Attorneys
for Glenn Beck ask judge to toss suit tied to Boston bombing
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[August 12, 2014]
By Scott Malone
BOSTON (Reuters) - Attorneys for
U.S. television commentator Glenn Beck on Monday asked a judge to
dismiss a lawsuit charging their client with defamation for wrongly
accusing a victim of the Boston Marathon bombing of being the "money
man" behind the attack.
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The plaintiff, Saudi Arabian national Abdulrahman Alharbi,
21, had been present at the race's crowded finish line on April
15, 2013, when two homemade pressure-cooker bombs ripped through
the crowd and was injured.
He was briefly investigated by federal authorities who concluded
within days that he played no role in the largest mass-casualty
attack on U.S. soil since Sept. 11, 2001. Federal prosecutors
now contend that a pair of ethnic Chechen brothers, Dzhokhar and
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, carried out the bombing.
Attorneys for Beck and his media company, The Blaze Inc, argued
that by granting interviews to media outlets after being cleared
of suspicion by federal officials, Alharbi made himself a
"limited purpose public figure" subject to higher levels of
scrutiny than a private citizen.
"The fact that Mr. Alharbi said what he said and availed himself
of the opportunity to inject himself into this controversy in an
attempt to shape the debate is not a fact that can be denied,"
attorney Michael Grygiel said during a hearing at U.S. District
Court in Boston.
Alharbi's attorney, Peter Haley, said that Beck showed malice by
continuing to claim the Saudi exchange student was responsible
for the attacks even after he was cleared.
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"All of the statements that we're focused on come after the
point of exoneration," Haley said. "They're statements Mr. Beck
has reason to know are false ... he continues to make them with
reckless disregard to truth or falsity."
Chief Judge Patti Saris said she would consider the request but
noted, "I'd be surprised if I resolved this in a motion to
dismiss."
Neither Beck nor Alharbi attended Monday's hearing.
The lawsuit seeks unspecified financial damages.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev died following a gun battle with police three
days after the bombing that killed three people and injured more
than 260. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was captured on the evening of April
19, 2013, hiding in a boat in someone's back yard.
He is awaiting trial and faces the threat of execution if found
guilty of carrying out the attack.
(Editing by Eric Walsh)
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