NewYorkTimes
A judge rejected former vice presidential candidate and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin‘s (R) attempt on Tuesday to resurrect a libel case against the New York Times. “In a defamation case brought by a public figure like Sarah Palin, a mistake is not enough to win if it was not motivated by actual malice,” U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff wrote in his opinion. “And the striking thing about the trial here was that Palin, for all her earlier assertions, could not, in the end, introduce even a speck of such evidence.” Palin sued the paper and former editorial page editor James Bennett for publishing an art...
uPolitics.com
A day after a judge tossed out Sarah Palin‘s case against the New York Times, the jury made the same decision. The 9-person jury, made up of five women and four men, heard seven days of trial and had been deliberating since Friday night. They were unaware that Judge Jed Rakoff had already ruled that Palin and her team did not adequately prove “actual malice.” After his decision was announced to the public yesterday, he said he would wait for the jury’s verdict, then toss the case. The precedent for public figures who sue for defamation was set by the 1964 New York Times vs. Sullivan case. The ...
uPolitics.com
Sarah Palin‘s defamation trial against the New York Times has been delayed until February 3 after Palin tested positive for COVID-19, U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff ordered on Monday. Palin served as the governor of Alaska from 2006 to 2009. She was also John McCain‘s running mate in the 2008 election. Palin sued the Times in 2017 after an opinion piece incorrectly reported that the rhetoric of her political action committee was connected to the shooting of former Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Arizona). The piece said that a map that had been circulated by the group put Gifford and other Democratic l...
uPolitics.com
President Donald Trump has had over $270 million in debt forgiven since 2010, the New York Times reported Tuesday.The report is based on an analysis of his tax records, which show that when Trump International Hotel & Tower in Chicago struggled financially, his lenders granted him extra time to pay off his debt, though much of it ended up being forgiven.In response to the Times article, Trump tweeted: “I was able to make an appropriately great deal with the numerous lenders on a large and very beautiful tower. Doesn’t that make me a smart guy rather than a bad guy?”The Times reported that two ...
uPolitics.com
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