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Alabama Basketball Player's Libel Lawsuit Against New York Times Can Go Forward
From today's decision by Judge Scott Googler (N.D. Ala.) in Spears v. New York Times Co. (for more on the earlier correction in the case, see here):
On the night of January 14, 2023, Spears and his two high school friends, Dylan Serafini and Esai Morse, went to the popular student gathering area called "The Strip" located on University Boulevard in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, following the Alabama-LSU basketball game. At the time, Spears was a freshman at The University of Alabama and played guard on the Alabama basketball team. At 12:30 a.m., Spears and his friends met up outside of Houndstooth Bar with one of Spears's teammates, Brandon Miller, and were also joined at some point by the team's student manager, Cooper Lee. After meeting up, they drove to Moe's Original BBQ in downtown Tuscaloosa where they stayed until 1:40 a.m. While at Moe's BBQ, Spears FaceTimed another teammate, Jaden Bradley, who invited Spears and his friends to join Bradley and others.
After declining the invitation to go out, Spears and his friends drove back to his dorm room while Miller and Lee drove to The Strip in Miller's car. At 1:48 a.m., Spears FaceTimed Bradley again to see where they had gone, which is when Spears learned that there had just been a shooting on The Strip and bullets had struck Miller's windshield. Later that day, Tuscaloosa police investigated the incident and interviewed members of the basketball team who were out the night before, including Spears. Police ultimately charged two men in relation to the shooting. No one else, including Spears, was charged.
In its investigation of the incident, The Times learned that surveillance video showed two people "were struck by bullets in the crossfire," and that a "detective also made note of an unidentified passenger in Miller's car." In March, a confidential source "familiar with the case" purportedly told The Times that Spears was the unidentified passenger in Miller's car at the time of the shooting.
On March 15, a reporter for The Times approached Spears and asked, "The night of the shooting, when you were in Brandon Miller's car, were you scared when the shots were fired?" Spears replied, "No comment." The reporter then asked Spears if he wanted to comment on his presence the night of the shooting to which Spears again replied, "No comment."
Later that night, The Times published an article describing Spears' s alleged presence at the shooting with the headline: "A Fourth Alabama Player Was at a Deadly Shooting, in a Car Hit by Bullets." The article included various statements about Spears's alleged involvement, such as, "[i]n another car that was struck were Brandon Miller, a star player for the Crimson Tide, and Kai Spears, a freshman walk-on whose presence at the scene had not been previously reported," and "[i]ncluding Spears, at least four Alabama players have now been placed at the scene of the shooting that took place in the early morning hours of Jan. 15…." Following publication, representatives of The University of Alabama and affiliates of Spears told The Times that Spears was not present at the shooting. On March 20, Spears's attorney requested a public retraction of the statements pursuant to Ala. Code § 6-5-186, which The Times declined.
Spears sued, and the court let his libel claim go forward:
When printed defamatory language "exposes the plaintiff to public ridicule or contempt, though it does not embody an accusation of crime," damages are presumed and libel is actionable per se [under Alabama law, with no need to prove specific damages]…. "The question of whether an article is libel per se is identical to the question [of] whether the article is defamatory." …
The test for determining whether an article is defamatory is "whether an ordinary reader or a reader of average intelligence, reading the article as a whole, would ascribe a defamatory meaning to the language." … The Times argues that the article depicts Spears as a potential victim of the shooting and, therefore, it is not defamatory. Indeed, the article does not expressly accuse Spears of any crime. Instead, it identifies Spears as one of "two players [who] were in a car struck by bullets in the crossfire." The article claims that the shooting "could have been even more deadly" in that " [t]wo bullets struck the windshield of Miller's car" but"[n]either struck Miller or Spears." Read alone, these statements do not appear reasonably capable of conveying a defamatory meaning. However, they must be read in the context of "the article as a whole."
