet during the trial’s fifth day in Manhattan federal court.

‘No, I didn’t,’ Bennet responded.

Sarah Palin arrived at Manhattan court holding hands with Ron Duguay, her ex NHL player beau, for a second time on February 10

Palin and Duguay have yet to confirm their romance with her new beau stating that it is a ‘young friendship’ 

Palin and Duguay were seen on February 11 dining out at a swanky Gelso and Grand restaurant in Little Italy 

Bennet also said ‘no’ when asked if he tried to blame Palin or the political action committee. Bennet said he moved quickly to correct the editorial as criticism mounted that its wording suggested they were to blame.

‘We don’t promise to be perfect, we promise to try our damnedest to be perfect, and when we’re not we try to fix it,’ Bennet testified.

Bennet maintained that he added the language while under deadline pressure, thinking that the growth of ‘highly charged political rhetoric’ could prompt such incidents.

Bennet denied adding the language in order to suggest Loughner used the cross hairs map.

‘If I thought it caused the violence, I would have used the word ’cause,” Bennet said.

Bennet said he was ‘alarmed’ when conservative Times columnist Ross Douthat emailed less than an hour after the editorial ran that it appeared to incorrectly link Palin to the Giffords shooting. Some readers also complained.

‘We were really, really harshly criticized for muddying the record,’ Bennet said, ‘I thought it was urgent to correct the piece as forthrightly as possible, to acknowledge our mistake. This is basic practice. It’s the right thing to do.’

The trial is a test of longstanding legal protections for US media against defamation claims by public figures.

To win, Palin must prove that Bennet and the Times acted with ‘actual malice,’ meaning they knew the editorial was false or had reckless disregard for the truth.

Lawyers for Palin have tried to show that the correction was too slow, and noted several times that it did not mention her.

Palin’s lawyer Shane Vogt questioned Bennet about why the correction omitted his role in crafting the editorial. 

‘It was something that was being discussed a lot online,’ he said. ‘If there was a correction that needed to be made, the sooner the better.’  

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