The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Libel Lawsuit Against Fox Over Claims That Businessman Was "COO" of "2020 Election … Cyber Pearl Harbor"
From Khalil v. Fox Corp., decided Monday by Judge Louis Stanton (S.D.N.Y.):
The plaintiff in this action is Majed Khalil, a Venezuelan businessman. During the course of the events giving rise to this action, he was also referred to as "Khalil Majed Mazoud." Defendants in this case are Lou Dobbs, Fox Corporation and Fox News Network, LLC. Defendant Lou Dobbs is a Fox personality, who hosted the show Lou Dobbs Tonight. Defendant Fox News Network, LLC is wholly owned by Defendant Fox Corporation …. The Complaint alleges that Dobbs was under contract with Fox during the time period when the allegedly defamatory remarks were made. The Complaint also alleges that Fox controlled multiple social media accounts related to Lou Dobbs, including a Twitter account in Dobbs' name, which has millions of followers.
The allegations in the Complaint stem from statements made by Lou Dobbs and Sidney Powell on Lou Dobbs Tonight and related Twitter posts following the 2020 election. During the show, the Complaint alleges that Dobbs held himself as a reporter of facts, not opinion. Fox described his show as "the #1 program on any business network among total viewers."
On November 7, 2020, Fox projected that President Trump lost the 2020 Presidential Election. Almost immediately following the election, Fox news channels, which generally cater to a conservative audience, began to report on theories that the election was fraudulent. One such theory of election fraud centered around two voting machine companies, Dominion Voting Systems … and Smartmatic Corporation …, which were allegedly formed by various individuals from Venezuela with the purpose of rigging elections.
Many of the accusations against Dominion and Smartmatic stemmed from Sidney Powell, who appeared repeatedly as a guest on Fox television programs, including Lou Dobbs Tonight. Powell told Fox viewers that Dominion was using software to either flip votes from votes for then-President Trump to Joe Biden or to simply add votes for Joe Biden. However, many prominent politicians, organizations, and government agencies countered Powell's narrative of the 2020 election, referring to her theories as "insane," "a national embarrassment," "unhinged," and "crazy." Even then-President Trump's campaign team distanced itself from her, stating, "Sidney Powell is practicing law on her own. She is not a member of the Trump Legal Team. She is also not a lawyer for the President in his personal capacity."
Both Dominion and Smartmatic also took steps to clarify that they were not involved in an election-rigging scheme. As early as November 12, 2020, Dominion began circulating a series of emails entitled, "SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT: FACTS & RUMORS" that contained links to independent sources disproving the false claims about Dominion's alleged role in rigging the election. These emails were sent to Fox reporters and producers. A Dominion representative also spoke with Fox Executive Editor Jay Wallace about the false information being spread about Dominion. Smartmatic emailed with Fox Business Network and informed Dobbs' coordinating producer that Smartmatic only provided software to support Los Angeles County in the election, and not—as Fox claimed—to the state of Georgia.
Furthermore, several election experts in November publicly stated that there was no credible evidence that the 2020 election was compromised through a computer alteration scheme.
Nonetheless, on December 10, 2020, the @LouDobbs account, run by Fox, tweeted, "the 2020 Election is a Cyber Pearl Harbor: The leftwing establishment have aligned their forces to overthrow the United States government #MAGA #AmericaFirst #Dobbs." In the tweet, the account posted a document, which refers to Khalil as one of "four names" "people need to get familiar with," and claims that Khalil is "a Venezuelan of Lebanese origin, who is the right hand and business front man of Jorge Rodriguez. He has been the effective 'COO' of the election project, under Chavez and Maduro. Khalil is a liaison with Hezbollah."
The document posted further stated, "We have a warning to the mainstream media: you have purposely sided with the forces that are trying to overthrow the US system. These four people and their collaborators executed an electoral 9-11 against the United States, with the cooperation and collusion of the media and the Democrat Party and China. It is a cyber Pearl Harbor. We have identities, roles, and background of Dominion. Smartmatic people. This will turn into a massive RICO filing. It is Smartmatic, Dominion Voting Systems, Sequoia, SGO … We have technical presentations that prove there is an embedded controller in every Dominion machine… We have the architecture and systems, that show how the machines can be controlled from external sources, via the internet, in violation of voting standards, Federal law, state laws, and contracts."