As Spears argues, an ordinary reader, reading the article as a whole, could reasonably ascribe to it the implied suggestion that Spears was somehow complicit in the shooting. The article refers to multiple members of the basketball team—including Spears—as being "involved" in the "fatal January shooting." It further claims that the University "kept quiet" those players' involvement in the shooting. The article also places Spears "at the scene of the shooting" and in the car that transported the gun used in the shooting:
[A police detective] said that Miles had texted Miller, telling him to pick him up and that "I need my joint," referring to Miles' s gun, which he had left in the back seat of Miller's car.
The detective also made note of an unidentified passenger in Miller's car. A person familiar with the case identified that person as Spears.
Taken together, these statements could reasonably be read as implying that Spears was reprehensibly "involved" in the shooting. As such, the language could "expose[] [Spears] to public ridicule or contempt, though it does not embody an accusation of crime."
The court rejected, however, Spears' false light invasion of privacy claim, because that claim requires (under Alabama law) a showing of so-called "actual malice"—i.e., a showing that the defendant knew the statement was false or at least likely false—and the court concluded that Spears hadn't adequately alleged facts supporting such knowledge on the Times' part. The actual malice issue might come up later with regard to the defamation claim, especially if Spears is found to be a public figure. But at this point in the lawsuit, the Times didn't make such an argument; to quote the motion to dismiss,
On this motion, The Times advances this argument regarding the lack of actual malice only with respect to the claim for false light invasion of privacy, for which it is an element of the cause of action for every plaintiff. Although actual malice is frequently an element discussed in the context of public-figure defamation claims, The Times does not assert the public-figure status of Spears in this motion, which is based solely on the pleadings and materials properly incorporated therein (like the Challenged Report). Should this action proceed, however, The Times would expect the plaintiff's public-figure status to be a subject of discovery.
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The New York Times lies again.
In what way is this 'news'?
Always remember : When someone like Longtobefree fulminates against the NYT, it isn't about the small number of times they make an error, but over the vast majority of times they report things right.
Things he doesn't want to hear.....
How do you know those other articles are accurate?
Are you present and aware for all of the events that the New York Times writes about?
Great argument, Toranth. You are the audience this shitty, polemical blog cultivates and deserves.
But, but they have all those "Pullitzers" (as in pull my finger) to show that they are right.
Always remember : When someone like Bumble pretends nothing can be trusted and no news has value, it isn’t because he believes it. He’s not that dumb. Instead, he’s looking for an excuse to ignore reporting he finds uncomfortable or inconvenient in favor of cherry-picked trash that tells him only what he wants to hear.
I'm glad your telepathy is telling you what all these other people you've never met actually believe, but do you feel like answering my question that your premise is based on?
Just as a note, each day the NYT publishes around a half-dozen or so corrections. In other words, each day, there are enough people that read an article, know it is wrong, feel upset enough to contact the NYT, supply evidence of the error, convince the editors that the error needs correction, and then have that correction posted and printed - five or six times over. And that doesn't include the many stealth-edits that modern 'newspaper' website indulge in.
How many people do you think there are that can identify errors, but are unwilling or unable to go through all those steps?
And all this assumes innocent error, rather than Duranty-style deliberate lies and propaganda.
Half-educated, roundly bigoted, superstitious right-wingers whose disdain for modern America inclines them to hate America's strongest newspapers are among my favorite disaffected culture war casualties.
I expect to urinate on the grave of your conservative political preferences, clinger, then enjoy a nice beer while reading the Washington Post and the New York Times.
They haven't gotten a Pulitzer for this lie yet?
The reference to a confidential source "familiar with the case" is a clear indicator of lying weasels.
How long will it be until the NYT gets the bitch slapping they deserve?
When SCOTUS overrules Times vs. Sullivan.
Sorry to interrupt this MAGA whining, but there’s a more important question to be resolved about this :
” following the Alabama-LSD basketball game”
So is there really a school named “LSD”? Is this school located in the SEC? And did this Alabama-LSD basketball game take place in a physical sense, or was it all in someone’s mind?
Sorry, document scanning glitch; fixed.
Whew! I was afraid you were hallucinating.
