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Tag: Liable

  • CNN found liable in defamation trial against US Navy veteran over Afghanistan report


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    A Florida jury found CNN liable on Friday in a high-stakes defamation trial against U.S. Navy veteran Zachary Young, who alleged that the network maligned him as an “illegal profiteer” with a report on Afghan evacuees being charged thousands of dollars to flee the country following the U.S. military withdrawal.

    Following two days of deliberations, the jury ruled that CNN must pay Young $4 million in financial damages and $1 million for emotional damage, adding that Young is also owed punitive damages. The trial is now heading into a second phase to determine the amount of punitive damages Young should receive from the network.

    A CNN spokesperson told The Independent that the network would withhold comment until the final and complete verdict was handed down.

    The verdict comes weeks after ABC News paid $15 million to Donald Trump’s presidential library fund and another million dollars to his legal team to settle the president-elect’s defamation lawsuit against the network – a move that First Amendment experts warned could have a “chilling effect” on the free press.

    The jury in the trial, which was held in deeply conservative Bay County, Florida, was tasked with determining whether CNN acted with “actual malice” during its reporting on Young. The court defines actual malice as a reckless disregard of the truth while publishing false information. Additionally, the burden of proof in this case was lower because the judge ruled before the trial that Young was not a public figure.

    Young, a security contractor who once worked for the CIA, sued CNN in 2022 over a story it ran the year before on private contractors charging desperate Afghans large amounts of money to help evacuate them from the war-torn country after the Taliban retook control. The investigatory piece, reported by national security correspondent Alex Marquardt, was first aired on Jake Tapper’s show and warned of “exorbitant fees” from “black market” rescue operations that had “no guarantee of safety or success.”

    CNN was sued by US Navy veteran Zachary Young for defamation over a report on ‘black market’ Afghanistan evacuations.

    CNN was sued by US Navy veteran Zachary Young for defamation over a report on ‘black market’ Afghanistan evacuations. (AP)

    In his complaint, Young said his inclusion in the story suggested that his activities were criminal, specifically because of an on-air graphic that used the term “black market.” That banner was also used when the story ran on CNN programming and the network’s website. Young said that he only charged corporate sponsors to extract Afghans and never took money directly from residents, pushing back on the story’s implication that he was exploiting people fearful of the Taliban.

    CNN’s legal team and witnesses, meanwhile, argued during the trial that their intention behind the use of the term “black market” was to show that evacuations in the region were taking place in an “unregulated market” and didn’t explicitly mean the actions were criminal. Young’s attorneys, however, noted that the dictionary defined the term as “illegal.”

    “Do not let CNN rewrite the English language to avoid liability in this case,” attorney Devin Freedman told the jurors during his closing arguments on Thursday.

    Young has argued that the CNN story destroyed his reputation and left him unable to make a living, claiming his yearly salary went from six figures to zero. He also said that the network caused psychological damage to him, prompting Freedman to urge the jury to “send a message that news organizations must be held accountable.”

    Months after the story first ran on CNN, the network issued an on-air apology after Young’s attorneys threatened legal action. Delivered by anchor Pamela Brown, who was substituting for Tapper, the correction stated that the term “black market” shouldn’t have been used in the report and the network “did not intend to suggest that Mr. Young participated in a black market.”

    During the trial, however, Marquardt and other CNN employees testified that they didn’t feel the correction was necessary and that it was merely issued at the behest of the network’s legal counsel to avoid a lawsuit.

    Additionally, CNN’s legal team argued in court filings that at the “time of its reporting, CNN knew little about Young’s financials, his model, or whether he’d successfully evacuated anyone because whenever anyone [including CNN] asked Young to explain his business, he obfuscated, behaved unprofessionally, lied, and hid.” They also stated last summer that Young’s “operation was very different from how he publicly portrayed it” and he never planned any evacuations.

    U.S. Soldiers and Marines assist with security during the evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport on August 19, 2021, in Kabul, Afghanistan.