According to the Complaint, the document had no indication that it was authored or originated from a source other than the defendants. The Complaint alleges that those statements regarding Khalil were all false.
Later that day, Dobbs hosted Powell during his on-air show, telling viewers that Powell would discuss a "Pearl Harbor style cyber-attack on the 2020 election." Dobbs then displayed a graphic with the title "Four Names You Need to Know According to Sidney Powell," which included Khalil's name and referred to him as a "Rodriguez front man." Dobbs asked Powell, "you say these four individuals led the effort to rig this election. How did they do it?" Powell responded by accusing Khalil, along with three other individuals, of having "designed and developed the Smartmatic and Dominion programs and machines that include a controller module that allows people to log in and manipulate the vote even as it's happening."
Dobbs told Powell he would "like to put up this element from your investigation if we could have that full screen up so that we could all go through that with the audience. Because it's important as we look at these four names, we're talking about very large, a very large foreign intrusion and interference in the, in the election of 2020." At the end of the show, Dobbs informed Powell that he would "gladly put forward your evidence that supports your claim that this was a cyber Pearl Harbor, we have tremendous evidence already… of fraud in this election but I will be glad to put forward on this broadcast whatever evidence you have."
After the show was broadcast, Fox and Dobbs posted videos on Twitter with the caption that "@SidneyPowelll reveals groundbreaking new evidence indicating our Presidential election came under massive cyber-attack orchestrated with the help of Dominion, Smartmatic and foreign adversaries." The Complaint alleges that no such evidence was ever revealed and never existed.
The Complaint alleges that none of the Defendants ever approached Khalil to seek confirmation or denial of the claims against him regarding election fraud.
The court denied defendants' motion to dismiss, reasoning that plaintiff had sufficiently alleged that the statements were false, defamatory, and factual assertions rather than opinions. It also rejected defendant's "fair report" defense:
The Fair Report doctrine is codified in New York law. Under Section 74 of the New York Civil Rights Law, "a civil action cannot be maintained against any person, firm or corporation, for the publication of a fair and true report of any judicial proceeding, legislative proceeding or other official proceeding, or for any heading of the report which is a fair and true headnote of the statement published." …
While Defendants argue that the challenged statements constitute a report on an "ongoing investigation into electoral fraud, seemingly at the President's behest," this argument fails. Powell was not working on a case in an official capacity nor on behalf of a public agency during her investigation. In fact, on November 22, 2020, well before the December 10, 2020 statements, the Trump Campaign released a statement stating that "Sidney Powell is practicing law on her own. She is not a member of the Trump Legal Team. She is also not a lawyer for the President in his personal capacity."
More damning, however, is that at no point did Dobbs or Powell attribute the statements about Khalil to an official investigation or a judicial proceeding. A reasonable observer would have no grounds to believe that her statements constituted a report of an official proceeding.
And it rejected defendant's "neutral report" defense:
The parties dispute whether the Neutral Report doctrine will apply in this Court. However, it is unnecessary to reach that issue because even assuming, arguendo, that the doctrine does apply, it does not protect the Defendants in this action.
Under the Neutral Report doctrine, "when a responsible, prominent organization makes serious charges against a public figure, the First Amendment protects the accurate and disinterested reporting of those charges, regardless of the reporter's private views regarding their validity." Edwards v. National Audubon Soc'y (2d Cir. 1977). While the "Edwards opinion did not attempt precise definition" of the Neutral Report doctrine, the Second Circuit has provided other examples of when doctrine may apply, such as when "the public interest in being fully informed about such controversies that rage around sensitive issues demands that the press be afforded the freedom to report such charges without assuming responsibility for them." "It is equally clear, however that a publisher who in fact espouses or concurs in the charges made by others or who deliberately distorts these statements to launch a personal attack of his own on a public figure, cannot reply on a privilege of neutral reportage."
The doctrine is inapplicable here. The charge on which Dobbs and Fox News Corp were reporting was not made by a "responsible, prominent organization," rendering this case distinct from Edwards. As alleged in the Complaint, Sidney Powell was not a responsible source. Several election experts and government agencies had already debunked her theories of election fraud well before the challenged statements were made.
Even if Defendants could successfully show that their statements should be protected due to the public interest in being fully informed about "sensitive issues," they cannot avail themselves of the doctrine because the Complaint adequately alleges that Defendants espoused and concurred in the charges….
