State law generally governs libel cases, and libel law varies state by state. |
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My best friend is a libel lawyer, so I would get him to pass his eye over it as well. |
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A majority of the jurors were members of a political party that owned the company which had published the alleged libel. |
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The defendant cannot justify one libel by proving the truth of another distinct libel. |
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A ranking official sued sued the authors, accusing them of libel, in his home county court. |
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In my judgment, grave though the libel is, and grave though the aggravation has been, the answer to that question is decisively no. |
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In libel the burden of proof rests with the defendant, and there is no entitlement to legal aid. |
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Criminal libel is the only remedy against this worthless organisation who simply seek publicity for themselves. |
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We spoke the same language, and he didn't stare blankly when I asked him a question about a topic like libel. |
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Many people have argued that criminal libel laws are unconstitutional, but the Supreme Court has never so held. |
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Such people should be sued for libel in law court instead of talking to them. |
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Other areas where the law and the media are in conflict include libel and privacy legislation. |
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As Robertson circulated his pamphlet where he could, the matter was a serious libel. |
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A newcomer to the newsroom with no background in what constitutes libel is a time bomb waiting to go off. |
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Despite the recommendations of the Faulks Committee, the law of defamation still distinguishes between libel and slander. |
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Britain's libel laws are almost the opposite of those in the United States. |
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Ironically, the action is over a short story concerning a previous libel action. |
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During the 1790s Pitt frequently resorted to seditious libel as a blunt instrument against the reform movement. |
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A third common law offence which may involve strict liability is that of blasphemous libel. |
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Before classicism can again occupy a central place in our lives, a monstrous libel must first be undone. |
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One cannot say what one likes about people or institutions because one cannot libel anyone. |
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He was made a life peer in 1992 but in 2000 was expelled by the party after claims emerged that he had invented an alibi in the 1987 libel case. |
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The law of libel in England is based on whether the plaintiff has suffered hatred, ridicule or contempt. |
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I explained that such comparisons, if offered seriously in print, would lose a libel suit any day of the week. |
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The court was told that he faced financial ruin in relation to the costs of a libel action he had taken out against the Sunday Times. |
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Lord Steyn was contrasting damages for malicious falsehood with damages for libel. |
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The law permits bankrupts to sue for libel and keep any money awarded from such suits. |
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He is a clever bully, brutal in his criticism of others but so thin-skinned that he resorts instantly to the libel laws to cow his own critics. |
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These varied from the trials and subsequent execution of radicals for treason, to trials for sedition and seditious libel. |
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The laws of libel needed no reinforcement and proceedings for seditious or criminal libel should be used sparingly. |
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He vehemently denies the allegations of theft and is now threatening to sue White for libel. |
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Public nuisance and libel are also torts and tortious liability is more often pursued than criminal proceedings. |
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So what on earth is the blood libel doing in a column in the respected mass daily paper? |
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The blood libel makes even less sense when you consider that in the 13th century the Church adopted the doctrine of transubstantiation. |
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The same costs potentially face publishing firms and broadcasting companies every time they decide to fight a complex libel case. |
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The purpose of a libel action is to enable the Plaintiff to clear his name of the libel, to vindicate his character. |
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The few restrictions allowed concern such matters as obscenity, libel, national security, and the sometimes conflicting right to a fair trial. |
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The statute of limitations for libel in England is one year, giving O'Reilly only 76 more days to file. |
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Like a disreputable character who wins a libel action on a technicality, he should be given a ha'p'orth of damages, if any. |
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You thought you had read the last about the libel case involving local council officers? |
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They are suing the UK government over its refusal to grant legal aid in libel cases. |
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He was to later admit that he had lied in the defeated High Court libel case over the payment of a bill for a weekend stay at the Ritz in Paris. |
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They have indulged in character assassination, slander and libel, and the sloppiest, least scientific thinking imaginable. |
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It is true that the subjects may sue for libel or invasion of privacy, and some have done so and won. |
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People have lost their jobs over derogatory remarks made in blogs, but can you be sued for libel or defamation? |
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Elton John was once on a chat show discussing his successful libel action against the Sun. |
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None of the cases sustained the use of libel laws to impose sanctions upon expression critical of the official conduct of public officials. |
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Leeds Crown Court was told on his conviction that he had faced financial ruin over the failed libel action. |
