1 / 11

Defamation and Civil Libel

Defamation and Civil Libel. JOUR3060 Communication Law & Regulation. DEFAMATION (REVIEW). Defamation is 1) a defamatory statement or utterance, 2) of and concerning the plaintiff, that has been 3) published to a third party, and results in 4) damages. DEFAMATION (REVIEW). Who is liable?

erik
Download Presentation

Defamation and Civil Libel

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Defamation and Civil Libel JOUR3060 Communication Law & Regulation

  2. DEFAMATION (REVIEW) • Defamation is 1) a defamatory statement or utterance, 2) of and concerning the plaintiff, that has been 3) published to a third party, and results in 4) damages

  3. DEFAMATION (REVIEW) • Who is liable? • 1) original publisher (source) • 2) re-publisher • 3) secondary publisher • What is the Burden of Proof? • Must prove: 1) false statement 2) fault • Public Persons: knowledge of falsity, reckless disregard for truth • Private Persons / Public Matter: fault amounting to at least negligence • What are the defenses to defamation? • 1) Truth • 2) Absolute Privilege • 3) Qualified Privilege

  4. CIVIL LIBEL • CIVIL Libel: deals with a person’s reputation • how take action: private attorney on behalf of individual • standard of proof: “preponderance of the evidence” • punishment: $$ damages

  5. CATEGORIES OF CIVIL LIBEL • 1) Private Person, Private Issue • 2) Private Person, Public Issue • 3) Public Figure, Public Issue • 4) Public Official, Public Issue

  6. CIVIL LIBEL CASES • Rosenbloom vs. Metromedia (1971) Private Person, Public Issue • Milkovich vs. Lorain Journal (1990) Newspaper liability for Private Figure • Time, Inc. vs. Firestone (1976) Private figure • Gertz vs. Robert Welch Inc. (1974) Public Figure Test • Curtis Publishing vs. Butts (1967) Public Figure Newspaper liability • Falwell vs. Flynt (1988) Public Figure, actual malice • Rosenblatt vs. Baer (1966) Public Official

  7. Curtis Publishing vs. Butts (1967)

  8. Falwell vs. Flynt (1988)

  9. CIVIL LIBEL • 1) Private Person, Private Issue: false statement • Criminal charges doesn’t make someone a public figure • 2) Private Person, Public Issue: false statement, fault amounting to at least negligence • Actual malice for damages • Newspaper liable for character attacks • 3) Public Figure, Public Issue: actual malice • False attribution qualifies as actual malice • Media liable for “recklessly gathered” allegations • 4) Public Official, Public Issue: actual malice • Criminal charges always relevant • Public officials liable for comments made outside private duty

  10. FOR NEXT CLASS: • TOPIC: Privacy • Assignment: Hopkins 14, Lisby 3 • Reminders: Extra Credit Assignment online, Paper #1 Due March 10th

More Related