Monday, February 20, 2017

A Hospital CEO Sued CNN for Publishing 'Fake News' About Him. The Court's Decision May Be a Gamechanger




carbone cnn 

President Trump might be the most well-known person to accuse CNN of publishing “fake news,” but he certainly isn't the only one.
In Georgia, a former hospital CEO has launched a legal battle against the news network after he was forced to resign over what he claims were a “series of false and defamatory news reports” — reports that he says CNN “intentionally” skewed in order to sensationalize the story.
On Wednesday, a federal district judge announced an early ruling in favor of that CEO, Davide Carbone, declaring that CNN had “recklessly” reported that Carbone's hospital had an infant mortality rate that was three times the national average:
CNN's years-long investigation — which was featured on Anderson Cooper's show “AC360” beginning in 2011 — focused on Florida's St. Mary's Medical Center and their children's cardiac surgery program.
After the damning report prompted Carbone's resignation, he filed a defamation lawsuit against the news network, claiming that CNN “misled its viewers” by knowingly comparing “more risky pediatric open-heart surgeries at St. Mary’s to a national average that included both open-heart and less risky closed-heart surgeries.”
As Carbone’s attorney L. Lin Wood explained to LawNewz.com:
"In our case, we contended that CNN essentially made up its own standard in order to conduct an ‘apples to oranges’ comparison to support its false assertion that St. Mary’s mortality rate was three times higher than the national average.
Accordingly, the case against CNN certainly fits the description of media-created ‘Fake News.'"
While CNN has tried to get the case thrown out of court, a ruling by Judge Orinda Evans on Wednesday seemed to effectively crush that effort, as she ordered that the lawsuit be allowed to move forward:
The Court finds these allegations sufficient to establish that CNN was acting recklessly with regard to the accuracy of its report, i.e., with ‘actual malice.'

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