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US Senate Passes 'Libel Tourism' Bill

Hugh Pickens writes "AFP reports that the US Senate has passed (by a 'unanimous consent' voice vote) a bill that prevents US federal courts from recognizing or enforcing a foreign judgment for defamation that is inconsistent with the First Amendment to the US Constitution, which guarantees freedom of speech. If the bill becomes law it will shield US journalists, authors, and publishers from 'libel tourists' who file suit in countries where they expect to get the most favorable ruling. 'While we cannot legislate changes to foreign law that are chilling protected speech in our country, we can ensure that our courts do not become a tool to uphold foreign libel judgments that undermine American First Amendment or due process rights,' said Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy. Backers of the bill have cited England, Brazil, Australia, Indonesia, and Singapore as places where weak libel safeguards attract lawsuits that unfairly harm US journalists, writers, and publishers. The popular legislation is headed to the House of Representatives, which is expected to approve it. 'This bill is a needed first step to ensure that weak free-speech protections and abusive legal practices in foreign countries do not prevent Americans from fully exercising their constitutional right to speak and debate freely,' said Senator Jeff Sessions, the top Republican on Leahy's committee."

6 of 467 comments (clear)

  1. Confused by AntEater · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm trying to figure this one out. A bill that passed the senate that reinforces some portion of our individual liberties. I'm having trouble seeing where the corporate benefit is here. I didn't think anything made its way through any part of congress without some corporation getting something out of it. I must be missing something.

    --
    Alex, I'll take keybindings not used by Emacs for $400....
    1. Re:Confused by ShOOf · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ya my first reaction was to look at the date, nope not Apr 1.

  2. Re:The US Senate did something useful by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now that is news!

    And more seriously, this is definitely useful, because otherwise a foreign country could set up rules that heavily favors the plaintiff and abuse US citizens for, say, writing negatively about Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or Posh Spice.

    Or even the two of them as lovers!

  3. Re:Good by dangitman · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now that one can do investigation journalism in US, reverse-engineering in Finland, publish leaks in Sweden could we please recognize that preventing the publication of a file on internet is utterly silly ?

    As long as you don't get your countries mixed up, and create leaks in Holland, or attempt to reverse-engineer Swedish.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  4. Re:campaign finance and free publicity by locallyunscene · · Score: 4, Funny

    Nono you've got your conspiracy theory all wrong. Big media can and always have been able to spin a story any way they like. That's part of free speech.

    The real reason is that Disney wants to make a new movie about the life of Muhammad and wants protection from pairing him with an effeminate wise-cracking camel.

  5. Re:Catholic attack fail by jemtallon · · Score: 5, Funny

    And someone accuses God of statutory rape. That's got to be worth 3 Godwins and a strawman. Thread over!