ChatterBank5 mins ago
Does The Daily Mail Need Better Lawyers?
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No best answer has yet been selected by jake-the-peg. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If they had evidence that she used an earpiece and an accomplice to perpetrate a fraud on the audience, they would have fought it. As she said, expressing cynicism about her claims is fair enough, "fair comment" as we used to call the defence, but an assertion of fact like that, unsupported, is not.
it seems the Mail picked up an allegation first made on a radio programme that Morgan's staff in the audience were relaying things to her via an earpiece. It later emerged the people in question weren't her staff at all but worked for the theatre.
It's an extremely damaging allegation and you'd have expected a newspaper to check things like this. It got off very lightly paying £125,000 - how much compensation would you want if a libel meant you would have trouble ever working again?
It's an extremely damaging allegation and you'd have expected a newspaper to check things like this. It got off very lightly paying £125,000 - how much compensation would you want if a libel meant you would have trouble ever working again?
Sally Bercow needed a better brain. She should have known the risk if being sued. Once she had tweeted, the damage was done and all the lawyers could do is try to get her out of trouble. Still think that the judge was wrong to read a damaging innuendo into the tweet, but that's what happens under our present law of defamation.
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I suppose it all depends on whether you believe in Psychics, personally I don't.
I have to laugh when I read some of my wife's magazines where readers have written to the resident "psychic" asking if their dead relative is happy and blames them for anything. Needless to say the "psychic" tells them everything they want to hear and no doubt they feel better for it. If it makes them happy then so be it. However, It's all hogwash!
Perhaps the DM lawyers were psychics too and knew the outcome could be worse.
I have to laugh when I read some of my wife's magazines where readers have written to the resident "psychic" asking if their dead relative is happy and blames them for anything. Needless to say the "psychic" tells them everything they want to hear and no doubt they feel better for it. If it makes them happy then so be it. However, It's all hogwash!
Perhaps the DM lawyers were psychics too and knew the outcome could be worse.
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