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United States: Monthly Round Up – 6 October 2019

Welcome to INFORRM’s US Monthly Round Up which we have decided to revive for the benefit of our readers. Posts will consider monthly developments in media law across the United States. We hope readers find this useful.

The defamation case brought by Vern Unsworth – the Thai cave rescue diver – against Elon Musk is proceeding in Los Angeles. The claim follows a tweet by Mr Musk in which he described Mr Unsworth as a “pedo guy”. The BBC reports as does CNBC, the New York Times and Law360. It is noted that the case developed following an interview of Mr Unworth on CNN. The defence sought to define Mr Unsworth as a public figure but failed – meaning proving actual malice motivating the statements is not required. The original complaint, in the United States District Court of Central California, can be found here.

Republican Congressman Devin Nunes is suing CNN for $435m following the publication of a “demonstrably false hit piece” on him on November 22. The article stated that Lev Parnas was willing to testify that Nunes met with a former Ukrainian prosecutor in 2018 in an effort to get dirt on Vice President Joe Biden. Reuters, USA Today, Variety and Courthouse News report.

The United States planned extradition of Julian Assange has been criticised by the WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Kristinn Hrafnsson. The Guardian covers the implications of the policy, which has implications internationally for press freedom. Assange’s extradition has been topical for a while, with Human Rights Watch commenting.

Huawei is reportedly looking to sue the FCC for defamation following a ruling which states it would not offer subsidies to carrier who used equipment from suspect companies.

The Spectator [£] considers the importance of open media and citizen journalists in a recent article.

This month in the Courts

(1) whether a court or jury must determine if a factual connotation is “provably false” and

(2) whether the First Amendment permits defamation liability for expressing a subjective opinion about a matter of scientific or political controversy.

It is a shame that these points of determination will be left unresolved, which Justice Alito highlights in his dissenting opinion.

This Round up was complied by Suneet Sharma a junior legal professional with a particular interest and experience in media, information and privacy law.

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