The Neutral Report Doctrine also requires that the challenged statements be neutral and dispassionate. The Complaint alleges facts which support a reasonable inference that the Dobb's reporting was neither accurate nor dispassionate. Rhetoric such as "9-11" and "Cyber Pearl Harbor" is impassioned advocacy, which makes this privilege inapplicable.
Furthermore, … Mr. Khalil is not a public figure, rendering the neutral report doctrine inapplicable. While defendants argue that Edwards should not be limited to its facts, it would be an extension of Edwards to apply it to a private figure. The Second Circuit has resisted extending Edwards to a private figure. The Court declines to extend Edwards here as well.
Finally, though Khalil was a private figure, New York law requires the application of the actual malice test to all statements on matters of public concern, whether or not about public figures; but the court said actual malice (meaning knowing or reckless falsehood) was adequately alleged:
To adequately pled actual malice, the plaintiff must show that a false statement of fact was made "with the knowledge that the statement was false or with reckless disregard to whether or not it was true." To satisfy the "reckless disregard" standard, a defendant must have made the false publication with a "high degree of awareness of … probable falsity," or must have "entertained serious doubts as to the truth of his publication." While mere allegations of negligence or "failure to investigate" are not enough to meet the actual malice standard, "the purposeful avoidance of the truth is in a different category."
"The Supreme Court has provided several factors to consider when determining whether a speaker acted with actual malice: (1) whether a story is fabricated or is based wholly on an unverified, anonymous source, (2) whether the defendant's allegations are so inherently improbable that only a reckless person would have put them in circulation, or (3) whether there are obvious reasons to doubt the veracity of the informant or the accuracy of his reports." This analysis typically requires discovery.
Here, Defendants repeatedly maintained their claims about Khalil long after Powell's election fraud theories were challenged. Numerous reports that declared the falsity of the claims against Dominion and Smartmatic and rejected Powell as an accurate source of information gave Defendants reasons to doubt Powell's veracity and the accuracy of her reports. While the complaint does not allege that the Khalil himself informed Defendants of the falsity of the claims against him, both Smartmatic and Dominion did so. Falsity of the claims against both companies would necessitate falsity of the claims against Plaintiff. Several government agencies stated that there was no evidence of fraud in the election, and even then-President Trump supporters rejected Powell's accusations.
While Defendant's failure to seek Khalil's comment on the statements standing alone is not enough to meet the actual malice requirement. However, the Complaint adequately alleges that the defendants purposefully avoided the truth, given the amount of public information regarding the lack of fraud in the election.
Plaintiffs have alleged enough facts in the complaint to survive a motion to dismiss and obtain discovery.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
If Jeffrey Clarke had gotten his memo out early there would have been an official source to report. A lesson to the Biden administration in 2024.
Is that the memo that is going to get him disbarred, or a different memo?
” …the Complaint adequately alleges that the defendants purposefully avoided the truth…”
I’m shocked, SHOCKED I TELL YOU!!! that Fox News and Lou Dobbs would ever do such a thing.
You gotta show the clip if you're going to use the quote!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SjbPi00k_ME
Congratulations to Jessica Meyers, Sigmund Samuel Wissner-Gross, and Benjamin Chew of Brown Rudnick LLP, whose work overcome the motion to dismiss filed by the Fox-Dobbs legal team (which included Paul Clement)!
I don’t see how people like Dobbs and Carlson and Maddow and Joy Reid aren’t hit by multiple defamation lawsuits every day. I guess when you have no regard for actual facts the defense is that nobody believes you anyway.
I mostly agree, the targets aren't really damaged. But Dominion claims significant monetary loss.
I wish the four I mentioned (and others like them) would get stung hard by a couple of judgements. Might serve to diminish the steady flow of bullshit.
I suspect Dominion has suffered major loss of business, and its shareholders have lost substantial value because of all the insanity from Powell and Giuliani.
Yes I imagine they suffered material damage to their business. Just more collateral damage from Trump’s Crusade of Crazy.
"I don’t see how . . . etc."
If you understood better the difference between fact and opinion, and also understood the notion that truth is a defense against libel, and also watched a variety of media that were not habitual right-wing liars, you would be better equipped to, "see how."
