By R. Robin McDonald | April 11, 2019
Senior Judge William O. Bertelsman of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, who was appointed by President Jimmy Carter, is overseeing the defamation lawsuits filed by a Kentucky teenager.
By Angela Morris | March 27, 2019
A $125 million wrongful death lawsuit alleges The Weather Channel knew its storm chasers were reckless, dangerous drivers and did nothing about it.
By R. Robin McDonald | March 13, 2019
The defamation suit was filed on behalf of Nicholas Sandmann, 16, in a MAGA hat whose visage went viral after an encounter with a Native American activist on the National Mall.
By Katheryn Tucker | March 11, 2019
“Thus, while it might be perfectly sensible to update or revise OCGA §9-13-142 in light of these technological advances, 'it is the job of the legislature, not the courts, to rewrite or revise statutes.' In any event, online publishing is not at issue in this case," Chief Judge Stephen Dillard said. At issue: "hard copy newspapers.”
By Tony Mauro | February 7, 2019
"Those photos needed to be called out,” says Bradley Kutrow, now a financial services and appellate partner at McGuireWoods in North Carolina.
By R. Robin McDonald | January 28, 2019
A professional photographer is suing the campaign of Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, claiming that the campaign of the state's top legal officer used a photograph without securing permission or a licensing agreement. Another photographer has a similar infringement suit pending against Gov. Brian Kemp's campaign.
By R. Robin McDonald | January 9, 2019
Wood confidentially settled a $750 million defamation suit against CBS and secured a favorable order in Alabama in an ongoing case against Oxygen Media.
By R. Robin McDonald | December 14, 2018
The panel rejected arguments by CNN that Georgia's anti-SLAPP statute mandated the dismissal of a defamation lawsuit.
By C. Ryan Barber | November 16, 2018
U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly based his decision largely on a 1977 decision by the Washington federal appeals court, establishing that the White House must provide due process when revoking a reporter's press credentials.
By C. Ryan Barber | November 14, 2018
U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly, a Trump appointee to the federal trial bench, heard arguments for about two hours in a packed courtroom. Kelly said he planned to issue a ruling by Thursday afternoon.
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