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This is a guest post by Catherine Tsalikis
The advent of the world wide web has necessitated a shift in legal thinking with regards to cases of libel. In Baglow v. Smith, 2011, an Ontario Superior Court justice has issued a decision with significant effects for Canadian free speech rights pertaining to blogs and other internet forums which host political debate and discussion.
Justice Peter Annis has dismissed a defamation claim brought by Ottawa’s John Baglow, former executive with the Public Service Alliance of Canada and left-wing commentator (known in the blogosphere as “Dr Dawg”). Baglow’s action was brought against Connie and Mark Fournier, operators of right-wing blog FreeDominion, and right-wing blogger Roger Smith (aka “Peter O’Donnell”).
In a manner common to exchanges between ideologically-opposed commentators, Baglow v. Smith arose from an escalation of online quips and jabs, during which Smith ultimately described Baglow as “one of the Taliban’s more vocal supporters”. The basis for this assertion stems from Baglow having previously argued in support of the repatriation of Omar Khadr from Guantanamo Bay to Canada, and having criticised the Canadian government for failing to uphold international law through the United Nations Convention of the Rights of the Child.
Of course, it is a long leap from Baglow’s criticism of Khadr’s treatment to the conclusion that the blogger is an adamant supporter of terrorist groups. Nonetheless, Annis J found in his summary action that there was no issue for trial, noting that, even accepting the low threshold standard for libelous statements, “declaring someone a supporter of the Taliban is at the absolute borderline of a comment that could be said to diminish the esteem of the plaintiff in the minds of readers of a political blog where insults are regularly treated as part of the debate.”
Furthermore, Smith’s words were not intending to state a known fact, but rather his own view – opinion comments are considered to be less serious in defamation cases. Annis J concluded that “the opinion expressed by the defendant lies at the heart of the debate between the factions represented by the parties and whether the underlying facts are true or not, readers following the blog would understand the comment as being one side of the debate”.
Significantly, followers of defamation law are touting this case as groundbreaking in the realm of online free speech, gleaning that Annis J’s decision points to a different standard of defamation between statements made on blog forums and those made in other, more permanent print material. Indeed, the decision suggests that the contemporaneous nature of online debate allows recipients of written attacks to “take the sting” out of potentially libelous comments by responding quickly. Baglow could have responded to Smith’s “Taliban supporter” label by defending himself as the online community would usually expect bloggers to do in these heated, back-and-forth exchanges, but instead chose to resort to legal means.
More generally, Canada has indeed seen advancements in free speech guarantees. Following a Supreme Court decision in 2009, journalists and bloggers are now able to use the defence of “responsible communication on matters of public interest” as a defence against libel. Of course, in this case, Smith’s statement wasn’t found to be libelous in the first place, so one would perhaps be too quick to claim that this decision unequivocally means that anything — or at least more — goes in the blogosphere. Crude, vulgar and boorish commentary is a staple of many online forums, but we would have to wait for a case involving a truly libelous statement to better judge whether the Canadian standard of defamation has been lowered for cyber-speak.
In the meantime, John Baglow has announced on his blog his intention to appeal the decision to the Ontario Court of Appeal.
Catherine Tsalikis is an editorial assistant for The World Today magazine at Chatham House
Ontario Provincial Police have charged an activist with two counts of defamatory libel for online comments he made regarding undercover police officers. Using fake names, Dan Kellar outed two officers who had infiltrated activist networks. Upon learning that one of them was spotted in Toronto, he put out a “community alert’’ on the website of an activist group he was involved with. Police claim the comments were likely to injure the reputation of the officers by exposing them to hatred, contempt or ridicule. Kellar says the charges are an attempt to stifle dissent. He will appear in court in Toronto on 20 September.
Dan Snyder, the owner of the Washington Redskins, dropped his libel suit against the Washington City Paper over the weekend on the eve of the team’s season opener, saying he had nothing further to gain from the seven-month legal battle that had drawn steep criticism from numerous media organisations. Snyder had originally sought 1 million US dollars, plus additional damages, in a suit against the alternative weekly paper and the author of a scathing cover story about him last November headlined “The Cranky Redskins’ Fans Guide to Dan Snyder.” (The news prompted the City Paper to prominently repost Dave McKenna’s story to the top of its homepage Sunday, giving the piece — as it has for months — more page views and a longer life than it ever would have without Snyder’s protestations.)
Both parties have agreed to pay their own legal fees. The City Paper said its share has topped the 34,000 USD raised by its followers in a legal defense fund. In a statement, the City Paper said:
“Today, we got what we wanted all along: dismissal of a case expressly designed to pressure us, and filed by a man who now apparently says he never even read the story in the first place. Now we’re eager to get back to our business of covering the city’s politics and culture—including its sports culture—without this distraction.”
In a statement issued by a spokesperson for Snyder, the owner claimed a level of dubious victory as well, saying “the principle that the truth and the facts matter in responsible journalism has been vindicated,” even as the lawsuit has been abandoned.
At the heart of the dispute was McKenna’s tongue-in-cheek tone. In the story, for example, he described Snyder as “going all Agent Orange on federally protected lands” — meaning that he had cleared trees to get a better view of the Potomac River from his property. Snyder’s lawyers insisted that this line implied Snyder literally sprayed Agent Orange (the shrub-killing toxin deployed by the US military in Vietnam). The suit took much of McKenna’s figurative language and recast it as libelous assertion, creating justification for a legal attack that many media critics interpreted as a mere bullying tactic from the beginning.
From the team’s statement:
“The lawsuit was pursued as a means to correct the public record following several critical factual misstatements in the Washington City Paper article. In the course of the defendants’ recently filed pleadings and statements in this matter, the Washington City Paper and its writer have admitted that certain assertions contained in the article that are the subject of the lawsuit were, in fact, unintended by the defendants to be read literally as true. Therefore, we see nothing further to be gained at this time through continuing the lawsuit.”
A libel lawsuit filed by Donald Trump has been brushed aside by a New Jersey appeals court yesterday. The lawsuit was filed against author Timothy L O’Brien after he wrote a passage suggesting that Trump was worth substantially less than he claims. O’Brien cited three anonymous sources who valued Trump’s worth at between $150 million and $250 million, not the $7 billion he estimates. Trump filed the lawsuit in 2009, when it was rejected. The appeals court affirmed the lower court ruling, and declared that they did not find the existent of ‘actual malice’ in the matter.