Patrick Reed sues Golf Channel, Brandel Chamblee for defamation
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[August 17, 2022] Patrick
Reed is the latest member of LIV Golf to turn from the course to the
courts, as the former Masters champion filed a defamation lawsuit
against Golf Channel and commentator Brandel Chamblee on Tuesday.
The claim central to Reed's complaint is that Chamblee and Golf
Channel conspired with the PGA Tour and commissioner Jay Monahan to
defame Reed "since he was 23 years old" -- nine years ago.
Reed's allegations include "misreporting information with falsity
and/or reckless disregard of the truth, that is with actual and
constitutional malice, purposely omitting pertinent key material
facts to mislead the public, and actively targeting (Reed) to
destroy his reputation, create hate, and a hostile work environment
for him."
In January 2020, Reed's lawyer sent Chamblee a cease-and-desist
letter demanding he not repeat accusations that Reed cheated during
a tournament. Reed was penalized two strokes at the Hero World
Challenge in 2019 for improving his lie in a bunker, but he claimed
he didn't intend to do so.
Chamblee continued to take Reed to task over the years, not only for
cheating allegations but also for his decision to defect from the
PGA Tour to LIV Golf earlier this year.
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Reed maintains that Chamblee's opinions have led to
fans heckling him and calling him a cheater at tournaments.
Though a nine-time winner on the PGA Tour, Reed apparently felt
Monahan and the tour were after him.
According to the lawsuit, "Despite his exceptional world-class
golfing achievements, in June of 2022, Mr. Reed was constructively
terminated as a member of the PGA Tour, as a result of threats made
and action taken by it's (sic) Commissioner Jay Monahan and his PGA
Tour, and signed with LIV Golf."
The PGA Tour indefinitely suspended its members who played in the
first LIV event in June without the tour's consent. Reed did not
join LIV until the second event of their eight-tournament schedule
in North Plains, Ore., last month. He was suspended as a result.
Reed's complaint was filed before the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of Texas in his hometown of Houston.
--Field Level Media
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