Dominion Voting sues Fox for $1.6B over 2020 election claims

https://edition.cnn.com/2023/02/23/media/fox-news-dominion-reliable-sources/index.html

‘It’s a major blow’: Dominion has uncovered ‘smoking gun’ evidence in case against Fox News, legal experts say

Analysis by Oliver Darcy, CNN
Updated 11:29 PM EST, Thu February 23, 2023

(CNN) - Fox News is in serious hot water.

That’s what several legal experts told CNN this week following Dominion Voting Systems explosive legal filing against the right-wing talk channel, revealing the network’s executives and hosts privately blasted the election fraud claims being peddled by Donald Trump’s team, despite allowing lies about the 2020 contest to be promoted on its air.

While the legal experts cautioned that they would like to see Fox News’ formal legal response to the filing, they all indicated in no uncertain terms that the evidence compiled in Dominion’s legal filing represents a serious threat to the channel.

“It’s a major blow,” attorney Floyd Abrams of Pentagon Papers fame said, adding that the “recent revelations certainly put Fox in a more precarious situation” in defending against the lawsuit on First Amendment grounds.

Rebecca Tushnet, the Frank Stanton Professor of First Amendment Law at Harvard Law School, described Dominion’s evidence as a “very strong” filing that “clearly lays out the difference between what Fox was saying publicly and what top people at Fox were privately admitting.”

A cache of behind-the-scenes messages included in the legal filing showed Fox Corp chairman Rupert Murdoch called Trump’s claims “really crazy stuff,” and the cable network’s stars — including Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, and Laura Ingraham — brutally mock the lies being pushed by the former president’s camp asserting that the election was rigged.

It also showed attempts to crack down on fact-checking election lies. On one occasion, Carlson demanded that Fox News White House correspondent Jacqui Heinrich be fired after she fact-checked a Trump tweet pushing election fraud claims.

Tushnet said that in all of her years practicing and teaching law, she had never seen such damning evidence collected in the pre-trial phase of a defamation suit. “I don’t recall anything comparable to this,” Tushnet said. “Donald Trump seems to be very good at generating unprecedented situations.”

David Korzenik, an attorney who teaches First Amendment law and represents a number of media organizations, said that the filing showed Dominion’s case against Fox News has serious teeth.

Korzenik stressed that while the law allows for bias and ratings-seeking behavior by media outlets, it does not allow for the publication of material one knows to be false. The filing, Korzenik said, “certainly puts Fox in the actual malice crosshairs and puts them in real jeopardy.”

RonNell Andersen Jones, a professor and media law scholar at the University of Utah, described the evidence as “pretty voluminous” and said that she too had never seen evidence like it collected in a high-profile defamation case against an outlet as enormous as Fox.

“This is a pretty staggering brief,” Jones said. “Dominion’s filing here is unique not just as to the volume of the evidence but also as to the directness of the evidence and the timeline of the evidence.”

“This ‘out of the horse’s mouth’ evidence of knowing falsity is not something we often see,” Jones added. “When coupled with the compelling storyline that Dominion is telling about motivation — the evidence that at least some key players in the organization were actively looking to advance some election denialism in order to win back viewers who had departed — it makes for a strong actual malice storyline.”

In a statement, Fox News accused Dominion of generating “noise and confusion,” adding, “the core of this case remains about freedom of the press and freedom of speech, which are fundamental rights afforded by the Constitution and protected by New York Times v. Sullivan.”

“Dominion has 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,” the network said. “Their motion for summary judgment takes an extreme and unsupported view of defamation law and rests on an accounting of the facts that has no basis in the record.”

But the attorneys said Dominion’s filing showed it had built a powerful case against Fox.

“The dream for a plaintiff’s attorney is what Dominion claims to have here,” Jones said, “smoking-gun internal statements both acknowledging the lie and deciding to forge ahead with perpetuating it.”

They'll have to settle. No way Dominion risks this being appealed all the way to SCOTUS.