I have a neighbor who is a right winger. Like you he thinks Maddow must be a liar. But he relies on Fox News, and was of course startled to hear for the first time from me the factual basis for much of the reporting done consequent to the January 6 investigation. He also had no notion that the January 6 news report sources were almost all right-wingers themselves, including Trump administration insiders. He couldn't recall that Fox had mentioned any of that.
So of course my neighbor thought Maddow was making stuff up. Like any reporter, Maddow can make a mistake. But she strikes me as an unusually careful reporter. If you think otherwise, I doubt you have watched her much. Or, maybe, like my neighbor, you are holding her to a standard of truth which turns out to be Fox News style fiction.
The point is that all four of those, and a lot of other media people routinely twist facts to try to maintain their narrative. It’s not Fox bad, MSNBC good. Or vice versa. Our media is ate up with it.
I understand the difference between fact and opinion one hell of a lot better than you.
There is a difference between twisting fact and ought right lying and that why Fox and Dobbs are in trouble and the other three are not.
I’m not sure I see much difference when the outright lying and the twisting serve the same endpoint - to defame innocent people. The audience for this crap don’t care how much fact is mixed in with the bullshit, they just need to believe it’s true.
I disagree with this stance. Spinning and making stuff up are not the same thing.
Let’s take a hypothetical. I go to a party with my wife, I have three glasses of wine on an empty stomach and suddenly I don’t feel well. I ask my wife if she can drive us home, make my apologies to the host, and quietly leave. Based on that, someone who has it in for me starts a rumor that I was “totally out of control at the party,” everyone was “shocked at how inappropriate my behavior was,” and I “clearly have a major drinking problem.”
Now, let’s imagine an alternative scenario. In this scenario my critic starts the same rumor about me as above — but I wasn’t at any party. I was home; the whole thing never happened. They just made it all up.
Can you acknowledge there’s a meaningful difference there? In the first scenario my critic is exaggerating and spinning something that actually happened to make me look bad. It’s an inaccurate characterization but I did go to a party and I did drink too much.
In the second scenario, my critic is just making up something that never happened at all to make me look bad. It’s not the same. Yes they’re both ‘misleading’. But making up events that never happened different than making misleading or exaggerated claims about events that did happen.
The route is different but the endpoint is the same. You end up with your reputation damaged based on false information. Do you care how it got to that point?
I’m curious as to why you think the ‘endpoint is the same’? Do you believe the actions of the critic in the second scenario are really ‘no more misleading’ than in the first?
I understand your point, but either way people who weren’t there think you were an out of control lush.
The route is different but the endpoint is the same. You end up with your reputation damaged based on false information. Do you care how it got to that point?
I understand your point, but either way people who weren’t there think you were an out of control lush.
bevis — The difference is that the question whether you were an out of control lush arises in the first instance because of your own conduct, and the answer is a matter of observers’ opinions based on facts they can see.
General Grant suffered considerable damage to his reputation in that way. Arguably it was justifiable damage; Grant was a hard drinker. That caused him to tailor his behavior somewhat, giving outright enemies fewer opportunities for attacks of that sort. Naturally, he thought he had also been defamed by such attacks.
In the second instance—the case of a liar’s made-up attack—there is zero ability to do anything to ward it off. And opinion has nothing to do with it. Because General Grant had many unprincipled personal enemies, and a justified reputation for drinking, he also suffered actually defamatory attacks of that sort, which somewhat tarnish his reputation to this day.
At least in principle, Grant had a remedy in court. Because he was a practical person, and also the nation’s most popular public figure, Grant had no need to file law suits, even though in some instances he could have proved knowing falsehood. Grant’s biographers have done that proof for him, to the advantage of his reputation for posterity, and to the discredit of Grant’s unprincipled enemies. That is work even Grant himself could not have accomplished, in his own celebrated memoirs.
When you said above, “I understand the difference between fact and opinion one hell of a lot better than you,” you were mistaken.
An opportunity to remedy your own conduct to better manage others’ opinions is of great value to many. But in the case of outright defamatory lies made against you, the difference is in the availability of remedies, both in court for the sake of your present well-being, and in retrospect, for your reputation among your own posterity, and in history. Of course practical people of little public note treasure the former protection more than they need the latter. But a wise person with an unknown future in front of him might value both protections considerably.