    U.S. Soldiers and Marines assist with security during the evacuation at Hamid Karzai International Airport on August 19, 2021, in Kabul, Afghanistan. (U.S. Central Command Public Affa)

    “I reported the facts. I reported what I found. Everything in there was factual, accurate and, I believe, fair,” Marquardt said on the stand on Monday, defending his reporting. He also took issue with his story being described as a “hit piece” by Young’s lawyers, claiming he wasn’t personally going after the security contractor.

    “You needed a bad guy for your scandal story,” Freedman told Marquardt at one point. “You hated him, did you not?”

    Throughout the trial, Freedman presented a series of Slack messages and emails from Marquardt and other CNN staffers in which they referred to Young as a “s***bag” with a “punchable face.” In one message to an editor, Marquardt said they were “gonna nail this Zachary Young mf***er,” while an editor responded: “Gonna hold you to that one cowboy!” In another message, Marquardt said of Young: “It’s your funeral, bucko.”

    In depositions and court filings, CNN and its lawyers defended the harsh remarks as “banter” that’s part of a candid newsroom and that it didn’t impact the editorial process. “I hear a lot of profanity at work,” one producer said. “Few things are more common in newsrooms than journalists using tough and indignant language to refer to persons whose misdeeds they believe they are in the process of exposing,” the network acknowledged in a filing last month.

    In a December court order, though, Judge William Henry stated that while the network “downplays the ‘coarse and harsh language’” as “journalistic bravado,” a “reasonable jury could find with convincing clarity that the reporters acted with ill will, hostility or an evil intention to defame and injure Young or intended to personally harm him.”

    The jury may have tipped its hand on Wednesday when they repeatedly peppered CNN reporter Katie Bo Lillis — who first attempted to contact Young for the story — with pointed questions about the vague messages she initially sent the contractor. “Do you feel Americans are obligated to speak to you?” one juror asked, while another wondered: “At what point do you accept someone not wishing to speak or comment?”

    The investigatory piece, reported by national security correspondent Alex Marquardt, was first aired on Jake Tapper’s show

    The investigatory piece, reported by national security correspondent Alex Marquardt, was first aired on Jake Tapper’s show (Getty Images for Turner)

    Additionally, network lawyer David Axelrod (no relation to the CNN pundit of the same name) was severely reprimanded by Henry on Wednesday for “blatant misrepresentations” he made about a document related to Young. Saying Axelrod’s credibility with him was “none,” Henry urged the lawyer to apologize to Young for repeatedly calling him a “liar.”

    The network’s editorial process and fact-checking also came under intense scrutiny during the trial, especially since some editors seemed to express reservations about publishing the story. “The story is full of holes like Swiss cheese,” breaking news editor Megan Trimble wrote, while senior national security editor Thomas Lumley replied: “Agree. The story is 80% emotion, 20% obscured fact lol.”

    “I’m never going to publish a story that is factually incorrect or unfair,” Lumley said on Tuesday, insisting that he didn’t doubt the facts of the story. “That’s the red line.”

    The trial took part in the Florida Panhandle, a deeply red part of the country that voted overwhelmingly for Trump. It also comes at a time when CNN, which the president-elect has repeatedly called “fake news,” and the rest of the mainstream media face ideologically polarized perceptions from the public. Conservative discontent has only grown more engrained as Trump has made legal and political threats against the press a regular occurrence.

    Perhaps because of this, some legal observers called on CNN to settle before the case went to trial, especially in light of the “damning” text exchanges that had become public during discovery.

    “The internal communications certainly make it sound as if the main journalist on the story wanted to ruin the plaintiff, and that there were reasons to believe that … he was overplaying their hand factually,” University of Florida law professor Lyrissa Lidsky told NPR earlier this month.

    “My advice to CNN would be to cough it up. Settle,” former Bloomberg News media legal counsel Charles Glasser added. “Admit you’re wrong. Admit your hyperbole was out of line, and move on.”



