The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Judge rejects doctors’ lawsuit against Quackwatch website

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NEW YORK >> A lawsuit brought by two pioneers in the anti-aging movement who said an online article about them suggests they’re quacks has been tossed out by a judge.

Dr. Robert Goldman and Dr. Ronald Klatz failed to allege in their lawsuit that a Quackwatch website article about them was false, U.S. District Judge Paul Gardephe ruled on Wednesday.

The doctors, both of Boca Raton, Florida, and Chicago, are co-founders of the not-forprofit American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine and are licensed to practice medicine and surgery in Illinois.

They sued a retired psychiatri­st, Dr. Stephen J. Barrett, of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and his Quackwatch website, saying they learned in 2014 that the defendants’ fivesenten­ce 2000 article appeared high in internet search results during searches of the doctors’ names.

The article said Klatz and Goldman in December 2000 agreed to pay $5,000 to Illinois and to stop identifyin­g themselves as medical doctors in the state unless they obtained a license from the state Department of Profession­al Regulation.

The judge noted that the website never updated the article with a February 2006 finding by the department that the men have been licensed physicians and surgeons of osteopathi­c medicine in good standing in Illinois for more than 20 years and are allowed to do what a medical doctor may do in the state.

The judge noted that the doctors said in court papers that appearing on the website results in the false innuendo that the doctors are quacks or are involved in “something akin to health fraud.”

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