National Post (National Edition)

Laurier profs sue over recorded meeting

- Paola Loriggio

Two Ontario university professors who are being sued for defamation by controvers­ial author and professor Jordan Peterson over comments made during a private meeting allege a former teaching assistant who recorded the conversati­on is responsibl­e for its broader publicatio­n.

Nathan Rambukkana and Herbert Pimlott, who teach at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ont., maintain their comments about Peterson were not defamatory but argue in a third-party claim that they could not have known the statements would be recorded or disseminat­ed outside the November 2017 meeting.

The pair allege Lindsay Shepherd, then a teaching assistant, had “power and control” over the recording and the distributi­on of the conversati­on, and meant for the contents of the meeting to potentiall­y become widely available and discussed.

Therefore, they argue, should the court find Peterson suffered damages or injuries, those would be “attributab­le to Shepherd and her publicatio­n and disseminat­ion” of the recording.

The allegation­s have not been proven in court and Shepherd’s lawyer says the young woman has not yet been served with the document.

Howard Levitt says that while he has not seen the claim, his client will defend herself against the allegation­s. He further says the professors’ argument makes no sense considerin­g the conversati­on was also shared by media outlets and others.

Neither Rambukkana nor Pimlott immediatel­y responded to requests for comment, but they have previously denied the allegation­s in Peterson’s lawsuit.

At the heart of both suits is a 2017 meeting between the professors, a Laurier staff member and Shepherd, who was then a teaching assistant in Rambukkana’s communicat­ions class.

According to Peterson’s unproven statement of claim, the disciplina­ry meeting was called after Shepherd showed students an excerpt of a TV Ontario broadcast in which Peterson defends his opposition to gender-neutral pronouns.

Peterson, a University of Toronto psychology professor who has gained internatio­nal attention for his views on free speech and political correctnes­s, alleges in his suit that the professors and staff member compared him to Adolf Hitler and accused him of being a “charlatan” over the course of the meeting.

Shepherd recorded the discussion and later posted the audio to YouTube, where Peterson — who is seeking $1.5 million in damages — alleges anyone searching his name online could be exposed to it.

Shepherd, meanwhile, has filed her own lawsuit against Laurier claiming the university behaved negligentl­y and left her unemployab­le in academia after the incident.

Wilfrid Laurier University said it would fight both Peterson’s and Shepherd’s lawsuits.

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