The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals announced
its decision two days after Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner
put his majority stake in the New York-based magazine up for
sale. It is unclear how the decision might affect the sale
process.
By a 3-0 vote, the appeals court said a lower court judge erred
in dismissing the lawsuit by the former members of the Phi Kappa
Psi fraternity at the center of the November 2014 article "A
Rape on Campus," written by Sabrina Rubin Erdely. She and Wenner
Media were also named as defendants
While calling it a "close call," the appeals court said
plaintiffs George Elias IV and Ross Fowler plausibly alleged
that the article was "of and concerning" them, separate from the
fraternity, though it mentioned neither by name.
By a 2-1 vote, the court also endorsed a "small group"
defamation theory offered by Elias, Fowler and a third
plaintiff, Stephen Hadford, who was also not mentioned in the
article, given Phi Kappa Psi's "prominence" on the
Charlottesville, Virginia, campus.
Tuesday's decision was written by Judge Katherine Forrest, who
normally sits on the federal District Court in Manhattan.
The appeals court returned the case to U.S. District Judge Kevin
Castel in Manhattan, who in June 2016 dismissed the lawsuit,
including claims over a podcast by Erdely.
Wenner Media said it was disappointed with the decision, but
"confident that this case has no merit."
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Alan Frank, the plaintiffs' lawyer, did not immediately respond to
requests for comment. The plaintiffs graduated in 2013.
Erdely's article described a September 2012 alleged rape of a
student named Jackie at the Phi Kappa Psi house, and suggested that
gang rapes might have been common there.
The article amplified a national debate over sexual violence on
college campuses, before questions arose over the reporting.
In April 2015, Rolling Stone retracted the article and apologized to
fraternity members, other students and administrators.
The dean of Columbia University's journalism school, Steve Coll,
issued an accompanying report calling the case "a story of
journalistic failure that was avoidable."
In June, Rolling Stone reached a $1.65 million settlement with the
fraternity.
Two months earlier, it reached a settlement with University of
Virginia administrator Nicole Eramo, after a jury awarded her $3
million in damages, a verdict that the university had been
appealing.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by Bill Trott and Leslie
Adler)
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