Author Sparks denies lawsuit claims that he defamed educator
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Author Nicholas Sparks was balancing his entertainment career with overseeing the private Christian
school he founded in his North Carolina hometown when he concluded the school’s new headmaster was a failed experiment, the novelist testified Wednesday in a federal lawsuit.
Sparks said he sought the educator’s resignation before leaving for a 2013 business trip and days before a trustees meeting that he anticipated would result in Saul Hillel Benjamin’s firing.
Benjamin alleges in his lawsuit against Sparks, his foundation and Epiphany School of Global Studies that Sparks defamed him by telling parents, a job recruiter and others that the educator su ered from mental health problems. Benjamin also claims violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act because he was forced out based on his assumed ailment.
The school is in New Bern, about 120 miles (193 kilometers) east of Raleigh.
The author of “Message in a Bottle” and “The Notebook” told jurors at the start of the trial that Benjamin lied repeatedly about his previous work experience, disappeared without explanation during school hours, berated employees and accused parents and others of being bigots or racists.
The day Benjamin and the school cut ties, the educator was called to a meeting with Sparks, a lawyer and another school trustee. Sparks asked Benjamin whether he’d ever called people involved in the school bigots or racists, which the educator denied. Sparks called two people into the room who contradicted Benjamin. Sparks said he concluded Benjamin had lied.
“I believed I had enough from the information-gathering I had done by that point” to ask for his resignation, Sparks said, adding that Benjamin received a severance of more than $150,000.
“Was it your understanding you could terminate Mr. Benjamin for any cause you believed” even if it wasn’t proven, attorney Lawrence Pearson asked Sparks.