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In actions against the defendant for libel, he pleaded justification, fair comment on a matter of public interest, and qualified privilege. |
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They cannot be sued for libel, malicious falsehood or conspiring to give false evidence. |
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A defamatory statement is libel if it is in permanent form such as writing or pictures. |
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I would be surprised if it were not insured for damages for libel or defamation anywhere in the world, and if it is not, then it should be. |
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And if the matter published is contained in a written or printed document the publisher is guilty of publishing a seditious libel. |
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The day after Wilde received the card, he requested a warrant for the marquess's arrest on the charge of publishing a libel against him. |
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Challenges abound, from a review process still in flux to issues of libel and copyright. |
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Many people cowered from criticising him, not least because of his readiness to confront his critics in the libel courts. |
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The claimants claim damages for libel against the three defendants in the current action arising out of the article. |
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The Defendants maintain that the claim for damages for libel must in consequence fail. |
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While the legal protections are mostly clear, some parts of internet libel law are still unsettled. |
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Printers had to settle for prosecutions if they printed seditious libel, so they either played it safe or adopted pseudonyms and fake addresses. |
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Suing for libel is much easier in the UK than in the USA, but either way you would not want it to happen. |
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And when we're libeled or defamed, we use the disinfectant power of the press to correct the record instead of libel attorneys. |
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I watched as a libel case was brought against one of his books in 1990, eventuating in its removal from college and university libraries. |
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There was a time when I would have argued that our libel laws were draconian and should be amended. |
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This is just a mutation of the blood libel to suit modern politics. |
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On the day the Sun-Times finally sank, an Ontario court rejected Breeden's effort to slither out of my libel suits. |
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The other almost always requires a delicate dance through a minefield of potential libel, antediluvian prejudice, and post-publication recriminations. |
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Mr Taylor had instructions to initiate those criminal libel proceedings. |
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I'm sure the legal eagles who reviewed all this know what they're doing, but this has made me just a little bit curious about exactly how libel laws work. |
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This makes running a bulletin board difficult and potentially expensive, especially for a company with enough money to make it worth launching a libel action. |
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Casino mogul Sheldon Adelson is on the rampage again, suing a Wall Street Journal reporter for libel. |
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Similarly, don't use profanity, obscenity, slander or libel. |
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According to Dershowitz, Corey called Harvard Law School and threatened to sue to the school for libel for his comments. |
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But it serves no public purpose to encourage plaintiffs to regard a successful libel action, risky though the process undoubtedly is, as a road to untaxed riches. |
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Despite the media's constant fulminations against Ireland's libel laws, the appetite for taking a high-cost libel suit to the High Court appears to be on the wane. |
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A libel suit that Westmoreland famously filed against CBS, which made the claim, was settled out of court. |
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If her partner had suffered trial by media, in their reports about his being the prime suspect, his libel action allowed the papers the latitude to outline just why. |
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The payment, which the Department for Education and Skills said it was making without accepting liability, was in respect of his libel and unfair dismissal claims. |
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The ability to make comparisons with damages awarded for non-pecuniary losses in personal injury actions would have a salutary effect on libel juries. |
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But when he faced the work of a great living artist, Whistler, he dispraised it in such foul and objurgatory language that he was sued for libel and found guilty by the jury. |
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Newspaper editors happily confirm that Churchill stories make great copy, especially since in the UK one cannot sue for libel on behalf of the dead. |
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Zine editors, we are told, feel they are immune to the restrictions of copyright, libel and obscenity laws, grammar, punctuation, spelling, and pagination. |
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The best that can be said about the affair is that the hefty financial bill that the spin doctor now faces may engender caution among others launching libel actions. |
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Their position is so utterly preposterous it could be construed as libel. |
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Typically, people who feel wronged by the media sue for libel. |
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But in this day and age, with so many mercenary lawyers around, talking libel and slander, you cannot even speak ill of the living without caution. |
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A legal expert here yesterday said that people who were e-mailing details of the allegations to friends and colleagues were engaging in libel, by defaming the players. |
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So just when we thought we had finally buried perhaps the worst libel ever to be flung our way, it has come roaring back to life, resurrected by the spinmeisters of Rome. |
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That doesn't mean that it is OK to slander and libel people. |
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The libel laws as they stand militate against doing this, because once a libel writ is issued by a complainant any apology is an admission of liability. |
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The Herald was to have a long battle with Mr Wright, culminating in a ruinous libel action which the paper won leaving the politician with huge costs. |
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Its story, plus the accompanying libel lawsuit, has provided journalists everywhere with the opportunity to enrich their vocabulary with synonyms for upchucking. |
