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Search resuls for: "Crikey"


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Persons: , it's, Henry Ajder, Ajder Organizations: Adobe, Service, Hamas, Adobe Stock, Google, Meta's Reality Labs Locations: Israel, Palestine, Gaza, israel, palestine
CNN —Lachlan Murdoch, Fox Corporation’s chief executive, paid substantial legal fees to Private Media, which publishes the scrappy Australia-based news outlet Crikey, after abandoning his defamation lawsuit against the outlet. So, $1,306,739 Australian ($839,207.39 US) to cover Private Media’s legal costs, more than the $1.1 million Australian ($705,000 US) that had been sought by the outlet. Private Media, which had crowdfunded its legal defense against Murdoch, pledged to donate $588,735 Australian ($377,555 US) — all of the money it had raised — to the Alliance for Journalists’ Freedom. Will Hayward, the chief executive of Private Media, said he was “delighted” to be able to donate the funds. “This includes campaigning for a Media Freedom Act, supported by a voluntary membership that will recognize quality journalism.”
Persons: Lachlan Murdoch, Fox, John Churchill, Murdoch, Crikey, unindicted, , doesn’t, Donald Trump, , “ Crikey, Mr Murdoch, Churchill, Will Hayward, ” Hayward, Peter Greste Organizations: CNN, Fox Corporation’s, Private Media, Capitol, Fox Corp ., Fox News, Dominion, Systems, Alliance for Journalists ’ Locations: Australia
Mr. Murdoch sued Crikey last August over an opinion column with the headline: “Trump is a confirmed unhinged traitor. And Murdoch is his unindicted co-conspirator.” The column did not specify whether it was referring to Mr. Murdoch or his father, Rupert Murdoch. Dominion had accused Fox of defaming it by repeatedly linking it to the false voter fraud claims in multiple broadcasts. That donation was a condition of the agreement with Mr. Murdoch. “This money was raised from the good will of people across Australia who believe in the importance of free speech,” Mr. Hayward said.
Persons: Murdoch, Crikey, “ Trump, Rupert Murdoch, Fox, Will Hayward, , Mr, Hayward, Organizations: Fox News, Dominion, Private Media, Alliance for Journalists ’ Locations: crowdfunding, Australian, Australia
Lachlan Murdoch in Sun Valley, Idaho, in 2019. And Murdoch is his unindicted co-conspirator.”Private Media rejected the claim that the article had defamed Mr. Murdoch and the case was due to go to trial in federal court in Sydney in October. On Friday, Mr. Murdoch’s attorney, John Churchill, filed a notice with the federal court stating that the Fox chief executive was discontinuing the proceedings. In a statement, Mr. Churchill said Mr. Murdoch was confident that he would have won the case at trial. Crikey, in a statement on its website, called the decision a victory for public interest journalism and said it stood by the original article.
SYDNEY, April 21 (Reuters) - Fox Corp (FOXA.O) CEO Lachlan Murdoch dropped a defamation lawsuit against an Australian news site over an opinion piece he said accused him of complicity in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, saying the defendant was trying to generate publicity. A lawyer for Private Media, Michael Bradley, said Murdoch had discontinued his Federal Court claim without warning and that Murdoch would pay Private Media's costs. "It's complete vindication of their stand on the principle of press freedom," Bradley said in an email, referring to Crikey and its employees. Fox and its top-rated cable channel Fox News on April 18 settled a defamation lawsuit by ballot machine operator Dominion Voting Systems, on what was to be the first day of a trial where Lachlan's father, Fox Corp Chairman Rupert Murdoch, had been expected to testify. In the Australian lawsuit, which was scheduled to go to trial in October, Lachlan Murdoch had accused Private Media and four employees of damaging his reputation in a June 29, 2022, opinion piece that described the Murdochs as "unindicted co-conspirators" in the effort by Trump supporters to overturn his election loss.
We won.”The legal dispute centers on a 2022 Crikey story that carried the headline, “Trump is a confirmed unhinged traitor. And Murdoch is his unindicted co-conspirator.”After the article was published, Murdoch demanded the story be removed and the outlet apologize. Murdoch followed through on the dare, filing a lawsuit against Crikey publisher Private Media. Crikey and Private Media said throughout the legal process that they would defend themselves and were confident in their case. Not only would he have been ensnared in another high-profile defamation case, his camp would have had to make effectively the opposite arguments it has made in the United States in regard to defamation law.
In a statement on Thursday, Mr. Murdoch’s Australian lawyer, John Churchill, said Crikey had recently added to its defense case the thousands of pages of evidence that were made public in the recent lawsuit that Dominion Voting Systems, an election technology company, brought against Fox in the United States. Murdoch remains confident that the court would ultimately find in his favor; however, he does not wish to further enable Crikey’s use of the court to litigate a case from another jurisdiction that has already been settled and facilitate a marketing campaign designed to attract subscribers and boost their profits,” Mr. Churchill said. Mr. Churchill said that in the Dominion case, which was settled on Tuesday for $787.5 million just as a trial was about to begin, the judge had ruled that the events of Jan. 6 were not relevant and that Dominion did not plan to argue that Fox had caused the insurrection. “Yet this is what Crikey’s article alleged and what Crikey is attempting to argue in Australia,” Mr. Churchill said. Crikey, which has said it stands behind the article it published, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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