In
Run Up to NYT Trial Palin Wants To Know If
Jurors Followed Any Recent High Profile
Case
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- The
Source
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Jan 20 –
In the case of Sarah Palin
versus New York Times and
James Bennet, on July 24, 2020
U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Judge Jed S. Rakoff held oral
arguments. Inner City Press
live tweeted them, below.
On August
28, Judge Rakoff issued an
order denying summary judgment
and finding, inter alia, that
"there "there is sufficient
evidence to allow a rational
finder of fact to find actual
malice [by NYT / Bennet] by
clear & convincing
evidence." So, trial. Inner
City Press will cover it -
having previously reported
Judge Rakoff jokingly perhaps
offering that time slot to a
criminal case and saying, Ms.
Palin may just have to wait.
Now it's set for
January 24, 2022. On January
19 the New York Times filed
its proposed questions for
jurors, including "do any of
you believe that the New York
Times has a bias against
certain political parties or
issues?"Also, do you know Ross
Douthat? Andrew Sullivan?
Robert Semple?
On January 20,
Sarah Palin's lawyers filed
their proposed questions,
including "Have you followed
any recent high profile court
cases closely?" Can you say,
Ghislaine Maxwell? We'll be
there.
On January 17 -
MLK Day - the New York Times
filed a request that juror
before opening statements be
read a statement including
that "Plaintiff claims that
two statements in the
Editorial falsely communicated
to readers that she directly
caused Jared Loughner to shoot
people in Arizona in 2011."
Then, the cross-hairs. Watch
this site.
On January 11,
Judge Rakoff convened a
pre-trial session. Inner City
Press live tweeted it here:
Judge Rakoff:
Counsel will be able to bring
in telephones. But why don't
you include that in the list
you are sending to my
courtroom deputy.
Judge Rakoff:
I've also been asked if the
parties can leave materials in
the court overnight. The large
courtrooms have break-out
rooms. Or you can use my jury
room. The next question was,
May counsel remove their masks
at podium? Yes. Witnesses too.
In the box
Judge Rakoff: In
the 6 trials I've held during
the pandemic, I've found
sidebars best held in the
robing room. We'll have room
for two counsel from each
side. Plaintiff's table can
have only three people. That
would be Ms. Palin plus two -
others, in the gallery
Judge
Rakoff: Normally in a civil
case I sit eight jurors - this
time, I'll sit nine. [Mentions
Omicron.] Judge Rakoff: I
never use questionnaires. You
ask, will the court
automatically exclude
unvaccinated jurors? The
answer is, No.
Judge Rakoff: On
the request that I prohibit
the defense from raising
certain exhibits without prior
permission I'll await the
defendant's motions in limine
due Monday. I'll rule on the
morning of trial before voir
dire
Judge Rakoff: I
usually, in civil cases, pick
a jury in less than an hour.
Each side gets three
peremptory challenges. I
usually give the jury the
pre-instruction after the
opening arguments and some
evidence so they have a bit
better idea.
Palin's
lawyer Shane B. Vogt asks
about the spacing of written
submissions.
NYT lawyer David
L. Axelrod says, We served
defendant with motions in
limine last night. Adjourned.
On January 10,
2022, Palin filed a motion in
limine seeking a rule that the
NYT and Bennet cannot use
listed exhibits "without first
obtaining a ruling from the
court on the admissibility of
such exhibits." These include:
77: Rep Rodney
Davis on Politically-Motivated
Violence
79: Palin Tweet:
Hey Lisa Murkowski, I can see
2022 from my house...
222: Plain State
re Blood Libel. Watch this
site.
The NYT and
Bennet filed notice of motion
to seek reconsideration in
light of NYS' after-arising
anti-SLAPP law.
Judge
Rakoff ruled for the NYT under
this new law, saying Palin
could not reasonably rely on
US Supreme Court precedents
being overruled: "Now before
the Court is defendants’
motion, pursuant to Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b),
for an order modifying the
Opinion to reflect the fact
that on November 10, 2020, New
York amended its
“anti-strategic litigation
against public participation”
(“anti-SLAPP”) law to
expressly require that public
figures prove actual malice by
clear and convincing evidence.
Dkt. No. 120. Plaintiff
opposes. Dkt. No. 123. For the
reasons set forth below, the
motion is granted."
Now on August 12,
2021, adjournment of trial
from September 20 to January
24, 2022 amid COVID: "Minute
Entry for proceedings held
before Judge Jed S. Rakoff: In
the above-captioned case, a
telephone conference was held
August 12, 2021 without
transcription or recording.
Counsel for Plaintiff and
Defendant were present.
Developments with the COVID-19
pandemic necessitate the
postponement of the jury
trial. Accordingly, trial will
now commence January 24, 2022.
