The Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe said
Dominion Voting Systems’ brief requesting summary judgment against Fox
News for defamation – and $1.6bn – is “likely to
succeed and likely to be a landmark” in the history of freedom of speech and
freedom of the press.
“I
have never seen a defamation case with such overwhelming proof that the
defendant admitted in writing that it was making up fake information in order
to increase its viewership and its revenues,” Tribe told the Guardian. “Fox and
its producers and performers were lying as part of their business model.”
The
case concerns Fox News’s repetition of Donald Trump’s lie that his 2020 defeat
by Joe Biden was the result of electoral fraud, including claims about Dominion
voting machines.
Tribe
said the filing “establishes that Fox was not only reckless” but also that
producers, owners and personalities were “deliberately lying and knew they were
lying about the nature of Dominion’s machines and the supposed way they could
be manipulated”.
Filed last week, the 192-page document makes it clear that
senior figures at Fox News from
Rupert Murdoch down knew immediately after the election that claims of voter
fraud, in particular those aimed at Dominion, were false.
Tucker
Carlson called the charges “ludicrous” and “off the rails”. Sean Hannity texted
about “F’ing lunatics”. A senior network vice-president called one of the
stories “MIND BLOWINGLY NUTS”.
But
none of this knowledge prevented hosts from repeating lies about everything
from imaginary algorithms shaving votes from Dominion machines to non-existent
ties between the company and Venezuela.
Tribe
was one of several first amendment experts to call the filing nearly
unprecedented. “This is the most remarkable discovery filing I’ve ever read in
a commercial litigation,” said Scott Horton, a Columbia Law School lecturer,
Harper’s Magazine contributing editor and litigator with clients including CBS
and the Associated Press.
“A
summary judgment motion by a plaintiff in this kind of case is almost unheard
of. These suits usually fail because you can’t prove the company you’re suing
knew they were spreading falsehoods. That you would have evidence they knew it
was a lie is almost unheard of … in this case the sheer volume of all the email
and text messages is staggering.”
Horton
said Dominion’s case gets “huge benefit” from the way Fox employees “express
themselves with a huge measure of hyperbole about absolutely everything”.
Tribe agreed: “This is
one of the first defamation cases in which it is possible to rule for the
plaintiff on summary judgment. This is not a request to go to trial. There is
no genuinely disputed fact. The defendants were deliberately lying in a manner
that was per se libelous and they clearly knew it.”
When the Dominion filing
was first reported, Fox News said it “mischaracterized the record,
cherry-picked quotes stripped of key context and spilled considerable ink on
facts that are irrelevant under black-letter principles of defamation law”.
Lawyers for Fox News
claim everything their anchors said was protected by the first amendment.
Other lawyers are
skeptical. “You may have a first amendment right to report on what the
president said but you have no right to validate a statement that you know to
be false,” said Steven Shapiro, former legal director of the American Civil
Liberties Union and counsel or co-counsel on more than 200 supreme court
briefs.
David Korzenik is a
leading libel lawyer whose clients include the Guardian. He said the Dominion
case shows it “possible to prove actual malice. If particular people are shown
to have believed something to be false, or to have been highly aware of its
probable falsehood, and at the same time they made statements endorsing it on
air, they are in play.
“You’re allowed to be
biased … you’re allowed to try to make money. And people should be able to
disagree with each other in a newsroom. But if Fox anchors say they don’t
believe X and then turn around and endorse X on air after expressing manifest
disbelief in it, they have a real problem.
“The actual malice
standard is very high and it’s supposed to be … it’s a burden that can be
overcome in limited but appropriate circumstances.”
The biggest irony
revealed by the Dominion filing is that Carlson and colleagues quickly decided
the greatest threat to their network was one of the only times it reported an
accurate scoop: that Arizona had gone for Biden, at 11.20pm on election night.
Four
days later, another Murdoch property, the New York Post, asked Trump to stop
the stolen election claim. Rupert Murdoch thanked the Fox News chief executive,
Suzanne Scott, for making sure the editorial got wide distribution, according
to the Dominion filing.
But
later that day, as Fox executives realized they were losing viewers, the tide
began to shift. “Getting creamed by CNN!” Murdoch messaged Scott.
In
a message to his producer, Carlson sounded terrified: “Do the executives
understand how much credibility and trust we’ve lost with our audience? We’re
playing with fire, for real an alternative like Newsmax could be devastating to
us.”
And
so on 8 November Maria Bartiromo featured the Trump adviser Sidney Powell and
said: “I know that there were voting irregularities. Tell me about that.”
That
alternate reality would be repeated for months.
Perhaps
most devastating of all is Dominion’s account of what happened on 12 November,
after the Fox News reporter Jacqui Heinrich tweeted a fact-check that challenged
a false Trump attack on “Dominion voting systems”, which Heinrich said had been
reported by Sean Hannity and Lou Dobbs. Heinrich pointed out that top election
infrastructure officials said “there is no evidence that any voting system
deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised”.
Carlson
was incensed. He messaged Hannity: “Please get her fired. Seriously what the
fuck? Actually shocked. It needs to stop immediately, like tonight. It’s
measurably hurting the company. The stock price is down.”
Hannity
complained to Scott, who said Heinrich had “serious nerve doing this and if
this gets picked up, viewers are going to be further disgusted”.
Heinrich
was told her tweet violated company policy because it mentioned colleagues. By
the next morning, she had deleted the tweet. She replaced it with a new one
disputing Trump’s false charge against Dominion. The new tweet omitted the fact
Hannity and Dobbs reported Trump’s attack.
-Charles
Kaiser, The Guardian
·
This story was amended on 21 February 2023, to
reflect the fact that after Jacqui Heinrich complied with an order to delete
her tweet fact-checking Trump’s false charge against Dominion, because it
mentioned Sean Hannity and Lou Dobbs, she posted a second tweet on the matter.
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