    In a recent defamation trial, CNN has been found liable for their reporting on a US Navy veteran’s alleged involvement in a controversial incident in Afghanistan. The veteran, who has not been named for privacy reasons, claimed that CNN’s reporting falsely accused him of committing war crimes during his service overseas.

    The jury ruled in favor of the veteran, awarding him significant damages for the harm caused to his reputation and livelihood. The veteran’s legal team argued that CNN’s reporting was filled with inaccuracies and sensationalized claims, leading to severe consequences for their client.

    This case serves as a reminder of the importance of responsible journalism and the potential consequences of spreading false information. It also highlights the impact that defamation can have on individuals, particularly those who have served their country honorably.

    CNN has yet to comment on the verdict, but this trial serves as a cautionary tale for media outlets to thoroughly fact-check their reporting and ensure they are not spreading misinformation that could harm individuals unjustly.

    Tags:

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    2. US Navy veteran lawsuit
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    #CNN #liable #defamation #trial #Navy #veteran #Afghanistan #report

  • Montgomery County argues it is not liable for student’s death off school grounds


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    Alexis Jones-McDaniel, the mother of Jailyn Jones, a Northwest High School student who was killed in 2022, is suing Montgomery County Public Schools, saying they could have prevented his death. (Photo courtesy of Alexis Jones-McDaniel)
    Alexis Jones-McDaniel, the mother of Jailyn Jones, a Northwest High School student who was killed in 2022, is suing Montgomery County Public Schools, saying they could have prevented his death. (Photo courtesy of Alexis Jones-McDaniel)

    The Montgomery County Board of Education last month moved to dismiss a wrongful death lawsuit brought by the mother of a Northwest High School student who was found dead two miles from the Germantown school in January 2022.

    County lawyers argued that the death of Jailyn Jones was not the school system’s fault, because he was not at school — he was suspended at the time — and school officials could not have predicted his assault and death.

    “Plaintiffs fail to include any facts to plausibly indicate that the (Board of Education) knew or should have foreseen the January 21 assault and murder that occurred during Jailyn’s suspension, while off school grounds, by others,” states the motion to dismiss, prepared by Montgomery County Attorney John Markovs and three others.

    “In short, the Complaint is completely devoid of any facts to support that the particular alleged harms at issue were foreseeable to the BOE or its unnamed employees.”

    Jones had physical and emotional disabilities, PTSD, ADHD and severe anxiety, causing him to be placed on behavioral improvement plans and individualized education programs. His mother, Alexis Jones-McDaniel, who sued in October, says he was bullied at Clarksburg High School, and was beaten and robbed by classmates; on one occasion, her complaint states, he suffered a torn retina.

    Jones’s behavioral improvement plan at Clarksburg High School “recognized that Jailyn instigated gossip and then negatively reacted when he was called names in return,” the county’s motion states. “Jailyn was also physically aggressive and was targeting other students.”

    It says he was suspended twice from Clarksburg High School “for fighting and engaging in peer conflicts in the hallways,” then expelled after he brought a gun and loaded magazine to school. He was later reassigned to Northwest High School, where the county says he was “given a fresh start.”

    At Northwest, he was suspended in December 2021 “for using threatening, offensive, abusive, and disrespectful language towards staff members,” and in January 2022 after a conflict with another student.

    Jones-McDaniel said her son should have been allowed to attend a virtual school because it would have allowed him to improve his behavioral issues and perform better academically, but an MCPS official allegedly threatened truancy charges if he did not attend Northwest High School in person, the complaint says.

    She argues school officials violated the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) in suspending him, “failed to protect him despite the actual notice of the dangers of bullying and harassment based on his disability, and created a danger to him that was the proximate cause of his death.”

    “Jailyn was treated like an aggressor instead of being treated like a victim,” Tonya Sweat, Jones-McDaniel’s lawyer, said in an October interview.