You see McCarthy boasting about giving thousands of hours of video footage of Jan 6. to Cucker Tarlson to curate it and spin the narrative?
 
They'll have to settle. No way Dominion risks this being appealed all the way to SCOTUS.

You see McCarthy boasting about giving thousands of hours of video footage of Jan 6. to Cucker Tarlson to curate it and spin the narrative?

well settling works best for both sides....FOX.will not want the discovery process that occurs and their secrets exposed.to the world also....
 
well settling works best for both sides....FOX.will not want the discovery process that occurs and their secrets exposed.to the world also....
plus I think they can get away w/a deep discount because they know Dominion knows the courts gives them leverage.
 
fox on fox viewers:

upload_2023-3-15_15-18-10.png
 
https://apnews.com/article/joe-bide...ts-elections-912eea8e168f95d51dec02da78ac2760
Dominion Voting sues Fox for $1.6B over 2020 election claims

WASHINGTON (AP) — Dominion Voting Systems on Friday filed a $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox News, arguing the cable news giant falsely claimed in an effort to boost faltering ratings that the voting company had rigged the 2020 election.

It’s the first defamation suit filed against a media outlet by the voting company, which was a target of misleading, false and bizarre claims spread by President Donald Trump and his allies in the aftermath of Trump’s election loss to Joe Biden. Those claims helped spur on rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 in a violent siege that left five people dead, including a police officer. The siege led to Trump’s historic second impeachment.

Dominion argues that Fox News, which amplified inaccurate assertions that Dominion altered votes, “sold a false story of election fraud in order to serve its own commercial purposes, severely injuring Dominion in the process,” according to a copy of the lawsuit obtained by The Associated Press.

“The truth matters. Lies have consequences,” the lawsuit said. “Fox sold a false story of election fraud in order to serve its own commercial purposes, severely injuring Dominion in the process. If this case does not rise to the level of defamation by a broadcaster, then nothing does.”

Some Fox News on-air reporting segments have debunked some of the claims targeting Dominion. An email sent to Fox News on Friday morning, seeking comment on the lawsuit, was not immediately returned.

There was no widespread fraud in the 2020 election, a fact that a range of election officials across the country — and even Trump’s attorney general, William Barr — have confirmed. Republican governors in Arizona and Georgia, key battleground states crucial to Biden’s victory, also vouched for the integrity of the elections in their states. Nearly all the legal challenges from Trump and his allies were dismissed by judges, including two tossed by the Supreme Court, which has three Trump-nominated justices.

Still, some Fox News employees elevated false charges that Dominion had changed votes through algorithms in its voting machines that had been created in Venezuela to rig elections for the late dictator Hugo Chavez. On-air personalities brought on Trump allies Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani, who spread the claims, and then amplified those claims on Fox News’ massive social media platforms.

Dominion said in the lawsuit that it tried repeatedly to set the record straight but was ignored by Fox News.

The company argues that Fox News, a network that features several pro-Trump personalities, pushed the false claims to explain away the former president’s loss. The cable giant lost viewers after the election and was seen by some Trump supporters as not being supportive enough of the Republican.

Attorneys for Dominion said Fox News’ behavior differs greatly from that of other media outlets that reported on the claims.

“This was a conscious, knowing business decision to endorse and repeat and broadcast these lies in order to keep its viewership,” said attorney Justin Nelson, of Susman Godfrey.

Though Dominion serves 28 states, until the 2020 election it had been largely unknown outside the election community. It is now widely targeted in conservative circles, seen by millions of people as one of the main villains in a fictional tale in which Democrats nationwide conspired to steal votes from Trump, the lawsuit said.

Dominion’s employees, from its software engineers to its founder, have been harassed. Some received death threats. And the company has suffered “enormous and irreparable economic harm,” lawyers said.

Dominion has also sued Giuliani, Powell and the CEO of Minnesota-based MyPillow over the claims. A rival technology company, Smartmatic USA, also sued Fox News over election claims. Unlike Dominion, Smartmatic’s participation in the 2020 election was restricted to Los Angeles County.

