Lee Kaplan Post Comment Deconstruction and Moderation
I eventually put my food related blog on comment moderation. I didn't like anonymous remarks that had all the signs of up-beat marketing talk appearing in response to a couple of my product reviews. If you want to disagree, that's fine, but you've got to say who you are and make a case.
I've just had to do the same with this blog. A comment came in about my Small Claims Court Becomes SLAPP Slip post. It's tone made it sound like it was either from Kaplan himself or some partisan supporter. That's fine, but how about attaching your name to the post, Anonymous? Are you afraid to stand up for what you say? Apparently so, and I took down the post. But I don't like the idea of censoring, so I'm putting in here along with an examination.
Now, to be fair, I realize that I inadvertently left out half a line from my previous post. The second to the last sentence should have started, "If this representation is correct..." I don't know what Kaplan actually does because I haven't been there and, frankly, am not interested in doing the amount of research on him that it might take to establish its veracity. But if this is how he acts, then it does sound like he wants to drown out opposing views.
I've just had to do the same with this blog. A comment came in about my Small Claims Court Becomes SLAPP Slip post. It's tone made it sound like it was either from Kaplan himself or some partisan supporter. That's fine, but how about attaching your name to the post, Anonymous? Are you afraid to stand up for what you say? Apparently so, and I took down the post. But I don't like the idea of censoring, so I'm putting in here along with an examination.
Erik Sherman writes from total ignorance in the Salahi vs Kaplan case.I was actually writing more about how small claims might circumvent a state's anti-SLAPP legislation, and this is an area I've researched in the past.
First, Salahi write demonstrably false information on the Internet to attack Kaplan's professional reputation as a journalist, a tort.Writing something that is demonstrably (please use the spell checker) false about someone could be a tort. Did the writer think that the information was correct? Did the writer back up the work with research, repeat a rumor, or make something up with the interest of doing damage? A court would have to decide in such a situation whether there had been a tort.
Salahi sent threatening emails and made phone calls to Kaplan's employers that cost Kaplan a job.First, Kaplan appears to be a freelance writer, so he has clients, not employers. Second, according to the links that Anonymous provides (more on this later), Kaplan nearly lost a client. Nearly to me means didn't. Furthermore, one of the links that goes into this makes it pretty muddy exactly what caused the problem for Kaplan - sorry, but on multiple readings, I couldn't figure out what he was saying, other than it had something to do with a switch of images, accompanying an article Kaplan wrote, somewhere or other.
Salahi claims his free speech was curtailed, yet says he will continue to libel Kaplan on the Web and that nobody told him he had to take the smear site he set up against Kaplan down.Yes, Salahi claims that the suit has made it more difficult to express himself, which is why I wrote about this as a potential case of small claims courts possibly being a new way for people and companies to try using legal tactics to control speech. Possibly is the operative word here.
So wheres the violation of the First Amendment?I never said that there was a violation of the First Amendment. That would require a government body restricting speech. The term First Amendment doesn't appear in the body of my post. It is a label for the post, because it's a free speech issue, and someone looking for First Amendment topics might find this interesting.
Salahi is asking the blogging community to pay the judgment for him, but why should they.I don't know, as I never said that they should. In fact, I never even mentioned that he was looking for people to donate money.
His crying about the First Amendment is a con to get sympathy and donors.A con? And just how do you prove that he doesn't believe what he's writing? He'd have to for this to be a con. Don't rant about people libeling others on the web and then do exactly what you complain about.
As for the SLAPP nonsense, it did not apply to the case.SLAPP nonsense? Sorry, but there are too many cases where law suits have become instruments to silence people. The question was whether Kaplan took action because he really felt injured or did so to silence a critic. I can't know that for sure, but it's certainly a possibility. Now go back and see at the beginning of my post where I wrote that this case may be one of the latest to get around anti-SLAPP restrictions.
Salahi had free legal help and it was Kaplan who had to bear the brunt of his own lawsuit.Hello, this was small claims court. I assume that Anonymous meant that Kaplan had to bear the costs of his suit. The cost to file for a $7,500 claim (which happens to be the largest that the court allows) is $75. Sorry, but that doesn't seem to be an overwhelming amount, and as you can't bring a lawyer into the court, that limits the amount of the legal bill. In other words, his costs were minimum and he was going for the largest amount of damage - and most painful penalty - he could while minimizing his own expenses.