( Jury Selection set for
1/24/2022 at 09:30AM before
Judge Jed S. Rakoff.)." Watch
this site.
In July, NYT
lawyer, Jay Brown of Ballard,
says Bennet - since ousted or
resigned - is able to bring
this motion. Judge Rakoff: I
was not persuaded by
plaintiff's argument on that.
NYT lawyer: This is Palin's
contention that a jury might
disbelieve Mr Bennet's
testimony
NYT:
There's no need for the court
to make credibility
determinations. There's no
dispute of material fact. Let
me turn to the merits. Did
Bennet act with actual malice
when he wrote the sentences?
Did he accuse her of inciting
shooting? We say no, not with
malice
NYT: Bennet
was unaware that his words
would be interpreted that way.
Judge Rakoff: Isn't it partly
a function of what a
reasonable jury could infer
where the language is
essentially unambiguous, like
if the Defendant said,
"Mr Jones is a cold blooded
murderer"
Judge
Rakoff: .. the jury could draw
an inference. NYT: The
defamatory statement can't be
considered in isolation.
"Under NYT v. Sullivan, the
statement must be judged
entire based on what the
publisher intended it to
mean."
Judge
Rakoff: But I'm to follow case
law, and not treatises, no?
Let me go back to my rather
over-simple hypo. Supposing
the defendant at his
deposition, When I said Jones
was a cold blooded murderer, I
didn't mean that literally, I
just meant he's nasty
Judge
Rakoff: Cannot a jury say,
That's preposterous. The words
were so without qualification
we don't believe you didn't
mean it literally? Can't that
be part of the mix?
NYT: The language
of the publication is part of
the mix -- [then NYT lawyer is
cut off]
Judge
Rakoff [after NYT lawyer is
cut off]: I interpret that to
mean he thought his rhetoric
was so electric...
NYT is
back: Elizabeth Williamson
prepared a draft of the
editorial... In her draft, she
said, "Just as in 2011, the
rage in Virginia was
nurtured," etc. Mr. Bennet
removed the Virginia
reference, there, but kept in
"link to political incitement
was clear."
NYT lawyer: Let's
consider the 5:08 am email by
Bennet: "I don't know what the
truth is here... We may have
relied too much on our own
earlier editorials."
Judge Rakoff:
Plaintiff says Bennet
committed at his deposition
that he had read a report in
The Atlantic Judge
Rakoff: Why couldn't a jury
infer that he had read it, and
knew what he wrote was false,
but after criticism was trying
to cover his read end? NYT:
Let's compare what Mrs. Palin
said and what the Second
Circuit ruled.
lawyer: Mr.
Bennet did not click on
hyperlinks in [his]
editorial... He relied on fact
checkers to ensure his
editorials were accurate
Palin's
lawyer: There's nothing
binding from the Supreme Court
imposing the defendant's
standard here. Judge Rakoff:
Even under your approach you
have to show reckless
disregard, no? Palin's lawyer:
Correct.
Palin's
lawyer: The decision was
already made to write about
gun control, and "hate speech"
of people on the Right.
Judge Rakoff: You're saying he
started with a bias? Palin's
lawyer: Yes, your Honor.
Palin's
lawyer: The NYT was already
under fire, sponsoring
Shakespeare in the Park
portraying Trump as Caesar,
some advertisers were pulling
out. So Bennet was back
pedaling. Palin's lawyer: They
resorted to framing, to
pre-conceived notions.
This is a case of
willful avoidance of the
truth. He published the
editorial without
re-acquainting himself with
what the Atlantic [he is or
was affiliated with] published
Palin's
lawyer: Bennet has a narrative
he wanted to tell and he
didn't care what the fact
checkers said. It's purposeful
avoidance of truth. Bennet
insisted on persisting with
narrative even after
corruption came out, he told
CNN it didn't undercut the
editorial
Palin's lawyer:
Bennet was still insisting
that the piece was
justifiable. The international
edition cut out the defamatory
terms, but Ms. Cohen claimed
it still conveyed the same
message. So Bennet was engaged
in political score-keeping
Palin lawyer:
There were 3 to 4 other
editorials ready that could
have run that day. All of this
could have been avoided. But
this falls in line with
Bennet's pre-determined
narrative. There was
recklessness. So the summary
judgment motion should be
denied.
Judge Rakoff:
I'll give the defendant nine
minutes, then I have to head
up to my courtroom for a
proceeding.
NYT's lawyer:
This may have been negligence,
but it is not defamation of a
public figure.
Judge Rakoff
tells the lawyer the history
of "malapropism," promises an
end of August ruling before
Feb 2021 trial.
The case is
Palin v. The New York Times
Company, 17-cv-4853-JSR
(Rakoff)
***
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