Dominion lawyers said they have not yet filed lawsuits against specific media personalities at Fox News but the door remains open. Some at Fox News knew the claims were false but their comments were drowned out, lawyers said.

“The buck stops with Fox on this,” attorney Stephen Shackelford said. “Fox chose to put this on all of its many platforms. They rebroadcast, republished it on social media and other places.”

The suit was filed in Delaware, where both companies are incorporated, though Fox News is headquartered in New York and Dominion is based in Denver.

I hope the judge sets a precedent by awarding Dominion more than the $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit because Fox news was in fact in step with former President Trump about the BIG LIE while behind the scenes they knew it was all a lie instead of showing integrity by reporting on that BIG LIE...

The unprofessional journalism by the reporters of Fox news helped whipped up the crowd to storm the capitol and democracy on January 6th. It resulted in a U.S. military veteran (a protester) being shot & killed when the protection security had no choice but to shoot her dead when she refused to stand down from forcing her way into the barricaded room and later capitol police suffering injuries & death.

Many other lives were ruined too involving many of the protestors that ALL believed in the BIG LIE that the 2020 Presidential election was stolen due to Dominion actions.

-------
Romance novel model gets prison for Jan. 6 attack on police
Story by By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN, Associated Press • 5h ago

A Michigan pipelayer who modeled for covers of romance novels was sentenced on Thursday to three years in prison for assaulting police at the U.S. Capitol during a mob’s attack.

Insurrection-January-6th-Capitol-Democracy.png


Logan Barnhart joined one of the most brutal clashes between rioters and police on Jan. 6, 2021. He grabbed an officer by his neck and torso and dragged him into the crowd of rioters on the Capitol’s Lower West Terrace. Minutes later, he returned to a police line and swung a flagpole at officers.

Barnhart, 42, of Holt, Michigan, said he didn't recognize himself on a video, shown in court, that captured him assaulting the officer.
  • “The way I was acting seems so foreign to me,” he told U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras.
Contreras also sentenced Barnhart to three years of supervised release after his prison term and ordered him to pay a $3,688 fine and $2,000 in restitution. Contreras said anybody who “directly and brazenly” attacks police is inherently dangerous to the public.

“He ran to the fight,” the judge said.

Earlier on Thursday, a former Capitol police officer avoided a prison sentence for trying to help a Virginia fisherman avoid criminal charges for storming the building his law enforcement colleagues defended on Jan. 6. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson sentenced Michael Angelo Riley to two years of probation and four months of home detention.

Riley, a 25-year police veteran, was on duty when a mob attacked the Capitol, injuring more than 100 officers. Riley’s voice cracked as he lamented how his “awful judgment” cost him his career, tarnished his reputation, ended friendships in the department and traumatized his family.

“The amount of regret and remorse I have over this situation is unimaginable,” Riley told the judge.

In Barnhart's case, federal prosecutors had recommended a prison term of five years and three months. Barnhart has been on home detention while awaiting his sentencing. The judge ordered him to remain on home detention until he reports to prison at a date to be determined.

Barnhart has worked as a pipelayer and heavy machine operator for construction companies.NBC News reportedthat Barnhart has modeled for covers of romance novels, including “Stepbrother UnSEALed: A Bad Boy Military Romance.” Internet sleuths using facial recognition technology found photographs of Barnhart from his modeling career, NBC reported.

Defense attorney Michelle Peterson said Barnhart drove alone to Washington, D.C., to attend the “Stop the Steal” rally on Jan. 6 because he wanted to support then-President Donald Trump and believed the baseless claims that Democrats stole the election from the Republican incumbent.

“Now two years away from the chaos of that day, he is deeply remorseful and cannot understand how he acted so foolishly,” Peterson wrote.