By the way, it was proven in court that Salahi lied about the SLAPP motion that he mistakenly claimed he could use a year ago.Oh? Lied? An interesting assertion without any proof cited. And what is it that Anonymous means? Lied about raising it? Try collecting yourself and thinking through what it is that you want to say, please.
The article attacking Kaplan was written by an anti-Israel rag and reporter that has done hit pieces on Kaplan before, and has nothing to do with the court case or the evidence.Ah, I see - Anonymous doesn't like the presumed politics of the article's publisher. But this is empty rhetoric, as it doesn't show one way or the other that what was in the article was inaccurate. A critical view isn't necessarily a "hit piece," which sounds as though it's written strictly to discredit someone and not to investigate a story. Those who are interested can actually see Kaplan's own response to the article in question. While he does refute a number of things, I don't think he refuted the part about disrupting events.
See:Ah, now we get to the nub of it. The two sources were written by Kaplan, and Anonymous is a true believer. Reality suggests that in any dispute, the truth is generally somewhere between the two sides.
www.leekaplandeconstructsleekaplanwatch.blogspot.com and
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=28816 to get the real story...
Now, to be fair, I realize that I inadvertently left out half a line from my previous post. The second to the last sentence should have started, "If this representation is correct..." I don't know what Kaplan actually does because I haven't been there and, frankly, am not interested in doing the amount of research on him that it might take to establish its veracity. But if this is how he acts, then it does sound like he wants to drown out opposing views.
Labels: 1st amendment, Berkeley, first amendment, Kaplan, Salahi, suit




6 Comments:
At 11:53 AM,
Becky Johnson said…
I am an associate of Lee Kaplan, a member of DAFKA, and a journalist in my own right. I attended two of the five hearings in this case.
The issue about the SLAPP suit is this. Salahi plead ignorance in court of any knowledge or consideration of a SLAPP suit forgetting that he had discussed this very issue on his blog a year before.Kaplan submitted the actual copy of the site where this was done. Hence Salahi perjured himself. And it was not the only time.
--- Becky Johnson (not Anonymous!)
At 10:58 PM,
Anonymous said…
Did you bother to read the documents on the courthouse website. Salahi was represented by an attorney at his last appeal in Superior Court and this was probono. Had you done your research you would not ahve opresented one side as if Salahi is being truthful...There also obviously was a tort against Kaplan. It seems you are more inclined to accept whatever Salahi says rather than doing hard research. The judges are not stupid. Salahi lost for good reason and he doesnt bother to mention he had a lawyer representing him (something you should ahve researched on the web as did I.)
At 4:11 AM,
Erik Sherman said…
Ah, a signed comment! Thanks for the courtesy.
Perhaps I put this badly, but this isn't really about Salahi and Lee. Whether he brought this up correctly in court or not isn't the point. What I find interesting and disturbing is the realizion that people could use small claims court to try forcing others into not expressing themselves. I think this case shows at least the possibility of that happening.
I also still find a sad irony that a journalist would take this approach to stop criticism.
At 4:30 AM,
Erik Sherman said…
So much for the signed comments, eh? But instead of putting this into another post (because I have a funny feeling that this is the same poster that made it into the deconstruction above), I'll do it here.
>> Did you bother to read the documents on the courthouse website. Salahi was represented by an attorney at his last appeal in Superior Court and this was probono. <<
Uh ... so? I don't see how that touches on the original subject of whether a small claims action can effectively be a SLAPP suit. I don't remember addressing a final appeal in Superior Court because my post isn't really about this particular case. I would hope that he had a lawyer in court where possible - though that also doesn't contradict not being allowed a lawyer to represent you in small claims.
>> Had you done your research you would not ahve opresented one side as if Salahi is being truthful...There also obviously was a tort against Kaplan. <<
What is obvious to one side is not necessarily obviuos to another. A court has to decide that a tort has been committed, particularly when you are discussion libel. Also - and why is this so hard to grasp? - I'm interested in the issue of whether small claims can become a tool for a SLAPP suit.
>> It seems you are more inclined to accept whatever Salahi says rather than doing hard research. <<
How silly. I have a good number of qualifiers in my original post - meaning that I'm not automatically buying either side's argument. And the post is more about the bigger implications of the tactic for freedom of expression.
