Supreme Court to weigh in on libel vs. satire case
Associated Press
AUSTIN - Stepping into a battle over the First Amendment and political satire, the Texas Supreme Court today agreed to hear the case of two Denton County officials who sued a newspaper over an article about the fictional arrest of a 6-year-old girl.
The Dallas Observer said the article, which some readers thought was true, was satire and designed to poke fun.
The piece, published in 1999 under the headline "Stop the Madness," was a parody of the actual arrest of a 13-year-old Ponder student for reading a graphic Halloween story to the class. The fictional story was about a girl jailed for a report on Maurice Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are.
Denton County Judge Darlene Whitten and District Attorney Bruce Isaacks didn't think it was funny. They say the fictional story was presented as news and damaged their reputation.
Jim Hemphill, an Austin attorney representing the newspaper's publisher, New Times Inc., writer Rose Farley and editors Julie Lyons and Patrick Williams, said the story was protected free speech.
The newspaper and its employees have tried to get the case thrown out but have twice been rejected by a lower appeals court.
"They don't think they should have to answer in a courthouse what was clearly protected political speech," Hemphill said. "This is core political speech and the very heart of the First Amendment: criticism of their elected officials
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http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/metropolitan/2120067this looks like a case where they are going after the Al Frankens of the world! :bounce: