The Humor Mill

Bill Cosby Loses Bid to Dismiss Libel Lawsuit!

Posted Oct 9, 2015
In perhaps the most significant legal development since the scandal surrounding Bill Cosby erupted, a Massachusetts federal court on Friday denied the embattled comedian’s bid to dismiss a libel lawsuit brought by three women.

Tamara Green, Therese Serignese and Linda Traitz are the plaintiffs in the case. The women allege that they were victimized by a sexual assault by Cosby. But because of statute of limitations, they can’t sue Cosby for this.

Instead, the three women claim to have had their reputations tarnished when Cosby’s reps told news outlets that the rape claims were “fabricated,” “ridiculous” and “absurd,” among other comments.

In an opinion today, U.S. District Judge Mark Mastroianni rejects all of Cosby’s reasons to throw the lawsuit out at this juncture. He analyzes libel standards like whether the comments were “of and concerning” the defendants and whether the comments could be characterized as “predictable opinions.” The judge concludes that a jury could find the comments addressed the women and that the gist — basically that they fabricated tales of rape — is provable as true or false. It will be up to a jury to find whether the statements are capable of defamatory meaning.

The latest decision could prompt more lawsuits against Cosby. It also sets some precedent.

For one thing, Mastroianni addresses whether a celebrity can be liable for the comments of his reps.

“Given Defendant’s prominence in the entertainment field, the court infers he surrounded himself with people accomplished in media relations and legal matter,” writes the judge. “The court also infers those making Defendant’s public statements had an open line of communication with him as well as some historical perspective on his public relations matters. Based on the facts and inferences, the court finds it plausible at this point to conclude (1) those agents would have had, at a minimum, some sense of Defendant’s alleged conduct, such that their duty of care would have required them to take steps to determine the truth or falsity of the statements, and (2) the content of their responsive statements demonstrates such reasonable care was not taken.”

Mastroianni also rejects Cosby’s argument that he was within rights to make “privileged utterances of self-defense.”

“The court recognizes that some jurisdictions do apply a version of the conditional self-defense privilege, which allows individuals, in certain circumstances, to publish defamatory responsive statements necessary to defend their reputation,” responds the judge. “However, as recognized by the cases Defendant himself cites… such a privilege does not permit a defendant to knowingly publish false statements of fact.”

In other words, what Cosby’s reps said about his accusers could be shown to be knowingly false, which rises above being merely false.

Source: The Hollywood Reporter

The judge rules that Cosby can be liable for what his publicist and lawyers said and can't argue the comments were privileged as self-defense.

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