Fox resolves Dominion case, but $2.7 billion Smartmatic lawsuit looms
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[April 20, 2023]
By Jack Queen
(Reuters) - Fox News on Tuesday disposed of one legal threat with its
$787.5 million defamation settlement with Dominion Voting Systems, but
the network still faces a $2.7 billion lawsuit from another voting
technology company, Smartmatic USA, over its coverage of debunked
election-rigging claims.
Dominion accused Fox and its parent company Fox Corp of ruining its
business by airing claims that its machines were used to rig the 2020
U.S. presidential election in favor of Democrat Joe Biden and against
then-president Donald Trump, a Republican.
Fox and its parent company Fox Corp averted a six-week trial in Delaware
Superior Court with the deal, which is half of the $1.6 billion Dominion
sought but still by far the largest ever defamation settlement publicly
announced by an American media company, according to legal experts.
Fox, one of the most influential cable networks in the world and home to
many conservative commentators, acknowledged in a statement Tuesday that
the judge found “certain claims about Dominion to be false” and said it
hopes the deal helps the country “move forward with these issues.”
But Fox’s lawyers will stay busy navigating the legal fallout of the
network’s 2020 election coverage with a potentially far more damaging
defamation lawsuit by voting technology company Smartmatic, as well as a
separate but related lawsuit by a recently fired producer.
Fox representatives referred Reuters to prior statements on the cases.
The network has firmly denied the allegations in both cases.
It is unclear if Fox’s deal with Dominion indicates it is willing to
settle with Smartmatic, but experts who are not part of the litigation
suggested it could help kickstart talks.
“Smartmatic now has a bargaining chip, and Fox has shown it is willing
to take out its checkbook and write a big check,” said University of
Tennessee, Knoxville media law professor Stuart Brotman. “From Fox’s
standpoint, now that they realize they can get a successful settlement,
they have a basis for a real discussion with Smartmatic.”
Smartmatic is seeking $2.7 billion in damages from Fox and five
individuals, including former Trump lawyers and hosts.
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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
Smartmatic alleges in its lawsuit in New York County Supreme Court
that the defendants knowingly spread false claims that its software
was used to flip votes. Conspiracy theorists erroneously claimed
Smartmatic owned Dominion, and the companies mounted similar
allegations in their lawsuits.
Smartmatic attorney J. Erik Connolly said in a statement Tuesday the
company is committed to clearing its name, recouping the damage done
to it and “holding Fox accountable for undermining democracy."
Fox denies the allegations, saying in a recent statement the network
had a right to report on highly newsworthy allegations of voter
fraud. It has also called Smartmatic’s damages claims “outrageous,
unsupported, and not rooted in sound financial analysis.”
Fox was recently dealt a setback in the case after an appeals court
declined to toss it, finding Smartmatic alleged in “detailed
fashion” how Fox “effectively endorsed and participated” in
defamation.
Meanwhile, Fox has given no public indication that it is interested
in settling the lawsuit by the former producer, Abby Grossberg,
whose lawyers said in a statement Tuesday they are seeking
“meaningful institutional changes at Fox News.”
Any such changes were absent from the public announcement of the
Dominion settlement and could potentially be a major sticking point
in any negotiations, legal experts said.
Grossberg alleges she was exposed to sexism at Fox and unjustly
fired after she objected to what she claims were efforts to pressure
her into giving misleading testimony in the Dominion case.
Fox has said the allegations are “baseless” and were immediately
investigated by outside lawyers. The network also says it will
“vigorously” defend itself against all of Grossberg’s claims.
(Reporting by Jack Queen; editing by Amy Stevens and Lincoln Feast)
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