Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,643
Indeed you did.
You would have made a defamatory statement but you wouldn't have been liable.
What a mystery, eh Zig?
Way to miss the point.
Indeed you did.
You would have made a defamatory statement but you wouldn't have been liable.
What a mystery, eh Zig?
Way to miss the point.
Don't worry, it's a tricky one but I have the utmost confidence you'll figure it out.
Go bug Cavemonster. He's the one you have an issue with, not me.
What issue would that be?
The definition he gave for "defamatory statement" seems to match the legal definition.
Go back further.
That's usually what happens to people or organizations when they get caught with their proverbial pants down. There's a limit to how good one's reaction to the "PR nightmare" can be when your employees are caught on tape aiding and abetting child prostitution, as well as illegal immigration. But if anybody is to blame for the "PR nightmare", it's the ACORN employees.
Defamation—also called calumny, vilification, slander (for transitory statements), and libel (for written, broadcast, or otherwise published words)—is the communication of a statement that makes a claim, expressly stated or implied to be factual, that may give an individual, business, product, group, government, or nation a negative image. It is usually, but not always,[1] a requirement that this claim be false and that the publication is communicated to someone other than the person defamed (the claimant).
Then I place the industries of politics, advertising, marketing and sales under Citizen's Arrest and confine them to their quarters until the ink dries on the indictments.
Here's a small sample of that mealy mouth Michael Moore's style of journalism.
http://www.hardylaw.net/Bowlingtranscript.html
Cavemonster seems to have it right.
You seem to be hung up on defamatory statements.
All I can say Ziggurat is you don't know what libel/slander is.
Read the damn report. If you had, you'd get the full information from Brown's report, not the "edited" version that Rachel portrays.TraneWreck said:You didn't watch the video either, I see.
The ACORN employees in California (we can talk about the others when the full tapes are released) did NOTHING wrong.
Again, one guy gathered information and IMMEDIATELY called the cops.
One woman was trying to help someone she thought was a young prostitute find housing. O'Keefe made it sound like she was helping them get financing for the sex ring.
Watch the damn video.
Additionally Brown lists a number of serious law violations uncovered during the investigation including:Employees outside California made suggestions for disguising profits from the illegal enterprise and for avoiding detection by law enforcement authorities. Clearly, the worst behavior was exhibited by the Baltimore employees who advised on how to falsely report the profits of their sex business and report underage prostitutes as “dependants.”
What part of "Go back further" do you not understand?
I outlined a scenario. Under this scenario, according to Cavemonster, I would be liable for slander. You claim otherwise. Sort it out with him why he's wrong.
Read the damn report. If you had, you'd get the full information from Brown's report, not the "edited" version that Rachel portrays.
Additionally Brown lists a number of serious law violations uncovered during the investigation including:
* The disposition of confidential documents in violation of state civil laws.
* Voter registration fraud in the 2008 election.
* Improper accounting for charitable donations.
* Non-filing of tax forms.
Your title of this thread, "No wrongdoing for ACORN..." is just plain wrong.
To obtain the full tapes, Brown's office agreed not to prosecute conservative activists James O'Keefe and Hannah Giles, who played the pimp and prostitute in the video, even though the report found they likely violated state privacy laws.
Zig keeps insisting that if they had a case they would have filed one, forgetting any other factors.
Primarily, O'Keefe doesn't have any money
and neither does ACORN (because they don't exist anymore)
What, you seriously don't think a verdict in their favor, regardless of any recovered costs, wouldn't have been worth a lot to them? Of course it would.
They did last year.
Okay, I thought Coyote would clear this up for you, but he was hoping you'd figure it out for yourself, I guess he was kind of optimistic assuming that.
To tell your neighbors that someone is a convicted sex offender is a defamatory statement.
However, in most jurisdictions, truth is considered a valid defense.