Sarah Palin's positive COVID test delays NY Times defamation trial
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[January 25, 2022]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Sarah Palin, the 2008
Republican U.S. vice presidential candidate and former Alaska governor,
has tested positive for the coronavirus, forcing a U.S. judge on Monday
to delay her defamation trial against The New York Times.
Jury selection and opening statements had been expected to begin on
Monday, but were pushed back 10 days to Feb. 3 after test results for
the 57-year-old Palin became known. Palin had been expected to testify
in person as soon as Tuesday.
"She is of course unvaccinated," U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff in
Manhattan said at a hearing. "Since she has apparently tested positive
three times, I'm going to assume that she's positive."
Lawyers for Palin did not immediately respond to requests for comment,
but said she wanted to attend the trial.
Palin, who tested positive https://people.com/politics/sarah-palin-tests-positive-coronavirus-urges-others-wear-masks
for COVID-19 last March, has objected to mandatory vaccinations.
"It will be over my dead body that I'll have to get a shot," the mother
of five told a conservative conference last month, drawing applause. "I
won't do it, and they better not touch my kids either." She called the
top U.S. infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci "the biggest shyster
out there."
C-Span posted a video of Palin's comments.
Palin is seeking unspecified damages from the Times and its former
editorial page editor James Bennet.
She accused them of damaging her reputation in a June 14, 2017,
editorial linking her to a 2011 mass shooting in Arizona that killed six
people and wounded U.S. Representative Gabby Giffords.
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Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin speaks at a rally endorsing U.S.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump for President at Iowa
State University in Ames, Iowa January 19, 2016. REUTERS/Mark
Kauzlarich/File Photo
The editorial, headlined "America's
Lethal Politics," was published after a shooting at a baseball
practice in Alexandria, Virginia where U.S. Representative Steve
Scalise, a top Republican from Louisiana, was wounded.
It said "the link to political incitement was clear" between the
2011 shooting and a map circulated by Palin's political action
committee putting 20 Democrats including Giffords under "stylized
cross hairs."
The Times quickly corrected the editorial, saying it wrongly stated
that political rhetoric and the 2011 shooting were linked, but Palin
said the disputed material fit Bennet's "preconceived narrative"
against supporters of gun rights.
Palin has signaled that if she lost, she would challenge a 1964 U.S.
Supreme Court precedent that made it difficult for public figures to
win libel lawsuits, by requiring that they show defendants acted
with "actual malice."
Rakoff said Palin will be allowed in the courthouse on Feb. 3
"provided that she is asymptomatic," and if she still had symptoms
would need to be assessed first by an in-house doctor.
He also said no juror has contracted COVID-19 during the more than
100 trials held in the Manhattan courthouse since the pandemic
began.
"I think that chances are reasonably good that we will start on Feb.
3," Rakoff said. "Ms. Palin's health comes first, and the health of
the rest of the courthouse is equally important."
A trial is expected to last five days.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by
Luc Cohen and Helen Coster; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Alistair
Bell)
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