Survivor justice – and the laws and culture that make room for that justice – is complicated, and we hope that conversations exploring this topic treat it with the nuance and care it, and survivors, deserve. Harder, nor did we provide any support – financial, consultative, or otherwise – for Ms. “The TIME’S UP Legal Defense Fund did not and does not have a relationship with Mr. It is with that in mind – and in response to a request for assistance – that we provided contact information for Charles Harder to Ms. Iyer, spokesperson for the National Women’s Law Center. “At the TIME’S UP Legal Defense Fund, we believe that survivors deserve access to representation, resources, and the ability to tell their stories. When The Hollywood Reporter asked Time’s Up for comment, the organization sent a statement from Uma M. “We don’t have to sacrifice the First Amendment along the way - or make it easier for harassers to threaten and further harass their victims.” In light of this, is it wise to making libel suits easier? “I don’t think we should change defamation law,” says attorney Nancy Erika Smith, who represented Gretchen Carlson against Fox and would also represent several women in a defamation suit against Bill O’Reilly. While some sexual abuse victims are like McKee and on the plaintiff’s end of a defamation case, far more find themselves on the defendant’s end. 2020, Time’s Up told The New York Times that 33 of the 193 cases it was supporting at the time involved defending workers who had come forward about sexual harassment and were then sued for defamation. Had other justices taken up the McKee case and joined Thomas here, it arguably could have been a disaster for the #MeToo movement. In Thomas’ view, there was nothing about the First Amendment that separated public figures from private figures. 2019 was a concurring statement from Clarence Thomas calling for a re-examination of the actual malice standard under defamation law. If not, the individual can win under the lesser standard of showing the speaker’s negligence (failure to take proper care in ensuring the truth of a statement). The Supreme Court denied review, but what got the headlines in Feb. If so, such individual can only win a defamation suit by showing the speaker acted with actual malice (knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard of the truth). Her petition asked the justices to consider whether someone becomes a public figure merely by voicing an accusation of being victimized. She couldn’t prevail because a court deemed her to be a public figure who couldn’t demonstrate actual malice. The case was brought by Kathrine McKee, one of the individuals who attempted to sue Cosby for defamation over denials of sexual abuse. Putting aside Harder’s role for a moment, there’s the nature of that petition to the Supreme Court. While Harder’s time with Weinstein was brief and he’d no doubt like to disassociate himself from the disgraced figure (Weinstein’s name doesn’t come up in Gawker Slayer and Harder is currently suing Weinstein for unpaid legal bills), it still raises questions for Time’s Up. 2017 report in The New York Times about his sexual misconduct, Harder was getting a client referral from the very legal foundation that had subsequently become central to the #MeToo movement. That would mean that mere months after representing Harvey Weinstein when the movie mogul unsuccessfully attempted to squelch a breakthrough Oct. Supreme Court on behalf of one of Bill Cosby’s accusers,” he writes. he’s recently filed a defamation case for MyPillow’s Mike Lindell over a tabloid story about a Jane Krakowski romance), it does contain one jaw-dropper: “In 2018, I was honored to be asked by the Time’s Up Foundation to take a case to the U.S. 'NCIS: LA' Showrunner on Giving the Team a "Happily Ever After" in Series FinaleĪlthough the book contains few surprises for those who have followed his career from a modestly successful Beverly Hills entertainment litigator to someone amusing the legal predilections of right wing celebrities (e.g.
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