WILMINGTON, Delaware — A judge will soon decide how much of Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation case against Fox News and Fox Corp. heads to a jury next month, after two days of hearings on dueling motions seeking pretrial rulings.
In a sedate, partially empty courtroom here, attorneys for both sides made the case that the evidence produced in a year of discovery and depositions was so clear and convincing that Superior Court Judge Eric Davis could weigh in now.
“The parties demonstrated to me this is a very difficult case,” Davis said from the bench on Wednesday, noting that he’d rush to complete a summary judgement ruling ahead of the planned April trial. “Instead of losing my trial date, I agreed I’d work harder with respect to summary judgment.”
Any rulings — both partial or complete summary judgement — at this stage could sharply limit and shape the historic defamation case, on everything from what claims are considered to who can be held liable. Davis said Wednesday he wouldn’t rule today, but indicated his decision will come soon.
Dominion sued Fox News and Fox Corp. for $1.6 billion, arguing that certain Fox News broadcasts and hosts’ tweets that included conspiracy theories about Dominion voting systems — like the claim that the machines were used to rig the election for Joe Biden — were defamatory.
“Despite the noise and confusion that Dominion has generated by presenting cherry-picked quotes without context, this case is ultimately about the First Amendment protections of the media’s absolute need to cover the news,” a Fox News spokesperson said in a statement. “FOX will continue to fiercely advocate for the rights of free speech and a free press.”
In hours of arguments and question-and-answer, lawyers for both sides sparred over tweets, broadcasts and what it means for something to be an allegation.
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Calling something an allegation is not “legal fairy dust” that makes factual claims into opinions, Dominion attorney Rodney Smolla argued, pushing back against Fox News’ arguments.
Erin Murphy, an attorney for Fox News and Fox Corporation, spoke quickly in her presentations Tuesday and Wednesday, claiming that reporting on newsworthy allegations from newsworthy people is not defamation. Executives simply being aware of a guest’s planned appearance, she said, is not direct involvement in the production of that show.
“The ability to step in is different from proving you were involved,” she said.
A jury trial is scheduled to begin April 17. The judge said the lawyers would have to agree on whether they’d have testimony from live or videotaped witnesses for their jury presentations.
“I prefer live witnesses,” he added. “This is supposed to be a truth-seeking situation, not a game of gotcha.”
Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com