Fox News appeals defamation ruling over election claims, countersues
Smartmatic
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[March 18, 2022]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Fox News on Thursday
appealed a judge's decision to let voting systems company Smartmatic
pursue a $2.7 billion defamation lawsuit alleging that the network
falsely accused it of rigging the 2020 U.S. presidential election
against incumbent Donald Trump.
The network, part of Rupert Murdoch's Fox Corp, also countersued
Smartmatic to recoup legal costs, saying the lawsuit was designed to
stifle its constitutionally protected right to inform viewers about
newsworthy events.
Thursday's filing came nine days after Justice David Cohen of the New
York State Supreme Court in Manhattan found a "substantial basis" to
suggest that the network "turned a blind eye to a litany of outrageous
claims" about Smartmatic, evincing a "reckless disregard" for the truth.
"It is ironic that Fox claims that Smartmatic's lawsuit is without
basis" after that decision, Smartmatic's lawyer J. Erik Connolly said in
an email. He said courts around the country reviewing similar claims
"are saying something very different."
Smartmatic accused Fox News and several on-air personalities in its
February 2021 lawsuit of decimating its business with a bogus narrative
that its election software helped Democrat Joe Biden steal the 2020
election from Trump, a Republican.
The Florida-based company said Fox News did this to cater to Trump
supporters, boost ratings and keep viewers from defecting to the smaller
right-wing networks Newsmax and One America News.
In Thursday's filings, Fox News called the $2.7 billion damages claim
"pure fiction."
It cited a report by University of Chicago law professor Daniel Fischel
that Smartmatic had been a "failing enterprise" with $82.8 million of
losses over five years and four straight years of declining revenue.
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Workers clean up the burnt remains of a Christmas tree outside the
News Corp. and Fox News building in New York City, New York, U.S.
December 8, 2021. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
Fox News also said Smartmatic's
claims violated New York's November 2020 "anti-SLAPP" law, short for
"strategic lawsuits against public participation" and meant to
protect journalists from frivolous lawsuits designed to harass
critics.
"New York's anti-SLAPP statute was made for lawsuits like this one,"
Fox News said. "The best way to deter baseless attacks on the
freedoms of speech and efforts to chill the press is to provide
robust protection for speech on matters of public concern."
In a separate case, a federal judge on March 11 rejected Trump's bid
to invoke the anti-SLAPP law against E. Jean Carroll, a writer who
said Trump defamed her in 2019 by denying he raped her in the
mid-1990s.
Cohen also let Smartmatic sue anchor Maria Bartiromo and former
anchor Lou Dobbs and pursue some claims against former Trump lawyer
and on-air guest Rudy Giuliani.
In December, a Delaware judge rejected Fox News' attempt to dismiss
a similar $1.6 billion lawsuit by another voting technology company,
Dominion Voting Systems.
The case is Smartmatic USA Corp et al v Fox Corp et al, New York
State Supreme Court, New York County, No. 151136/2021.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Jonathan
Oatis)
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