North Carolina governor candidate Mark Robinson sues CNN over report
about posts on porn site
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[October 16, 2024]
By GARY D. ROBERTSON
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson
sued CNN on Tuesday over its recent report that he made explicit racial
and sexual posts on a pornography website’s message board, calling the
reporting reckless and defamatory.
The lawsuit, filed in Wake County Superior Court, comes less than four
weeks after a report that led many fellow GOP elected officials and
candidates, including presidential nominee Donald Trump, to distance
themselves from Robinson's gubernatorial campaign.
Robinson, who announced the lawsuit at a news conference in Raleigh with
a Virginia-based attorney, has denied authoring the messages.
CNN “chose to publish despite knowing or recklessly disregarding that
Lt. Gov. Robinson’s data — including his name, date of birth, passwords,
and the email address supposedly associated with the NudeAfrica account
— were previously compromised by multiple data breaches,” the lawsuit
states, referencing the website.
Robinson, who would be the state’s first Black governor if elected,
called the report a “high-tech lynching” on a candidate "who has been
targeted from Day 1 by folks who disagree with me politically and want
to see me destroyed.”
CNN declined to comment Tuesday, spokesperson Emily Kuhn said in an
email.
The CNN report, which first aired Sept. 19, said Robinson left
statements over a decade ago on the message board in which, in part, he
referred to himself as a “black NAZI,” said he enjoyed transgender
pornography, said he preferred Hitler to then-President Barack Obama,
and slammed the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as “worse than a maggot.”
The network report said it matched details of the account on the message
board to other online accounts held by Robinson by comparing usernames,
a known email address and his full name. CNN reported that details
discussed by the account holder matched Robinson’s age, length of
marriage and other biographical information. CNN also said it compared
figures of speech that came up frequently in his public Twitter profile
that appeared in discussions by the account on the pornographic website.
Polls at the time of the CNN report already showed Democratic rival Josh
Stein, the sitting attorney general, with a lead over Robinson. Early
in-person voting begins Thursday statewide, and over 57,000 completed
absentee ballots have been received so far.
Robinson also in the same defamation lawsuit sued a Greensboro punk rock
band singer who alleged in a music video and in an interview with a
media outlet that Robinson, in the 1990s and early 2000s, frequented a
porn shop the singer once worked at and purchased videos. Louis Love
Money, the other named defendant, released the video and spoke with
other media outlets before the CNN report.
Robinson denies the allegation in the lawsuit, which reads, “Lt. Gov.
Robinson was not spending hours at the video store, five nights a week.
He was not renting or previewing videos, and he did not purchase
‘bootleg’ or other videos from Defendant Money.”
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North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson arrives at a news conference
in Raleigh, N.C., Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Karl B DeBlaker)
Money said in a phone interview Tuesday that he stands by his
statements and the music video's content as truthful: “My story
hasn't changed.”
The lawsuit, which seeks at least $50 million in damages, says the
effort against Robinson “appears to be a coordinated attack aimed at
derailing his campaign for governor.” It provides no evidence that
the network or Money schemed with outside groups to create what
Robinson alleges are false statements.
Robinson’s lawyer, Jesse Binnall, said that he expects to find more
“bad actors,” and that entities, which he did not identify, have
stonewalled his firm's efforts to collect information.
“We will use every tool at our disposal now that a lawsuit has been
filed, including the subpoena power, in order to continue pursuing
the facts,” said Binnall, whose clients have included Trump and his
campaign.
In North Carolina courts, a public official claiming defamation
generally must show a defendant knew a statement was false or
recklessly disregarded its untruthfulness.
Most of the top staff running Robinson’s campaign and his lieutenant
governor’s office quit following the CNN report, and the Republican
Governors Association, which had already spent millions of dollars
in advertising backing Robinson, stopped supporting his bid. And
Democrats from presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris to
downballot state candidates began running ads linking their
opponents to Robinson.
Robinson's campaign isn't running TV commercials now. He said that
“we’ve chosen to go in a different direction” and focus on in-person
campaign stops.
Robinson already had a history of inflammatory comments about topics
like abortion and LGBTQ+ rights that Stein and his allies have
emphasized in opposing him on TV commercials and online.
Stein spokesperson Morgan Hopkins said Tuesday in a statement that
“even before the CNN report, North Carolinians have known for a long
time that Mark Robinson is completely unfit to be Governor."
Hurricane Helene and its aftermath took the CNN report off the front
pages. Robinson worked for several days with a central North
Carolina sheriff collecting relief supplies and criticized
Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper — barred by term limits from seeking
reelection — for state government's response in the initial stages
of relief.
Trump endorsed Robinson before the March gubernatorial primary,
calling him “Martin Luther King on steroids” for his speaking
ability. Robinson had been a frequent presence at Trump’s North
Carolina campaign stops, but he hasn’t participated in such an event
since the CNN report.
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