Romance novel model gets prison for Jan. 6 attack on police (msn.com)

wrbtrader
 
Last edited:
I hope the judge sets a precedent by awarding Dominion more than the $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit because Fox news was in fact in step with former President Trump about the BIG LIE while behind the scenes they knew it was all a lie instead of showing integrity by reporting on that BIG LIE...

The unprofessional journalism by the reporters of Fox news helped whipped up the crowd to storm the capitol and democracy on January 6th. It resulted in a U.S. military veteran (a protester) being shot & killed when the protection security had no choice but to shoot her dead when she refused to stand down from forcing her way into the barricaded room and later capitol police suffering injuries & death.

Many other lives were ruined too involving many of the protestors that ALL believed in the BIG LIE that the 2020 Presidential election was stolen due to Dominion actions.

-------
Romance novel model gets prison for Jan. 6 attack on police
Story by By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN, Associated Press • 5h ago

A Michigan pipelayer who modeled for covers of romance novels was sentenced on Thursday to three years in prison for assaulting police at the U.S. Capitol during a mob’s attack.

View attachment 311745

Logan Barnhart joined one of the most brutal clashes between rioters and police on Jan. 6, 2021. He grabbed an officer by his neck and torso and dragged him into the crowd of rioters on the Capitol’s Lower West Terrace. Minutes later, he returned to a police line and swung a flagpole at officers.

Barnhart, 42, of Holt, Michigan, said he didn't recognize himself on a video, shown in court, that captured him assaulting the officer.
  • “The way I was acting seems so foreign to me,” he told U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras.
Contreras also sentenced Barnhart to three years of supervised release after his prison term and ordered him to pay a $3,688 fine and $2,000 in restitution. Contreras said anybody who “directly and brazenly” attacks police is inherently dangerous to the public.

“He ran to the fight,” the judge said.

Earlier on Thursday, a former Capitol police officer avoided a prison sentence for trying to help a Virginia fisherman avoid criminal charges for storming the building his law enforcement colleagues defended on Jan. 6. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson sentenced Michael Angelo Riley to two years of probation and four months of home detention.

Riley, a 25-year police veteran, was on duty when a mob attacked the Capitol, injuring more than 100 officers. Riley’s voice cracked as he lamented how his “awful judgment” cost him his career, tarnished his reputation, ended friendships in the department and traumatized his family.

“The amount of regret and remorse I have over this situation is unimaginable,” Riley told the judge.

In Barnhart's case, federal prosecutors had recommended a prison term of five years and three months. Barnhart has been on home detention while awaiting his sentencing. The judge ordered him to remain on home detention until he reports to prison at a date to be determined.

Barnhart has worked as a pipelayer and heavy machine operator for construction companies.NBC News reportedthat Barnhart has modeled for covers of romance novels, including “Stepbrother UnSEALed: A Bad Boy Military Romance.” Internet sleuths using facial recognition technology found photographs of Barnhart from his modeling career, NBC reported.

Defense attorney Michelle Peterson said Barnhart drove alone to Washington, D.C., to attend the “Stop the Steal” rally on Jan. 6 because he wanted to support then-President Donald Trump and believed the baseless claims that Democrats stole the election from the Republican incumbent.

“Now two years away from the chaos of that day, he is deeply remorseful and cannot understand how he acted so foolishly,” Peterson wrote.

Romance novel model gets prison for Jan. 6 attack on police (msn.com)

wrbtrader


I bet he'll be popular inside.
 
Fox News to defend its on-air lies as blockbuster Dominion trial to kick off

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/apr/16/fox-news-lawsuit-dominion-trial-rupert-murdoch

After Joe Biden was declared the winner of the 2020 presidential election, several hosts at
Fox News, the powerful network that feeds the pulse of America’s conservatives, aired outlandish and false claims about the vote. Many of them had to do with Dominion, a voting equipment company founded in 2003 that most Americans had never heard of.

Over and over again, the network aired the lie that Dominion machines rigged the election and were flipping votes. It aired the lie that the company was founded in Venezuela to rig elections for dictator Hugo Chávez. And it aired the lie that Dominion had bribed government officials to use its machines.

