Press: A General Loses His Case
The four women and two men walked silently to their red leather armchairs in Room 110 of the Federal District Court Building in lower Manhattan. As dozens of reporters and spectators listened intently, the clerk asked Jury Foreman Richard Zug, an IBM computer specialist, if the panel had come to a decision. "We have," replied Zug. Reading carefully from the verdict form, Zug announced, "On actual malice: to the question, Has the plaintiff proved by clear and convincing evidence that a person or persons at Time Inc. knew that the defamatory statement was false or had serious doubts to its truth?,...
Email, Password or Region is incorrect
A required form parameter was missing.
The System is currently down. Please try again in a few minutes.
Email Address is invalid
Password is blank
Most Popular »
- Icelanders Avoid Inbreeding Through Online Incest Database
- The 2012 World Press Photo of the Year
- Why American Kids Are Brats
- Top 10 Celebrity Restaurants
- Jimmy Stewart: A Hero Home From the War
- Mired in the Sticky Politics of Health and Faith, Obama Shifts on Contraception
- World Press Photo Awards Announced
- A Cancer Drug Reverses Alzheimer's Disease in Mice
- The Second Coming of Warren Jeffs: The Jailed Polygamist Leader Prepares His Flock for Doomsday
- 'Anonymous' Knocks CIA Site Offline
- Why Is Your Boss Moving to Brazil?
- The Upside Of Being An Introvert (And Why Extroverts Are Overrated)
- Jailed Polygamist Warren Jeffs Prepares His Flock for Doomsday
- Why Mario Monti Is the Most Important Man in Europe
- Friends With Benefits
- The Brain: How The Brain Rewires Itself
- New York City: 10 Things to Do
- Sentencing Spain's 'Superjudge': Why Baltasar Garzón Is Being Punished
- Hot-Tub Time Machine
- Seoul Searching




