Project Veritas Wins Lawsuit Against New York Times
A judge has directed the New York Times to return internal
documents belonging to Project Veritas that were cited by the paper in an
article last month. The report had sparked allegations that the FBI was behind
the memos’ leak.
In his ruling on Friday, Justice Charles Wood of the
Westchester County Supreme Court in New York state ordered the New York Times to
give Project Veritas back any physical copies of legal memos prepared by the
media watchdog group’s attorneys and to erase all electronic copies.
The judge also upheld his temporary order issued last month
against further publication of details from the memos. He said that the
documents did not constitute a matter of public concern, adding that they fell
under the group’s expectations of privacy that outweighed concerns about press
freedoms.
“Steadfast fidelity to, and vigilance in protecting First
Amendment freedoms cannot be permitted to abrogate the fundamental protections
of attorney-client privilege or the basic right to privacy,” Wood ruled.
Project Veritas had raised objections to a November 11 New
York Times article that purportedly revealed how the group held discussions
with its lawyers to “gauge how far its deceptive reporting practices can go
before running afoul of federal laws.
The article’s timing prompted outrage and suspicions that an
FBI source might have leaked the newspaper confidential data obtained during
recent raids.
It came out in less than a week after an FBI raid of Project
Veritas founder James O’Keefe’s home – as part of an investigation into the
group’s acquisition of a diary supposedly belonging to Ashley Biden, the US
president’s daughter.
In a statement, Libby Locke, a lawyer for Project Veritas,
said that the ruling affirmed the view that the New York Time’s behavior had
been “irregular.”
The New York Times has long forgotten the meaning of the
journalism it claims to espouse, and has instead become a vehicle for the
prosecution of a partisan political agenda.
The decision came as part of a defamation lawsuit Project
Veritas filed against the New York Times in 2020 when the paper published an
article accusing the group of engaging in “deceptive” journalistic practices.
The judge said that while these practices may be of public interest, legal
communications were not.
Meanwhile, New York Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger said the
paper would appeal the ruling – claiming that it was without “apparent
precedent” and maintained that the documents were “obtained legally in the
ordinary course of reporting.”
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