You don't give an example of twisting the facts, so here is one that I've seen cited by other commenters as an example of Maddow's supposed dishonesty. In a segment about how OAN had hired an RT employee as a reporter, Maddow stated: “In this case, the most obsequiously pro-Trump right wing news outlet in America really literally is paid Russian propaganda. Their on-air U.S. politics reporter is paid by the Russian government to produce propaganda for that government.”
OAN argued that this was libellous because it implied that Russia paid OAN. OAN lost, and had to pay Maddow's legal fees, because Maddow was clear about what the facts were. In context, Maddow's reference to paid Russian propaganda is just an expression of the opinion that there is no real difference between Russia paying OAN and Russia paying one of OAN's “reporters.” This is substantially different from misrepresenting the facts because viewers can form their own opinion about whether there is a difference. This is different from Fox News hosts misrepresenting the facts, where the viewer has no way of knowing that they are being lied to unless they perform an independent fact check.
https://reason.com/volokh/2021/08/17/one-america-networks-libel-lawsuit-against-rachel-maddow-rejected-by-ninth-circuit/
Their on-air U.S. politics reporter is paid by the Russian government to produce propaganda for that government.”
Is this not a factual statement?
Maddow was the High Priestess of the Russia hoax. The chief advocate for the Steele Dossier in the media.
No bad information from her. No siree.
bevis — Sorry to have to correct you on this, but what you call "the Russia hoax," remains a question for history. Without question, the Mueller Report was obstructed by Trump's supporters, but nevertheless delivered firm evidence of too many untoward connections between Trump administration figures and Russia.
There is an undisputed record of criminal convictions of some of those figures. There was disgrace, and Presidential pardon of figures possibly positioned to inform on Trump himself.
Only someone with over-reliance on corrupt pro-Trump media sources, which systematically omitted important facts from their reporting, would conclude confidently that there had been a hoax. That does not mean a case cannot be made that Trump was not involved. It does mean it takes a sucker to insist he could not have been. Perhaps that is you.
Russia hoax.
Really, dude? The right wing continually calling it that doesn't mean Trump's election and later transition team wasn't deep in with Russian intel's election destabilization attempts.
Heck, while I find it unlikely to be gospel, nothing in the Steele Dossier has been debunked yet, and some of it has been confirmed.
So what is a "responsible, prominent organization"? Explicit credentialism? Or just any so-called news operation that fakes it enough that the judge is willing to call them that?
Face it, all "major media" have been gaslighting the public since at least 2008. There is no longer a mainstream because they have all forfeited the public's trust, even Fox. What few trustworthy media still exist are on podcasts or blogs.
They did a solid job of reporting on Khalil, though.
What makes these podcasts and blogs trustworthy? That you agree with them, or is there some other metric? How would I determine that trustworthiness?
In your desperate attempt to manufacture victim status for yourself, you didn't bother to read. The issue isn't whether the news operation is a "responsible, prominent organization"; the issue is whether the group raising the allegations that the news operation is reporting on is a "responsible, prominent organization."
Let me guess: what makes them trustworthy is that they tell you what you want to hear.
Dobbs does serve as an exhibit as to the decay of our media. I remember him when he hosted the Nightly Business Report on PBS. Kind of a typical smooth somewhat knowledgeable host of a typical business show. Boring as white bread.
So why has he chosen to morph into a fire breathing purveyor of bullshit? Because that’s where the money is now? Why talk about boring markets when you can inflame tens of thousands on Twitter and nobody ever checks your work?
Agree here.
No, you don't; he was never on PBS. He was on CNN as a sane, neutral host of their business program. Moneyline, I think it was called?
He went off the deep end sometime in the mid-oughts (a decade before Trump, so TFG isn't to blame). He is seriously loopy, but it appears to be sincere, rather than a shtick like Tucker Carlson's.
You’re probably right. Same observation, different venue.
Nieporent — Loopy but sincere is nearly a job requirement for broadcast news business reporters. Make it a point to notice, even sports reporters do a better job of anchoring their reported conclusions in demonstrable facts. Most broadcast news business reporters barely get through any sentence without uncritical reliance on one or another overworked business nostrum. As a class, broadcast business reporters seem like the least curious bunch in journalism.
Given that Federal judges are increasingly equating “Sydney Powell said it” with “reckless disregard for the truth,” it’s worth noting that Sydney Powell is not trying to sue for libel.