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Here she is hoping the campaign doesn't get too dirty, here she is libelling her opponent and paying an out of court settlement, and here she is repeating the libel. |
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Pressure has been intensified by a number of high-profile libel cases and a growing realisation the legal costs in such cases are completely ruinous. |
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As a safeguard against libel cases, press crimes can also only be tried by jury. |
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A welsh mp yesterday agreed to pay libel damages after a campaign against endowment policy mis-sellers backfired. |
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What I called blood libel was the charge that Pope Pius XII, and my church, were moral accessories to mass murder. |
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Printing such asinine opinions without rebuttal is criminal, even when not libel! |
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Such accusations are a counterpart to blood libel of various kinds, which may be found throughout history across the globe. |
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During 1771, Burke wrote a Bill that, if passed, would have given juries the right to determine what was libel. |
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It is a really cheap shot at somebody who has no right of reply and they know will not sue for libel. |
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After she restored them in the second edition, Moxon was prosecuted and convicted of blasphemous libel, though he escaped punishment. |
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He joined with other Radicals in his attacks on the government and three times during the next couple of years was charged with libel. |
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During this time, he was distracted by concerns about style and possible libel in Keep the Aspidistra Flying. |
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In 2007, she won a libel suit against Grazia magazine after it claimed that she had visited a diet doctor. |
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She won another libel suit in 2009 against the British tabloid Daily Mail after it printed that she had lied about her exercise regimen. |
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This permitted its authors to claim they had published fiction, not truth, if they ever faced allegations of libel. |
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The libel trial unearthed evidence that caused Wilde to drop his charges and led to his own arrest and trial for gross indecency with men. |
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Queensberry was arrested on a charge of criminal libel, a charge carrying a possible sentence of up to two years in prison. |
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The government uses press laws governing libel to intimidate journalists who are critical of its policies. |
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Kufuor was a supporter of press freedom and repealed a libel law, though maintained that the media had to act responsibly. |
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The newspaper was forced to recaption the photograph to avoid a libel suit. |
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But the book on Wilde embroiled him in a libel suit with Lord Alfred Douglas. |
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Which Ballard should J.G. Ballard sue J.G Ballard for, on grounds of malicious libel? Answers please to Sue, Grabit and Run. |
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The most notorious Twitter libel case, sometimes called Twibel cases, involved rocker Courtney Love. |
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The newspaper's attorneys argued that the article was not a libel. |
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Unsportingly, Trevor-Roper himself had thin skin and was quick to call upon the libel courts. |
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Sheridan and his wife Gail both deny perjuring themselves during a 2006 libel case against the tabloid. |
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But third persons, merely for the purpose of laying a wager, shall not thus wontly expose others to ridicule, and libel them under the form of an action. |
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In 1841, Garrison was imprisoned on charges of libel for accusing Newburyport shipowner Francis Todd and captain Nicholas Brown of transporting 44 African captives in chains. |
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On June 5, 1810 William Cobbett stood trial for seditious libel for an article he wrote against the British Government which was published by Thomas Curson Hansard. |
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The exception is the award of damages in English law libel cases, although a judge is now obliged to make a recommendation to the jury as to the appropriate amount. |
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Slander is spoken defamation and libel is printed or broadcast defamation. |
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Historically, one of the best known nominal damage awards was the farthing that the jury awarded to James Whistler in his libel suit against John Ruskin. |
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Five weeks after Priestley left, William Pitt's administration began arresting radicals for seditious libel, resulting in the famous 1794 Treason Trials. |
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He punished libel with exile or death and, due to his suspicious nature, increasingly accepted information from informers to bring false charges of treason if necessary. |
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Wilde sued for criminal libel, leading to Queensberry's arrest. |
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On the night the article was published Jagger appeared on the Eamonn Andrews chat show and announced that he was filing a writ for libel against the paper. |
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He was disappointed when Gollancz turned down Burmese Days, mainly on the grounds of potential suits for libel, but Harper were prepared to publish it in the United States. |
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An appellatory libel ought to contain the name of the party appellant. |
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Cobbett was found guilty of treasonous libel on 15 June 1810 after objecting in The Register to the flogging at Ely of local militiamen by Hanoverians. |
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An indictment for seditious libel followed, for both publisher and author, while government agents followed Paine and instigated mobs, hate meetings, and burnings in effigy. |
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For example, publishers may face charges of defamation, if they produce and distribute libelous material to the public, even if the libel was written by another person. |
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He has been assigned to the Queen's Bench Division at the High Court, which mainly deals with deals with civil wrongs, judicial reviews and libel cases. |
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The fear of such an eventuality could result in libel chill. |
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