Share this @internewscast.com
Sarah Palin's Defamation Suit Against The New York Times Goes To Court

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – FEBRUARY 03: Former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin arrives at a federal court in Manhattan to resume a case against the New York Times after it was postponed because she tested positive for Covid-19 on Feb. 3, 2022 in New York City.

Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) “wholly failed” to prove her defamation case against the New York Times “even to the minimum standard required by law,” a federal judge wrote in a scathing opinion, explaining his fateful order to toss the case in the middle of deliberations.

Now seeking a new trial, Palin’s attorneys want to scrap the jury’s “not liable” verdict amid revelations that “several” jurors learned about the case’s dismissal through smartphone push notifications while deliberations were ongoing. They also want to disqualify Senior U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff, who was adamant that that this development was meaningless and “legally irrelevant.”

“Although these jurors were adamant that this knowledge had not affected their determination of the verdict in the slightest, the Court promptly notified the parties of this information,” his opinion states.

Rakoff emphasized his “firm view” that the jurors’ awareness that he dismissed the case “did not nullify the jury’s verdict in any respect.”

“Even if one indulges the implausible hypothesis that the jury would have returned a verdict for Palin absent the news alerts, the operative final judgment would still have been the same: dismissal of Palin’s claim as a matter of law,” he added.

The detailed and extensively footnoted opinion explains why Rakoff found that Palin did not meet the high bar under defamation law for “actual malice,” established by the watershed Supreme Court precedent Times v. Sullivan. Press freedom advocates fear that Palin filed her case to advance a conservative agenda—expressed by former President Donald Trump and floated by two current Supreme Court justices—of loosening U.S. libel law.

In a footnote, Rakoff nodded to that possibility.

“Palin has consistently maintained that New York Times v. Sullivan either is no longer good law or does not apply to this case, and thus that the First Amendment does not require her to prove that Defendants published with actual malice,” he wrote. “The Court has repeatedly rejected these contentions, which are fully preserved for appellate review.”

To prevail in court under the current standard, Palin had to prove that former Times editor James Bennet acted with reckless disregard for the truth when he wrote in an editorial that the “link to political incitement was clear” between a graphic disseminated by her political action committee and the 2012 massacre perpetrated by Jared Lee Loughner. Sarah PAC had circulated a map with crosshairs over the congressional districts of 20 Democrats, including that of one of Loughner’s victims, Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. It was never established that Loughner saw the map, let alone acted upon it.

The Times corrected the editorial “America’s Lethal Politics,” striking the offending line with a lengthy correction, some 12 hours later.

Rakoff found that no reasonable jury could have found that Bennet knew the phrase was likely false before publishing it.

“Had [Bennet] known or suspected the information was false before publication, he likely would have been defensive, avoided issuing a correction to the Editorial, or tried to minimize the correction’s confession of error,” the judge noted.

Palin’s attorney Shane Vogt did not immediately respond to Law&Crime’s email requesting comment.

Read the ruling, below:

(Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

The post Judge Calls Juror Controversy ‘Legally Irrelevant,’ Finds Sarah Palin ‘Wholly Failed’ to Prove Her Case Against New York Times first appeared on Law & Crime.

Source: This post first appeared on

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like

Tragic Incident: Teen Father Fatally Shoots Newborn, Conceals Body with Snow

News footage of Logan Kruckenberg Anderson in court on Nov. 5 (WMTV).…

Federal Authorities Report Man’s Threat Against Trump and Secret Service

Left: Andrew Walter Sandvik (Fargo Police Department). Right: President Donald Trump speaks…

Mother Confesses to Killing Toddler to ‘Make Room’ for Another Child

Inset: Matthew Maison (Justice for Matthew Facebook Group). Background, left to right:…

New Security Footage Released in Search for Missing California Mother and Daughter, Melodee Buzzard

The Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office in California has unveiled surveillance footage…

Urgent Update: Mother of Missing Melodee Buzzard Taken Into Custody

Ashlee Buzzard, the mother of the missing California girl Melodee Buzzard, has…

Authorities Report Violent Assault: Suspect Allegedly Bites Woman’s Lips Severely

In a shocking incident last week, Pennsylvania police apprehended a man accused…

Alabama Mother Shocked to Learn in Court of Her 7-Year-Old Son’s Fatal Accident She Inadvertently Caused

An Alabama mother appeared in court on Tuesday, where she was confronted…

Man Arrested for Stabbing Ex-Partner’s Friend in Bar Altercation: Police Report

Inset: Robert S. Goodletson (Brown County Sheriff’s Office). Background: The Hammer Inn…

Call for Disciplinary Action Against Judge Allegedly Assisting Man to Avoid ICE Detention

Inset: Newton District Court Judge Shelley Joseph (WBZ). Background: Newton District Courthouse…

Mother Pleads Guilty to Killing Toddler Son to Allegedly “Make Room” for Boyfriend’s Child

This week, a Michigan mother facing charges alongside her boyfriend for the…

Teen Sues “Hot Car Dad” Christopher Scholtes for Physical Abuse Amid Family Scandal Days Before His Death

Days before Christopher Scholtes, an Arizona resident found guilty of murder, ended…

Alleged Stabbing Occurs During Citizen’s Arrest in Melbourne CBD

A man has been taken into custody after one person was injured…