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Contact: Judith Platt (202) 220-4551 Amy Gwiazdowski (202) 220-4550
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PUBLISHERS DEFEND RIGHT TO SATIRIZE PUBLIC OFFICIALS
November 5, 2003
Washington, DC - The Association of American Publishers (AAP),
leading a broad coalition of media and First Amendment groups,
went into court in Texas today to defend the right of Americans
to make fun of public officials through political satire and parody
without fear of being sued for defamation. In a case now before
the Texas Supreme Court that is attracting national attention,
the groups joined in a friend-of-the-court brief asserting the
constitutional right of Americans to use "comic exaggeration to
draw attention to…misuse of authority."
The case, New Times, Inc. v. Isaacks et al, is a defamation action
brought against the Dallas Observer, an alternative newsweekly,
and its parent company, New Times, Inc., as a result of the publication
of a fictitious article satirizing the way in which two local
elected officials enforced a school violence "zero-tolerance"
policy by jailing a 13-year old student for writing a school-assigned
Halloween essay. In October 1999, six months after the shootings
at Columbine, a 13-year-old 7th grader was jailed for five days
in Denton County, Texas (north of Dallas) for writing a homework-related
Halloween essay in which he discussed the shooting of two students
and a teacher. In the wake of the highly publicized incident,
the Dallas Observer published a satiric article entitled "Stop
the Madness," reporting that a 6-year old had been arrested during
story-time after writing a book report based on Where the Wild
Things Are that contained "cannibalism, fanaticism, and disorderly
conduct." The mock news article contained outrageous fictional
quotes from several real people, including then-Governor George
W. Bush, a representative of the ACLU, the county district attorney
Bruce Isaacks, and juvenile court judge Darlene Whitten. The piece
drew criticism from some members of the public, who apparently
believed it to be a true news story rather than a satire. Isaacks
and Whitten sued for defamation. Both the trial court and the
Texas Court of Appeals refused to throw the case out, finding
there to be issues for the jury as to whether a "reasonable person"
would believe the story to be true and whether the defendants
acted with "actual malice" in publishing it.
The amicus brief points out that "…beyond the absurd proposition
that a six-year-old girl could be arrested for anything, much
less writing a book report…on one of the most critically acclaimed
and best-loved children's books of all time, the article is saturated
with details, some specifically noted by the Court of Appeals,
any one of which would have put a reasonable reader on notice
that the article as a whole was not to be taken literally." The
brief states that "Opinions conveyed through the use of humor,
while they may rub those criticized the wrong way, are no less
entitled to First Amendment protection than those conveyed by
other means," concluding that "In short, satire is the type of
speech on matters of public concern the protection of which is
the transcendant purpose of the First Amendment."
Among the 15 groups joining AAP on the amicus brief are the American
Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression, the Association of
Alternative Newsweeklies, the Freedom to Read Foundation, the
Motion Picture Association of America, PEN American Center, and
the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. The brief and
a complete listing of the amici can be found on the AAP web site
at http://www.publishers.org.
The Association of American Publishers is the national trade association
of the U.S. book publishing industry. AAP's members include most
of the major commercial book publishers in the United States,
as well as smaller and non-profit publishers, university presses,
and scholarly societies. AAP members publish hardcover and paperback
books in every field, educational materials for the elementary,
secondary, postsecondary, and professional markets, computer software,
and electronic products and services. The Association represents
and industry whose very existence depends upon the free exercise
of rights guaranteed by the First Amendment.
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