Sarah Palin returns to Manhattan Court for a new trial in his lawsuit accusing the New York Times to release her in a 2017 editorial about mass shootings.
The former republican vice presidential candidate and governor of Alaska is having a second chance to argue that the gray lady defamed her by suggestion in the opinion article that her campaign rhetoric inspired an attempt to murder against the representative of Arizona Gabrielle Giffords six years before.
A jury of nine people was selected Monday morning in less than an hour, and opening statements are expected to begin on Tuesday. Palin, 61, who was in court, did not comment.
The jury members in the first trial in 2022 found that the newspaper did not defame Palin, but only after several of them had seen a news alert on his phone that the judge had decided to throw the case while they were still deliberating.
The judge of the Federal Court of Manhattan, Jed Rakoff, discovered that Palin’s camp did not have the high bar to prove defamation against public figures, in which the media must have published falsehoods with “real malice.” The judge rapped the times before throwing the case of what he called “unfortunate editorialization.”
The jury members insisted that seeing the alerts had no impact on their deliberations. But the Second Court of Appeals of the Circuit ordered a new trial last August, finding that Rakoff had mistakenly excluded the evidence favorable to the Palin case.
The Times publishing house had published on June 14, 2017, after a gunman opened fire on the practice of the baseball team of the Republican Party of the Congress, hurting the house of the house Steve Scary and three others.
The media said in the piece, headed the “lethal policy of the United States”, which Palin’s Political Action Committee had Published a map with stylized views on the electoral district of Giffords Days before the 2011 shooting, which killed six people.
Palin, 60, says that the Times released her falsely affirming that there was a “clear link” between his campaign announcement and the atrocious shooting, despite the lack of evidence that the map motivated Arizona Gunman Jared Lee Loughner.
The Times argued through the trial that its editors made an honest mistake that rapidly corrected.
Palin Tok The Stand in the first trial and told the jury that he was “devastating” to read the editorial that linked it to the butcher shop.
“It was devastating to read, again, an accusation: false accusation, which had something to do with innocent people of almercario,” he testified.
Palin at that time was dating the New York Rangers star, Ron Duguay, who supported her in the court. The mother of five divorced her husband or 31 years, Todd Palin, in 2019.
A newspaper spokesman, Charlie Stadtlander“ On Monday he said that the case “revolves around a passing reference to an event in an editorial that was not Sarah Palin.”
“That reference was an involuntary error and quickly corrected. We are sure that we will prevail and intend to strongly defend the case.”
The trial is expected to last two weeks and present testimony of Palin and James Bennet, the former director of the editorial page in The Times who inserted the lines in the core of the demand.
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