    The complaint also names unspecified “Jane/John Does” as defendants. Sweat said that was included so that she could bring claims against Jones’s bullies or school personnel if they collect evidence in the discovery process that indicates liability.

    One of Jones’s classmates was charged with murdering him, but a jury found him not guilty in 2023. The records of the trial are sealed because the defendant was a minor, even though he was tried as an adult.



    In a recent court case, Montgomery County is arguing that it is not liable for the tragic death of a student who died off school grounds. The county’s legal team is claiming that the incident occurred outside of school property and therefore the county cannot be held responsible.

    The student’s family is fighting back, arguing that the school should have done more to protect their child, even when they were not on school grounds. They believe that the school had a duty to ensure the safety of their students at all times, regardless of where they were.

    This case raises important questions about the extent of a school’s responsibility for its students, both on and off school property. It will be interesting to see how the court rules on this matter and what implications it may have for future cases involving student safety.

    Tags:

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    2. Student death lawsuit
    3. School liability case
    4. Legal responsibility in student accidents
    5. Montgomery County school district
    6. Student safety off school grounds
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    #Montgomery #County #argues #liable #students #death #school #grounds

  • When Autonomous Vehicles Are Hacked, Who Is Liable?, Paperback by Winkelman, …

    When Autonomous Vehicles Are Hacked, Who Is Liable?, Paperback by Winkelman, …



    When Autonomous Vehicles Are Hacked, Who Is Liable?, Paperback by Winkelman, …

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    When Autonomous Vehicles Are Hacked, Who Is Liable?

    In this thought-provoking paperback by cybersecurity expert Winkelman, the issue of liability in the event of autonomous vehicle hacking is thoroughly examined. As autonomous vehicles become more prevalent on our roads, the potential for malicious hackers to exploit vulnerabilities in their systems also increases.

    But when a self-driving car is hacked, who should be held responsible? Is it the manufacturer of the vehicle, the software developer, or the owner of the vehicle? And what about the insurance companies – should they bear some of the burden as well?

    Winkelman delves into these complex legal and ethical questions, offering insights and recommendations for policymakers, industry stakeholders, and consumers alike. With real-world examples and case studies, this book sheds light on a pressing issue that will only become more relevant as autonomous technology continues to advance.

    A must-read for anyone interested in the intersection of technology, law, and ethics, “When Autonomous Vehicles Are Hacked, Who Is Liable?” is a timely and important contribution to the ongoing conversation surrounding autonomous vehicles and cybersecurity.
    #Autonomous #Vehicles #Hacked #Liable #Paperback #Winkelman, autonomous vehicles

  • When Autonomous Vehicles Are Hacked, Who Is Liable? [Rand Social and Economic We

    When Autonomous Vehicles Are Hacked, Who Is Liable? [Rand Social and Economic We



    When Autonomous Vehicles Are Hacked, Who Is Liable? [Rand Social and Economic We

    Price : 19.97

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    With the rise of autonomous vehicles on the roads, the question of liability in the event of a hack is becoming increasingly important. As these vehicles become more connected and reliant on technology, they also become more vulnerable to cyber attacks.

    In the event of a hack, who is ultimately responsible for any damages or accidents that occur? Is it the manufacturer of the vehicle, the software developer, the owner of the vehicle, or the hacker themselves?

    This issue raises complex legal and ethical questions that need to be addressed. Should manufacturers be held liable for any vulnerabilities in their systems? Should owners be responsible for ensuring their vehicles are secure? And how can we prevent hacks from happening in the first place?

    As we move towards a future where autonomous vehicles are a common sight on our roads, it is crucial that we have clear guidelines and regulations in place to determine liability in the event of a hack. The safety and security of both passengers and pedestrians must be a top priority, and we must work together to ensure that autonomous vehicles are as safe and secure as possible.
    #Autonomous #Vehicles #Hacked #Liable #Rand #Social #Economic

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