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Post by Admin on Jul 29, 2019 17:56:22 GMT
Sandmann, a Kentucky teenager who became infamous after a viral video showed him engaged in a confrontation with a Native American activist named Nathan Phillips, has suffered a legal setback after a judge dismissed his family's $250 million lawsuit against The Washington Post.
"As the Court explained at the oral argument on this motion, in modern libel law there are many affirmative defenses, even for claims based on defamatory statements," Judge William O. Bertelsman explained in his ruling. "These defenses are calculated to protect defendants, especially the press, from strict liability."
He added, "The defense that a statement of opinion is not actionable protects freedom of speech and the press guaranteed by the First Amendment."
Although he acknowledged that Sandmann was sincere when he argued that his supposed confrontation with Phillips was actually an attempt "to calm the situation and not to impede or block anyone," Bertelsman added that the Post was merely reflecting the opinions conveyed by Phillips.
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Post by Admin on Jul 25, 2020 0:02:35 GMT
The Washington Post on Friday agreed to settle a monster $250 million lawsuit filed by Covington Catholic High School student Nick Sandmann over its botched coverage of his 2019 encounter with a Native American elder. Sandmann declared the victory in a tweet on his 18th birthday. It’s unclear how much the newspaper settled for. “On 2/19/19, I filed $250M defamation lawsuit against Washington Post. Today, I turned 18 & WaPo settled my lawsuit,” he wrote. “Thanks to @toddmcmurtry & @llinwood for their advocacy. Thanks to my family & millions of you who have stood your ground by supporting me. I still have more to do,” he continued. It’s the teen’s second win in a whopping $800 million defamation battle against a number of news outlets including the Washington Post, CNN, ABC, CBS, The Guardian, The Hill and NBC. CNN agreed to settle with Sandmann in January this year as part of a separate $275 million claim. Sandmann and a group of his Covington classmates were vilified on social media after they were filmed wearing “Make America Great Again” hats after an anti-abortion rally while being yelled at by demonstrators. Sandmann, then 16, was singled out after footage of his confrontation with Native American activist Nathan Phillips was picked up by CNN and other outlets who claimed the incident was racially motivated. Footage released later showed it was the Covington students who were being harassed. In a subsequent tweet Friday, Sandmann fired a warning shot at Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey. “We have settled with WAPO and CNN. The fight isn’t over. 2 down. 6 to go. Don’t hold your breath @jack,” he wrote.
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