In Fox-Dominion defamation trial, jury to weigh executives' role
Send a link to a friend
[April 10, 2023]
By Helen Coster and Jack Queen
(Reuters) - One of the most closely watched U.S. defamation cases in
decades is set to begin on Thursday as a Delaware court picks a jury to
decide whether Fox News should pay Dominion Voting Systems $1.6 billion
for spreading election-rigging falsehoods.
A critical task for jurors over the five-week trial will be deciding who
was responsible for the cable network's decision to broadcast the claims
despite internal doubts about their veracity. Dominion asserts that
Fox's top brass approved of the coverage, but the network says the
evidence of high-level involvement is threadbare.
Last week, Delaware Superior Court Judge Eric Davis said he would not
block Dominion from calling Rupert Murdoch, chairman of Fox News parent
company Fox Corp, to testify in-person about his involvement in the
coverage, which Davis has ruled was false and defamatory.
"The more complicit the whole organization is in perpetuating these
known falsehoods, the more likely a jury would be to return a big dollar
figure," said Mary-Rose Papandrea, a constitutional law professor at the
UNC School of Law.
Dominion alleges that Fox destroyed its business by knowingly airing
false claims that its ballot counting machines were used to flip the
results of the 2020 U.S. presidential election against former President
Donald Trump, a Republican who lost to Democrat Joe Biden. The trial has
been widely viewed as a test of whether Fox's coverage crossed the line
between ethical journalism and the heedless pursuit of ratings, as
Dominion alleges and Fox denies.
The jury pool will be drawn from New Castle County, Delaware, where
Democrats outnumber Republicans more than two-to-one, according to the
state's Department of Elections. Fox is home to many conservative
commentators who pulled for Trump.
Opening arguments are set to begin April 17. They will come weeks after
Davis dealt Fox a setback by ruling that claims the network aired about
Dominion's complicity in a nonexistent plot to rig the election against
Trump are not protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution,
which forms the bedrock of free speech law.
[to top of second column]
|
A Fox News channel sign is seen on a
television vehicle outside the News Corporation building in New York
City, in New York, U.S. November 8, 2017. REUTERS/Shannon
Stapleton/File Photo
But Davis left it up for jurors to decide whether Fox knowingly
spread false information or acted with reckless disregard for the
truth - the legal standard of actual malice that Dominion must meet
to prevail. The question could hinge upon troves of internal Fox
communications and testimony by Murdoch, his son Lachlan, and a
parade of Fox higher-ups and hosts who are expected to testify.
The defamatory statements aired on shows including "Sunday Morning
Futures," "Lou Dobbs Tonight" and "Justice with Judge Jeanine."
Dominion alleges that Fox personnel from the newsroom to the
boardroom knew the statements were false but continued to air them
to avoid losing viewers to far-right outlets. Dominion also cites
evidence that some hosts and producers thought the guests spreading
them, including former Trump attorneys Rudy Giuliani and Sidney
Powell, were not credible.
Fox has argued Dominion falls short of pinning actual malice on the
individuals who were responsible for the defamatory statements
because it cannot prove any "superior officer" at the network or its
parent company "ordered, participated in, or ratified" wrongdoing.
The network says scattered doubts about the claims among certain
individuals cannot be attributed to the organization as a whole.
"I think (Fox is) trying to argue that the employees themselves did
not have that necessary mental state," said UNC's Papandrea. "But
it's tricky when the organization itself has relevant information
that would cast doubt on the veracity of the statements about
Dominion."
(Reporting by Helen Coster and Jack Queen in New York; Editing by
Amy Stevens and Christopher Cushing)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |