Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge to dismiss Palin’s libel suit against Times

- TOM HAYS

NEW YORK — A judge said Monday he’ll dismiss the libel lawsuit that former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin filed against The New York Times, claiming the newspaper damaged her reputation with an editorial falsely linking her campaign rhetoric to a mass shooting.

U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff made the ruling with a jury still deliberati­ng in a New York City trial at which Palin — also a former Republican vice presidenti­al candidate, running alongside Arizona’s Sen. John McCain in 2008 — testified last week.

The judge said Palin had failed to show that the Times had acted out of malice, something required in libel lawsuits involving public figures.

Rakoff said he let jury deliberati­ons continue in case his decision winds up being reversed on appeal.

“This is the kind of case that inevitably goes up on appeal,” he said in an explanatio­n from the bench.

Lawyers for both Palin and the Times declined to comment immediatel­y.

Palin sued the Times in 2017, claiming the newspaper had damaged her career as a political commentato­r and consultant with the editorial about gun control published after U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise, a Louisiana Republican, was wounded when a man with a history of anti-GOP activity opened fire on a congressio­nal baseball team practice in Washington.

In the editorial, the Times wrote that before the 2011 mass shooting in Arizona that severely wounded former U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords and killed six others, Palin’s political action committee had contribute­d to an atmosphere of violence by circulatin­g a map of electoral districts that put Giffords and 19 other Democrats under stylized cross-hairs.

The Times acknowledg­ed that then-editorial page editor James Bennet had inserted wording that wrongly described both the map and any link to the shooting. But the newspaper’s lawyers said he made an “honest mistake” that was never intended to harm Palin.

To prove malice, Palin’s lawyers had to show that Bennet knew the wording was false or he knew that there was “a high probabilit­y” that it was false, the judge said.

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