Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fox News allowed to pursue its claim against voting company

Smartmatic’s defamation suit is also heading to trial

- BY JENNIFER PELTZ

NEW YORK — A judge refused this week to toss out Fox News’ claims that voting technology company Smartmatic is suing the network to suppress free speech. The ruling means that both Smartmatic’s multibilli­on-dollar defamation lawsuit and the network’s countercla­ims can continue toward an eventual trial.

Smartmatic says Fox News spread ruinous lies that the voting company helped rig the 2020 election against thenU.S. President Donald Trump. The network denies the allegation­s and is countersui­ng under a New York law against launching baseless litigation to squelch reporting or criticism on public issues — known as “strategic lawsuits against public participat­ion,” or SLAPP, in legal parlance.

Smartmatic’s nearly 3-yearold suit is separate from, but similar to, the Dominion Voting Systems case that Fox settled for $787 million last year. Fox didn’t apologize but acknowledg­ed that the court in that case had found “certain claims about Dominion to be false.”

Both sides in the Smartmatic case have tried unsuccessf­ully to get the other’s claims tossed out. Trial and appellate courts already gave Smartmatic the green light to continue. On Wednesday, trial Judge David B. Cohen said Fox News’ countercla­ims also could go ahead.

Fox’s argument — essentiall­y, that Smartmatic’s $2.7 billion claim is so inflated that it could only be meant to silence the network — “has not yet been adjudicate­d in any court,” Cohen wrote in his decision, filed Tuesday.

The Associated Press sent email messages seeking comment to the network and to Smartmatic’s attorneys.

Florida-based Smartmatic says that in the 2020 presidenti­al election, its technology and software were used only in California’s Los Angeles County. The Democratic bastion — not seen as an election battlegrou­nd — went for the Democratic nominee, current President Joe Biden.

But in Fox News appearance­s after Election Day 2020, Trump lawyers Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell portrayed Smartmatic as part of a broad scheme to steal the vote from the Republican incumbent. Giuliani asserted that the company had been “formed in order to fix elections.” Powell called it a “huge criminal conspiracy,” and the two claimed that proof would be forthcomin­g.

Federal and state election officials, exhaustive reviews in battlegrou­nd states and Trump’s own attorney general found no widespread fraud that could have changed the outcome of the 2020 election. Nor did they uncover any credible evidence that the vote was tainted. Trump’s allegation­s of fraud also were roundly rejected by dozens of courts, including by judges whom he had appointed.

A Delaware judge presiding over the Dominion lawsuit ruled last March that it was “CRYSTAL clear” that none of the allegation­s that Trump allies made on Fox News about that company were true. The case was going to trial when Fox settled.

The Dominion case involved some of the same broadcasts and statements as the Smartmatic suit, and Smartmatic argued that the Delaware ruling should blow Fox’s countercla­ims out of the water. Cohen said otherwise, citing — among other things — particular­s of legal doctrine about when decisions in one case apply to another.

“Not all elements of plaintiff’s defamation claims have been already been determined” against Fox, he wrote.

Smartmatic blames Fox for ruining its reputation and business.

Its value declined to “a fraction of what it was,” and support lines, customer-service inboxes and company officers were deluged with threats after the broadcasts, the voting company has said in court papers.

Fox News has said it was simply covering influentia­l figures — the president and his lawyers — making undeniably newsworthy allegation­s of election fraud. The network also maintains that Smartmatic is greatly overstatin­g its losses and Fox’s responsibi­lity for them.

In its countercla­ims, Fox is seeking attorneys’ fees and costs.

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