Hartford Courant

Fox coerced testimony in libel case, producer says

- By Randall Chase and Nicholas Riccardi

WILMINGTON, Del. — A Fox News producer has filed a lawsuit claiming the network pressured her to give misleading testimony in a separate lawsuit that alleges Fox slandered a voting machine company by amplifying baseless allegation­s of fraud following the 2020 presidenti­al election.

The lawsuit by Abby Grossberg, who said she is on a forced administra­tive leave, alleges that the network also discrimina­ted against her based on her gender and Jewish faith. It came as a hearing began Tuesday in Delaware Superior Court in the larger legal battle between Fox and Dominion Voting Systems, which seeks $1.6 billion from the network in its defamation claim.

The Dominion lawsuit provides the legal backdrop for Grossberg’s claim and already has embarrasse­d the network by revealing its personalit­ies’ private disdain for former President Donald Trump and illustrati­ng how political pressures can inform its coverage. The case also holds the potential for redefining libel law in the U.S.

Dominion, which sells electronic voting hardware and software, contends that some Fox News employees deliberate­ly amplified false claims by Trump allies that Dominion machines had changed votes in the 2020 election and that Fox provided a platform for guests to make false and defamatory statements about the company.

Attorneys for Fox argue that the network was obligated to report on arguably one of the most newsworthy stories of the time — that a sitting president was claiming he had been cheated out of reelection. Records released previously in the case show the Fox personalit­ies and executives doubted the claims, but gave repeated air time to those making them.

In her lawsuit, filed Monday in federal court in New York City, Grossberg contends that Fox attorneys advised her against hiring a personal attorney for the case and implied that she should not be “too candid” in her deposition­s.

“Ms. Grossberg convinced herself that discretion would be the better part of valor in this instance, and decided she would follow the directions of the attorneys who claimed they represente­d her best interests in connection with her deposition and kept her truth to herself,” the lawsuit contends.

During her deposition, when asked by a Dominion attorney whether it was important to correct a falsehood that a guest said on one of her shows, Grossberg replied: “No.” In her lawsuit, she says she gave that answer because she thought that was what Fox wanted her to say.

Her lawsuit said she was a producer for the “Tucker Carlson” show at the time of her leave and had previously worked with another prominent network personalit­y, Maria Bartiromo.

Fox countered with its own lawsuit, seeking to bar Grossberg from sharing confidenti­al discussion­s she had with company lawyers.

“Her allegation­s in connection with the Dominion case are baseless and we will vigorously defend Fox against all of her claims,” the network said in a statement.

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