USA TODAY International Edition

Austrian’s conviction a setback for #MeToo

- Christina Traar

In a setback for the global #MeToo movement, a former member of Austria’s parliament was convicted this month of libel against a man she publicly accused of sexually harassing her on Facebook.

In an unpreceden­ted case, a judge at the Regional Court for Criminal Matters in Vienna ruled that Green Party politician Sigrid Maurer libeled the owner of a city craft beer store because she couldn’t prove that he actually posted the harassing messages on his Facebook account.

In March, Maurer, 33, an advocate for women’s rights, received obscene Facebook messages from the account of the owner of the store, where she walks by frequently.

Maurer posted the messages on Facebook and Twitter, including his and the store’s names. “There was no other way to defend myself,” she said.

Maurer posted the messages after her lawyers said she could not sue for public sexual assault because the messages were private. Her posts went viral, and the store owner said he subsequent­ly became the target of online and personal verbal assaults, including death threats, and his store got negative reviews.

The man sued Maurer for libel, claiming he didn’t write the harassing messages. All of his customers have access to the computer in his shop, including his Facebook account, he testified.

In issuing his ruling against Maurer, Judge Stefan Apostol said he didn’t believe the man and found Maurer’s reasons for her posts “respectabl­e,” even though she had no evidence he perpetrate­d the abuse.

Maurer vowed to appeal the ruling, which would force her to pay a $3,500 fine and $4,600 in compensati­on.

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