Los Angeles Times

Hill loses f irst round in lawsuit

U.S. representa­tive resigned in 2019 after news outlets published nude pictures of her.

- By Seema Mehta

Judge dismisses case against British tabloid that published former representa­tive’s nude photo in 2019.

A British tabloid did not violate California’s revengepor­n law by publishing intimate pictures of then-Rep. Katie Hill without her consent, a judge ruled on Wednesday.

The Daily Mail’s news gathering and publicatio­n of images depicting a nude Hill brushing another woman’s hair and holding a bong are protected by the 1st Amendment, and the content of the pictures was in the public interest because of Hill’s position as an elected official, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Yolanda Orozco wrote in a decision that dismissed Hill’s case against the Daily Mail. Hill vowed to appeal. “Today, we lost in court because a judge — not a jury — thinks revenge porn is free speech. This fight has massive implicatio­ns for any woman who ever wants to run for office, so quitting isn’t an option,” Hill tweeted.

An attorney for the Daily Mail declined to comment.

Hill, a 33-year-old Democrat, was elected to Congress to represent northern Los Angeles County in 2018, flipping a traditiona­lly Republican seat. She was viewed as a rising star in the party but resigned less than a year later after the Daily Mail and the conservati­ve website Red State published the photos along with a story accusing Hill of inappropri­ate behavior with a campaign staffer and a congressio­nal aide. (Hill denied the affair with the aide, which would have violated House rules, but admitted to having a relationsh­ip with the campaign staffer, which she conceded was inappropri­ate because the woman was a subordinat­e.)

Hill sued the Daily Mail, Red State, journalist Jennifer Van Laar and ex-husband Kenneth Heslap, arguing that they violated California’s revenge-porn law by distributi­ng and/or publishing the intimate photograph­s.

The media outlets and

Van Laar argued that Hill failed to meet the requiremen­ts of the law because they were not the original distributo­rs of the images, because Hill’s nipples and genitals were redacted in the published pictures, and because of a “public interest” exemption. They asserted a 1st Amendment right to publish informatio­n about an elected official’s behavior that is newsworthy.

Van Laar’s motion to dismiss the case against her is scheduled to be heard Thursday, and Red State’s later this month. Hill’s exhusband has not filed any paperwork and does not have a lawyer on file in the case.

Wednesday’s ruling in favor of the Daily Mail could indicate similar rulings are likely for Van Laar and Red State because they made analogous arguments, said Krista Lee Baughman, Van Laar’s attorney.

“The court today basically said sharing or distributi­ng [images] is protected if it’s a matter of public concern,” Baughman said. “I think the judge is really right, and this is an important 1st Amendment case because it goes to what speech we can have around our representa­tives in government. If we go down that slippery slope of censoring what journalist­s can publish about our elected officials, that’s a dangerous place to be for our 1st Amendment.”

Carrie Goldberg, Hill’s attorney, warned that the ruling sets a dangerous precedent. “This is just phase 1 of the fight. There’s much more in store. Daily Mail may have won this motion, but they will go down in history as a woman-terrorizin­g sicko publicatio­n,” she tweeted. “And this will get reversed.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? FORMER REP. Katie Hill, seen in February, was once viewed as a rising star in the Democratic Party after f lipping a traditiona­lly Republican seat in northern L.A. County in 2018. She resigned less than a year later.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times FORMER REP. Katie Hill, seen in February, was once viewed as a rising star in the Democratic Party after f lipping a traditiona­lly Republican seat in northern L.A. County in 2018. She resigned less than a year later.

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