Judge questions Fox News bid to shake $2.7 billion Smartmatic election
suit
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[August 18, 2021]
By Jan Wolfe
(Reuters) - A New York state judge on
Tuesday signaled skepticism toward Fox Corp's bid to dismiss
Smartmatic's $2.7 billion lawsuit that accused Fox News hosts and guests
of making defamatory claims about the voting technology firm during the
network's coverage of the 2020 U.S. presidential election.
During an oral argument held virtually, Judge David Cohen made comments
sympathetic toward Smartmatic, which in February sued Fox and two
of Donald Trump's former lawyers, Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani, after
the attorneys falsely accused it of rigging votes against the former
president. Smartmatic is a London-headquartered company with a U.S. unit
based in Florida.
Cohen did not say when he would rule on Fox's motion to dismiss
the case.
The judge questioned whether there was any basis whatsoever for claims
Powell and Giuliani made about Smartmatic during appearances on Fox News
and Fox Business, like that the company was banned in Texas.
"How is that not defamatory?," the judge asked. "Did any evidence ever
come to light that Smartmatic was banned in Texas?"
Cohen also asked whether former Fox Business host Lou Dobbs ever
attempted to ascertain proof of this claim.
Paul Clement, a lawyer representing Fox Corp, responded that those
allegations were made during an interview Dobbs conducted with Giuliani,
and that Fox News had a right under the U.S. Constitution's protection
for press freedom to report on newsworthy claims made by Trump's
lawyers.
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Voters wait in line for hours, including some who received
sandwiches from volunteers in Brooklyn, to cast their ballots during
early voting in the Brooklyn borough of New York City, New York,
U.S., October 27, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo
The judge noted that experts have rejected the
conspiracy theory that the election was hacked, adding that even Fox
News host Tucker Carlson had blasted Powell for failing to back the
theory with evidence.
Cohen asked whether that should have made Fox News reconsider the
accuracy of its reporting. Clement said that Fox was merely
reporting on newsworthy claims made by Trump's legal teams, not
endorsing the theories.
Smartmatic's technology was used in only one jurisdiction in the
Nov. 3 election: Los Angeles County, where Trump lost to President
Joe Biden.
Fox News, Giuliani and Powell were separately sued in March for
defamation by another voting software company , Dominion Voting
Systems. Last week, a judge denied a bid by Powell and Giuliani to
dismiss the claims against them in that case. A judge has not yet
ruled on a request by Fox to dismiss Dominion's claims against the
network.
Trump has made false claims that the election was stolen from him
through widespread voting fraud.
(Reporting by Jan Wolfe in Washington; additional reporting by Helen
Coster; editing by Noeleen Walder, Will Dunham and Jonathan Oatis)
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