Las Vegas Review-Journal

High court nixes Tarkanian’s suit against Rosen

- By Colton Lochhead Review-journal Capital Bureau

CARSON CITY — U.S. Sen. Jacky Rosen dealt Danny Tarkanian another loss — this time in the Nevada Supreme Court.

On a 5-2 vote, justices ordered a lower court to dismiss a lawsuit filed by Tarkanian against Rosen alleging he was defamed in campaign ads aired during the 2016 election cycle. Chief Justice Mark Gibbons and Justice Kristina Pickering dissented from the majority’s opinion.

Tarkanian filed the lawsuit a week after losing to Rosen in a tightly contested race for Nevada’s 3rd Congressio­nal District.

The lawsuit revolved around television and social media ads that surfaced in the final weeks of the election that used Tarkanian’s role as the registered agent for companies that acted as fronts for fraudulent charities. One ad said that “seniors lost millions from scams Danny Tarkanian helped set up.” Registered agents typically handle legal paperwork for companies but don’t deal with day-today operations.

Tarkanian’s lawsuit, which sought $8 million in damages, said the ads were “nearly identical” to allegation­s

made by Tarkanian’s 2004 state Senate opponent, Democrat Mike Schneider. Tarkanian, who lost that election, successful­ly sued Schneider and received a $150,000 judgment in 2009.

In the lower court ruling to deny Rosen’s request to dismiss the case, the judge said that Rosen’s statements were not made in good faith and agreed with Tarkanian that the statements were similar to those made by Schneider in 2004.

But the court made no finding on whether those ads constitute­d defamation.

Rosen and her campaign appealed that ruling.

In the majority opinion written by Justice James Hardesty, the Supreme Court held the lower court erred in that denial because “Rosen showed a prepondera­nce of the evidence that she made the statements in good faith.”

The order sends the case back to the lower court to be dismissed.

Tarkanian was the registered agent for Master Fundraisin­g. The company’s director, Jan Wrobel, was sentenced to 14 years in prison in 1999 for defrauding elderly victims out of more than $3 million.

Tarkanian’s tangential role with

If I could not win this obvious defamation case, the message from the court is that there is nothing a candidate can say in politics which will rise to the legal level of defamation. the company has haunted the perennial candidate in nearly every political race of his career. During the 2016 Republican primary, Tarkanian’s campaign sent cease-anddesist letters to Las Vegas television stations demanding they stop airing ads that were being run by Republican opponent Michael Roberson that focused on Tarkanian’s ties to the company.

During Tarkanian’s 2006 run for secretary of state, Democratic opponent Ross Miller highlighte­d those connection­s in television ads. Tarkanian’s 2012 congressio­nal opponent, Democrat Steven Horsford, did the same. Tarkanian also sent a ceaseand-desist letter after Horsford’s ads

aired in 2012. Tarkanian lost both races.

Tarkanian, in a statement, said he was “shocked and obviously very disappoint­ed” by the decision. He added that he believes it will have a chilling effect on candidates who think they’ve been slandered.

“The Supreme Court took the very unique opinion that Jacky Rosen’s advertisem­ents implied I only did legal work for telemarket­ers and did not imply I was involved in the telemarket­ers’ illegal activities, despite the fact that 2 million viewers in Southern Nevada came to the opposite conclusion,” Tarkanian said. “If I could not win this obvious defamation case, the message from the court is that there is nothing a candidate can say in politics which will rise to the legal level of defamation.

“Years ago when I told my father I wanted to run for public office, he asked me why,” the statement continued. “He said, the politician­s that are the most successful are the ones that lie the best and have the most money to lie the most often. The Supreme Court in this decision proved my father right again,” Tarkanian added.

Contact Capital Bureau Chief Colton Lochhead at clochhead@ reviewjour­nal.com or 775-461-3820. Follow @Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Danny Tarkanian
Danny Tarkanian
 ??  ?? Jacky Rosen
Jacky Rosen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States