>> The judges are not stupid. <<
Never realized that I said they were. Oh, right, I didn't.
>> Salahi lost for good reason and he doesnt bother to mention he had a lawyer representing him (something you should ahve researched on the web as did I.) <<
If you think that winning in court is proof of virtue or veracity, I'd suggest that you have many life lessons ahead of you.
Also, you can't have a lawyer represent you in small claims court in California - as you might know if you bothered to follow the link I provided to the state's own material on the subject.
I must say that when I start getting multiple posts on a single subject like this, it comes across as a coordinated effort - and even smacks of trying to quiet anyone this group thinks might disagree with it.
There are relatively few situations in life where the two sides are so clearly drawn in virtue and vice. And if you're unwilling to attach your name to your views, it's a possible indication that your moral ground isn't as firm as you'd like to think.
At 9:07 PM,
Anonymous said…
Mr.Sherman---
Im curious to see how you would react if someone like Salahi setg up a blog devoted solely to your reputation as a kawyer, then wrote articles himself saying you were a criminal, sued for libel, represented the MAFIA or whatever other calumnies he could devise to ruin your business and reputation. As a lawyer, Inm sure you would sue. The blog was not set up for free speech but as a smear site and cost the plaintiff jobs.
Salahi during this last appeal was represented in Superiror Court by an attorney who represented him pro bono. Mr. Kaplan paid for his attorney. So this was not a case of a victim of the legal system. The fact is, Salahi contrqadicted himself so many times he even blindsided his attorney.
Id be scared to have you represent me. Your legal mind seems more inclined to promote the attacker's actions than finding jsutice for the victim....You failed to do research then continued to defend your sloppy and unfair comments.
At 5:40 AM,
Erik Sherman said…
You have to wonder about the fervor of some group that keeps leaving comments on obscure blogs. Again, I'll do the deconstruction here of yet another "anonymous" comment:
>> Im curious to see how you would react if someone like Salahi setg up a blog devoted solely to your reputation as a kawyer, then wrote articles himself saying you were a criminal, sued for libel, represented the MAFIA or whatever other calumnies he could devise to ruin your business and reputation. As a lawyer, Inm sure you would sue. The blog was not set up for free speech but as a smear site and cost the plaintiff jobs. <<
To remind the poster, I was writing about using small claims courts as a way of attacking free speach and considering whether Kaplan's suite of Salahi might fit that category. It's certainly a cheap way of claiming just enough money to stay within the bounds of small claims but more than enough to financially bury a student. That smacks not of protecting one's reputation but of trying to quiet another party. I could be wrong, but it's certainly the impression I had, given the circumstances. I'm taking no position on Salahi's blog, as I don't read it.
Also, given that I'm decidedly not a lawyer, if someone questioned my reputation as a lawyer, I suspect I'd be puzzled.
To make a claim as to Salahi's motiviation in setting up his blog, I'd hope that the poster actually asked the man and didn't simply set up an overly emotional and possibly libelous claim to further some cause or other. Ah, but wait, it's anonymous! How safe. And how unhelpful. For all I know, this could be some Salahi supporter trying to make the Kaplan camp look bad.
>> Salahi during this last appeal was represented in Superiror Court by an attorney who represented him pro bono. Mr. Kaplan paid for his attorney. So this was not a case of a victim of the legal system. The fact is, Salahi contrqadicted himself so many times he even blindsided his attorney. <<
Perhaps, perhaps not. I was discussing using small claims as a potential SLAPP outlet.
I don't put much stock in the claims of an anonymous person who cites no verifiable sources. This is just so much inflammatory empty rhetoric.
>> Id be scared to have you represent me. <<
I don't blame you - U;n not a lawyer, so I'd be concerned as well. And if I were a lawyer, given your apparent comfort in making unsupported claims and generalizations, I'd probably still be scared to represent you.
>> Your legal mind seems more inclined to promote the attacker's actions than finding jsutice for the victim.... <<
Ah, justice for the victim. Or should that be "vindication" and blanket agreement?
>> You failed to do research then continued to defend your sloppy and unfair comments. <<
Someone who claims that I'm a lawyer when I'm not and makes unsupported inflammatory statements might think twice before chiding anyone for "sloppy and unfair comments."
I'm starting to think that the people at least supporting Kaplan - and possibly Salahi, though to my knowledge only Salahi has responded to my post - really need to get a life.
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