Sarah Palin seeks new trial, judge's disqualification in NY Times case
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[March 01, 2022]
By Luc Cohen
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Former U.S. vice
presidential candidate Sarah Palin asked a U.S. court on Monday for a
new trial after losing her defamation case against the New York Times
earlier this month, and requested that the judge overseeing the case be
disqualified.
Palin's attorneys said last week they would take those steps because
several jurors received push notifications on their cellphones before
deliberations were over about U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff's decision
to dismiss the case regardless of their verdict.
The jury rejected the Republican former Alaska governor's argument that
the newspaper and former editorial page editor defamed her in a June
2017 editorial that incorrectly linked her to a mass shooting in 2011
where six people died and then-congresswoman Gabby Giffords was
seriously wounded. The article was corrected the next day.
Rakoff said jurors assured his clerk that the notifications did not
affect their deliberations, which lasted about two days. He said at a
Feb. 23 hearing that he would issue a written opinion by March 1
explaining why he dismissed Palin's case while jurors were deliberating.
A day before the Feb. 15 verdict, Rakoff said he would dismiss the case
because Palin had not showed the Times acted with "actual malice."
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Sarah Palin, 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate and former
Alaska governor, exits the court during her defamation lawsuit
against the New York Times, at the United States Courthouse in the
Manhattan borough of New York City, U.S., February 15, 2022.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
Palin's case is considered a test of a landmark
1964 U.S. Supreme Court decision, New York Times v. Sullivan, that
established an "actual malice" standard for public figures to prove
defamation.
Palin, a prominent conservative, was the late Senator John McCain's
running mate in the 2008 presidential election and served as
Alaska's governor from 2006 to 2009.
She said during the trial the Times editorial left her feeling
"powerless" and "mortified," but did not offer specific examples
about how it hurt her reputation or caused her harm.
Rakoff told the jury about his planned dismissal only after they
had finished deliberations.
"We reached the same bottom line, but on different grounds," he
told jurors. "You decided the facts. I decided the law."
U.S. judges often instruct jurors in high-profile cases not to read
news coverage of their trials to avoid exposure to information that
could bias them. Experts said a judge would have to find that the
push notifications biased the jury before overturning a verdict on
that basis.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Cynthia Osterman
and Noeleen Walder)
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