At 06:32 PM 6/5/01 -0700, Sandy Sandfort wrote:
David Honig wrote:
I agree with you, but how could the amateur journalists give authoritative proof if the courts don't allow it? How is this handled in other cases?
I'm not sure what you are saying here. If your "amateur journalist" has, for instance, a videotape of some guy having sex with Tom Cruise (to take a case ripped from today's headlines), then why would he need court-ordered discovery? Res ipsa loquitur (the thing speaks for itself).
I think my answer is: you have to do your research before the cops show up, or do some serious dumpster-diving afterwards, because the courts won't help you find corroboration.
Your question assumes you are already in court. This means you are being sued and the clock is running on your lawyers. Witness can also disappear, be disqualified, lie or not be believed. Lots of luck.
$ure, but this is irrelevent to what the courts will/won't do, or accept, as defense for purported harassment/slander/true slander. How *would* you (not meaning just you SS) defend such a case? Or have the journalists really sinned, in a libertarian ethic? Is this an 'expectation of privacy' thing, where you can publish the nasal length or inter-ocular distances of folks but not the length of their dick, even if true? And, what are the sexual behaviors of Kirkland police? :-)