If a judge is called ‘corrupt’ by a defendant outside court in front of the media, or if something more unambiguously libelous is said, can the judge sue the defendant?

  • radix@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    “Corrupt” would almost certainly be a statement of opinion, so not actionable in the US. A lot more detail would be necessary for this to be defamation.

    “Judge XXXX has taken millions in shadow bribes and has consistently ruled for the wishes of his/her benefactors. There has been a history of being reversed on appeal proving their bias. Also I watched them kick a puppy.”

    Then, obviously, these things would have to be false. Even then, the bar is pretty high. There are exceptions both ways on this, but as a general guideline, if the public knows a person’s name (judge in a high profile case, for example) they are probably classified as a public figure. The rule there is one of “actual malice” which isn’t exactly what it sounds like, but it’s the highest bar for defamation cases.

    The speaker would have to say something factually false, knowingly or with no regard for the truth. Giuliani, for one recent example, was found guilty of defaming the Georgia election workers, because he went into great detail about his false claims, and he was told repeatedly that thise claims were false, but he kept going.

    • TheEighthDoctor@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      “Corrupt” would almost certainly be a statement of opinion

      How the fuck is “corrupt” a matter of opinion? Maybe it’s different in English which is not my first language but corrupt has a very straightforward meaning, it means you took money or favors to affect your professional conduct.

      • litchralee@sh.itjust.works
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        5 months ago

        In American English, “corrupt” can refer to both the crime of corruption (eg quid pro quo deals with public officials) as well as seemingly abuses of discretion. For example, a city engineer has some amount of discretion when designing a new street, whether to dedicate more public space to automobiles or to restrict the space to become more like a public plaza, ie a living street with places to sit, eat, shop, and take in the air.

        By objective professional standards, either approach could be appropriate if properly justified. But public sentiment could result in that engineer being called “corrupt” because they’re giving less favor toward automobiles, for example. That is, “corrupt” is an epithet to voice one’s displeasure at a discretionary decision. Also see sports umpires, who face similar (or worse) vitriol.

  • NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    outside court

    If you mean a different time, not while the proceedings are ongoing, then it’s easy: yes, the judge has the same right to sue as anybody else. (And No, that would not make the judge biased. That idea is somewhat ridiculous).

    If you mean during the proceedings, then the judge has the additional right to call that person to order with a fine. Repeatedly, if needed.

  • kmartburrito@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    No matter what the outcome, it’s probably a poor choice to do this before your sentencing, which the judge you’re slandering has full control over.

  • Bertuccio@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    IANAL. Probably not.

    Defamation needs to show damages and the judge would need to show that somehow those statements materially damaged them.

    Public figures also need to meet higher bars for defamation.

    • RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Assuming OP is talking about Trump, this would take place in the USA. So because they are in the USA, they would also need to prove the things said were actually false, that the things said were said with malicious intent, and that what was said was not protected such as something protected by the first amendment.

      Winning a defamation case is very, very hard in the USA. Its not like Japan where the law literally gives away wins because you don’t even have to prove that what was said was false. The USA requires a lot of things be met in order to even qualify as defamation.

  • meco03211@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    The short answer is “yes” if you define “suing” as filing a lawsuit with a court. Anyone can file a lawsuit in court for pretty much any reason. Whether or not it goes anywhere depends on the strength of the claim and other factors.

    The longer answer is still “yes” if you narrow your definition of “suing” to filing a legitimate lawsuit with the potential to be successful. Judges are still people and can suffer real damage due to libelous or slanderous claims. There are certain elements that must be proven to be successful though. One of the defenses is for rhetorical hyperbole. As a hypothetical example, if a defendant with a penchant for grandiose and bombastic hyperbole and known for calling everything and everyone under the sun “corrupt” because he’s a pathetic baby calls the judge corrupt, it would likely fail based on the comment being rhetorical hyperbole. It would be similar to saying someone “killed” another person when no actual murder took place and it was like a verbal smack down.

  • NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    If a judge is called ‘corrupt’ by a defendant

    After thinking again:

    In most parts of the world, such behaviour would bring you a few years extra in some really bad jail, or 30 good strikes extra with the whip (this is near death), or simply a stronger kind of penalty than you deserve for whatever you have done. It is a bad idea. It is far from funny.

    Of course you are talking of the Usa here. And of course their system is corrupted. But I really don’t think it is that corrupted that you could actually get an advantage from such bad behaviour instead of an extra penalty.

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    As with everything it depends. The judge can file but unless they can show they suffered loss because of the comment another judge would throw the case out due to lack of standing.

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I’m guessing that could give the defendant ground to appeal the original ruling because the judge was biased by the alleged libel.

      • filtoid@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        Judges hate this this one trick. Call them rude words then they can’t convict you because that would make them biased!

      • stinerman [Ohio]@midwest.social
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        5 months ago

        No it is not. You can appeal if the judge was biased before he was assigned the case. After he takes the case if he becomes “biased” because you called him names and defamed him…no. If you could, every defendant would try to piss off the judge so that they could win on appeal because s/he was biased during the trial.

        • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          What if the judge loses the libel case? The defendant could then argue the “unfounded” libel charge was symptomatic of a preexisting bias.

          • NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            What if the judge loses the libel case?

            Then you should look for stronger insults LOL

            No. There is nothing to it. Real lawyers and judges have heard it before, and better.