None of those claims were true and Fox hosts, producers and top executives knew it. A stunning trove of internal communications obtained by Dominion shows there was widespread disbelief at the company; everyone from Fox’s CEO, Rupert Murdoch, to top hosts such as Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson knew the claims were untrue, even as the network continued to air them to millions of Americans.

Those messages and the claims are now at the center of a blockbuster six-week jury trial set to begin on Monday in Wilmington, Delaware, where Fox is incorporated. Dominion is suing Fox News and its parent company Fox Corporation for defamation, seeking at least $1.6bn it says it is due to cover the reputational damage it suffered as a result of Fox’s lies. The jury could also choose to impose additional punitive damages.

The trial is seen as one of the strongest opportunities for holding Fox and Murdoch, accused for years of distorting the truth to rile up conservative viewers, accountable for its lies.

“It’s not just comeuppance on something insignificant,” said Angelo Caruso, the president of Media Matters for America, a left-leaning media watchdog group. “It’s become sort of a proxy for voting and January 6.”

It is extremely rare for a defamation case to go to trial – most are either dismissed or settled. US law sets an extraordinarily high bar that plaintiffs must clear to win a defamation case, requiring them to prove that someone acted with “actual malice” – knowing or reckless disregard for the truth – when they published a false claim.

But this case is unusual, experts say, because Dominion’s case is so strong. The evidence they have produced offers as close to smoking-gun evidence as one can get.

“Really crazy stuff. And damaging,” Rupert Murdoch wrote in a 19 November 2020 email as he watched Rudy Giuliani make false claims about Dominion at a press conference. “Sidney Powell is lying by the way. I caught her. It’s insane,” Tucker Carlson wrote in a text message on 18 November 2020, referring to one of Trump’s attorneys who continued to go on Fox’s air to spread false claims about Dominion. “It’s unbelievably offensive to me. Our viewers are good people and they believe it.”

By mid-November, Fox’s internal fact-checking operation, called the Brain Room, had investigated the claims about Dominion and determined they were false.

RonNell Andersen Jones, a first amendment scholar at the University of Utah, said the case was shaping up to be “the most important defamation case in generations”.

“It is ridiculously rare to have one of these actual malice cases in which the plaintiff can show the jury a series of statements that say, directly, ‘this is a lie’. Or ‘this is crazy’. Or ‘this is ludicrous’ or’ this source is lying’,” she said.

“You couldn’t make up a hypothetical of ‘what is actual malice’ that’s stronger than that,” said Lee Levine, a lawyer who has defended media organizations in defamation cases.

Lies about the 2020 election, like the ones spread by Fox, have seeped into orthodoxy of the Republican party and resulted in a wave of harassment against election officials, efforts to overturn election results, and the violence at the Capitol on January 6. It is now commonly referred to as the “big lie” in the US – the belief that elections cannot be trusted.

Dominion’s lawyers argue in court filings that Fox made a deliberate choice to play up such election lies because it was concerned about losing viewers to far-right competitors.

“Dominion’s narrative arc here is very much about the harm that this conscious, corporate lie did to the country and its people,” Jones said. “What’s unique about this case is that we also see the plaintiffs arguing that their case is about democracy preservation. That this lie was damaging not just to the individual voting machine company but to the entirety of the electorate and to the democracy itself.”

Fox talent, including Carlson, Hannity, Maria Bartiromo and Jeanine Pirro as well as Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch, will probably be key witnesses at the trial, setting the stage for weeks of a media frenzy in Wilmington, an otherwise quiet city where many US businesses are formally headquartered for tax benefits. Live testimony from Rupert Murdoch and top Fox hosts would offer a rare opportunity for Dominion’s lawyers to force some of the most powerful people in American media to answer questions under oath about whether they knowingly lied to their audience.

“There is a huge difference between seeing these emails and writing about them and having people talk about [how] Maria Bartiromo couldn’t answer that question or how Tucker Carlson was made to look like a fool on the stand,” Levine said. “I mean it’s a whole different order of magnitude.”