Off topic but thought I'd throw this out to you for possible comment in tomorrow's open thread.
https://tomklingenstein.com/recovering-anti-woke-architecture/
Link in article goes to pdf of Grand Penn plan.
Pretty hilarious read – with beliefs ascribed to “woke architects” that exactly no one believes, filled with aesthetic jeremiads dumbed-down to the level of a child, and – of course – chock-full of the Right’s neverending victimhood whinging. If only someone told me the unwashed were forbidden from criticizing a design! I might have ignored those times it happened to me…
As for Penn/MSG, some points:
1. Everyone loathes Madison Square Garden. That would include “woke architects”, if they were anything more than a scary fairy tale your handlers created to frighten you. In fact, with the one exception of James Dolan, detesting MSG might be the only universally held opinion.
2. Likewise, everyone sees Penn Station’s razing as the architectural crime of the century.
3. Nonetheless, countless schemes to fix the mistake have floundered. Not because of “woke architects”. Who could be so imbecilic as to believe that? But because of monied interests.
4. There have been attempts to mitigate the crime, started by that friend of “woke architects”, Patrick Moynihan, with one building bearing his name : https://www.som.com/projects/moynihan-train-hall/
5. But most people think Dolan is too entrenched to dislodge. The best scheme I’ve seen with any chance of success carefully intervenes & excides & adds to the current mess. It’s by the private developer ASTM and (woke architects!) HOK. There’s an account below (if you can stomach reading the NYT) :
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/07/arts/design/penn-station-renovation-proposals.html
Sticking with New York, the architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro are possibly the closest thing to your fantasy of woke architects that exists outside of your fevered brain. Yet they’ve given New Yorkers two of their most popular recent works of architecture : The High Line and the Shed. The former is a exquisitly-detailed variegated promenade above the city streets running 1.5 miles downtown. It’s Number Two on my favorite things to do on a NYC visit, right after a late-night walk across the Brooklyn Bridge
https://arquitecturaviva.com/works/paseo-urbano-high-line-nueva-york-4
The Shed is a design and engineering wonder that can be configured and reconfigured in multiple ways, open and closed, large and small.
https://www.architonic.com/en/project/diller-scofidio-renfro-the-shed/20143435
Good job, Woke Architects!
Also, it's Judge Coogler, not Googler.
Good catch. He's a good judge that doesn't get enough credit.
.
As is customary, this “scholarly” blog corrected a published mistake without noting the mistake or the correction — because that’s how Federalist Society “scholars” (self-described “scholars,” of course) roll these days.
The mistake concerning the judge's name has not yet been corrected, despite the pointer from a reader.
Get an education, clingers.
That is indeed customary. Kirkland pretends not to know how blogs work.
"[F]ollowing the Alabama-LSD basketball game"?
I have been tangentially involved in fewer than six newsworthy incidents that were reported in print, but never named in the coverage. In each case, virtually none of the reporting accurately described the incident. Based on this limited set of data, I conclude that reporters are lazy, ignorant, and often hyperbolic.
Of course, I might be mistaken...
Probably not mistaken. The only report that I knew much about they didn't get much right, including showing a map with the city involved 60-70 miles away (Concord CA shown where San Jose is).
Reporters are lazy, ignorant, and often hyperbolic.
Right-wing law professors are stale-thinking, bigoted hypocrites and disaffected, disrespected cowards.
Where do you see the hope for America, Yogis_dad?
An interesting aspect of this incident is the very gentle treatment afforded Miller, SEC Player of the Year, who provided the gun that was used by Michael Davis in the shooting.
Right up to being the Number-Two pick in the 2023 NBA draft. In all fairness, the first pick, Victor Wembanyama, appears to be an fine citizen and outstanding young man.
And the old lion, Lebron James, has had a scandal-free career of over two decades - married to his childhood sweetheart, exemplary family man, committed to multiple philanthropic efforts, relentlessly disciplined and a fierce competitor.
As for Miller, I blame this country's sick obssession with guns. No doubt Michael Davis, the guns owner, thought he needed it for "protection".....