Levine and other observers have been baffled as to why Murdoch and Fox haven’t settled the case as they have been walloped by a drip of embarrassing revelations and the evidence. Murdoch has a history of settling high-profile cases against his media empire, including in 2011, when he settled with victims in the News of the World phone hacking scandal in the UK. He subsequently shut down the publication.

A $1.6bn verdict in Dominion’s favor, plus additional punitive damages, would sting Fox, but not be fatal for the company, which reported $13.97bn in revenue in the last fiscal year. ““In the coming weeks, we will prove Fox spread lies causing enormous damage to Dominion. We look forward to trial,” a Dominion spokesperson said in a statement.

A Fox spokesperson called the lawsuit “a political crusade in search of a financial windfall, but the real cost would be cherished first amendment rights”.

“While Dominion has pushed irrelevant and misleading information to generate headlines, Fox News remains steadfast in protecting the rights of a free press, given a verdict for Dominion and its private equity owners would have grave consequences for the entire journalism profession,” the spokesperson said.

But Fox is also facing additional legal trouble related to the case. Eric Davis, the Delaware superior court judge overseeing the case, appointed a special master on Wednesday to investigate whether Fox withheld evidence from Dominion’s lawyers. Abby Grossberg, a former Fox employee, is also suing the network, and says she was coerced into giving misleading testimony in the case.

The company also already faces a lawsuit from a shareholder who argues that company breached its fiduciary duty by allowing false claims to be broadcast, and a slew of similar lawsuits could follow.

Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a professor at the Yale School of Management, said he knew of 12 firms that were “chomping at the bit” to bring shareholder lawsuits.

“The duty of loyalty was being ransacked here with a reckless disregard for the truth in a way that was hurting the value of the shareholders of assets,” he said. “Duty of care is they didn’t bother to follow up, didn’t bother to confirm anything, bother to correct anything.”

Davis has already issued a series of pre-trial rulings that are likely to help Dominion and limit what Fox can argue in its defense. Davis has ruled the statements Fox aired were false. He has also said the network can’t argue it was protected because its hosts were reporting newsworthy allegations. He also rejected the idea that Fox could avoid liability for false statements because guests at other times had been more skeptical of the claims.

Much of the fight at the trial is likely to be over whether specific people at Fox with control over the challenged statements knew the statements were false or acted with reckless disregard and allowed them to be aired anyway, Anderson said.

Fox could also focus much of its argument at trial focused on attacking the $1.6bn Dominion says it is owed in damages, arguing the number is vastly inflated. “I think they’re gonna try and keep the number down. And if they keep the number down, at the end of the day they can declare victory, even if they lose on liability,” Levine said.

Beyond Fox, the case could also have broader implications for the protections afforded to media outlets in the US.It is unfolding at a moment when prominent US conservatives, including supreme court justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch, have suggested revisiting America’s libel laws to make it easier to sue media outlets. A win for Dominion would show that even though the US has an extraordinarily high bar to clear to prove a defamation case, it is still possible to hold a defamer liable.

The suit is also one of several measures under way across the US to hold those who spread insidious lies about the 2020 election accountable for their actions. Last year, a US House committee published a report laying bare how Donald Trump and key officials knew his claims about the election were false and continued to push them anyway. Trump and other key allies are also facing criminal investigations from the Fulton county district attorney and US justice department related to their activities to overturn the election.

Even if Dominion ultimately prevails in the case, though, it is unlikely to stop Fox from broadcasting the lie that the election was stolen, Caruso said. Indeed, the network has continued to embrace that lie amid the lawsuit, without specifically mentioning Dominion.

“They will become more artful liars,” he said. “I think it’ll slightly shift the threshold internally as to how much nonsensical conspiracy theories they’re willing to validate. And that will matter especially in an environment and a large portion of his base is still committed to this idea that we don’t have valid elections any more.”
 
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