| Does Shari'a Libel Law Now Apply in the U.S.? |
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| Written by Alyssa A. Lappen |
| Wednesday, 02 January 2008 12:07 |
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While Americans slumber, the tentacles of radical Islamists and their legal system infiltrates our land. This growing menace must be vanquished, but the main stream press are full of blind socialites, after their own power. Saudi billionaire Khalid bin Mahfouz has reached out of his country and into ours to perhaps snuff free speech? Please read Alyssa A. Lappen's article...
When truth = slander
by Alyssa A. Lappen Unless the U.S. Congress and New York legislatures act immediately to stop them, foreign terror financiers and libel tourists now can essentially impose sharia (Islamic) law on American writers and publishers. Intended or not, a narrow, technical New York Appeals Court decision on Thursday Dec. 20, 2007 produces that net effect. The ruling concerns jurisdiction in Dr. Rachel Ehrenfelds suit against Saudi billionaire Khalid bin Mahfouz, seeking a federal declaratory judgment against him to render unenforceable in the U.S. a U.K. High Court default libel decision. By implication, the New York Appeals Court ruling harms all publishers and writers in New York, the worlds publishing capital. Ehrenfelds case stems from her 2003 book, Funding Evil: How Terrorism is Financedand How to Stop It, where American Center for Democracy Director reports Mahfouz well-documented terror funding. (Full disclosure: Since September 2005, Ive been an ACD Senior Fellow.) As always after such terror financing reports, Mahfouz sued Ehrenfeld for libel in Britain. His attorneys informed U.K. High Court Justice David Eady that former CIA director R. James Woolsey wrote her books foreword. Say no more, Eady replied. I award you a judgment by default, and if you want, an injunction, too. Eady then ordered Ehrenfeld to apologize, retract, pay Mahfouz $225,913.37 in damages and destroy remaining copies of her book. Instead, she ignored the British default judgment and false libel claimnever tried on its meritsand asked the Southern District Court of New York to rule the U.K. judgment unenforceable here. In the U.S., the Supreme Courts seminal 1964 New York Times v. Sullivan decision defined libel or slander by a journalist as stating or writing falsehoods or misrepresentations that damage someones reputationand in cases of public figures, doing so with malice. Under sharia, by contrast, libel constitutes any oral or written remark offensive to a complainant, regardless of its accuracy or intent. Slander means to mention anything concerning a person that he would dislike, whether about his body, religion, everyday life, self, disposition, property, son, father, wife, servant, turban, garment, gait, movements, smiling, dissoluteness, frowning, cheerfulness, or anything else connected with him, according to Ahmad Ibn Lulu Ibn Al-Naqib (d. 1368). 1 Repeat: Sharia regards even the truth as slander if its subject dislikes the facts. Now applied through foreign courts, sharia law interpretations of libel have demonstrably undermined U.S. press viability already. Though Mahfouz never proved merits in any libel case, he has threatened or sued more than 35 journalists and publishers (including many in the U.S.) through Britains High Court, and exacted fines, apologies and retractions from all but Ehrenfeld. Last Thursday, New Yorks Appeals Court substantially (if not intentionally) allowed the application of sharia rules here. New York State recently held that it can collect sales taxes from commercial enterprises with as little physical presence as a single link on any New York-based website. While temporarily reversed on November 15, the states controversial opinion will be enforced after the 2007 Christmas season. Yet, also by New York fiat, Constitutional First Amendment rights now take a back seat to the states conservative long-arm statuteswhich protect distant commercial enterprises from state courts. A Saudi national suing an American journalist in Britain, Mahfouz hired numerous New York agents and couriers and used many New York electronic and telephone communication systems expressly to halt Ehrenfelds investigations and publications concerning terror finance. However, on Dec. 20 the New York Appeals Court established Mahfouz New York-based commercial transactions as less commercial (or significant) than a distant merchants sales link on a New York-based website. In its unanimous June 8, 2007 request for a local ruling on jurisdiction, the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals panel specifically extended as wide a berth as possible to the New York Court of Appeals to consider First Amendment rights within the context of Ehrenfelds case. However, the New York Court ignored the federal instructions to consider Constitutional issuesor the effects this case will consequently have on Constitutional rights in the worlds publishing capital. However pernicious the effect of this practice [libel tourism] may be, our duty here is to determine whether defendants New York contacts establish a proper basis for jurisdiction, wrote Judge Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick, an appointee of former Governor Mario Cuomo. Shockingly, New Yorks Court of Appeals allowed Mahfouz commercial actions (and any similar commercial actions of any other foreign terror financier and libel tourist) to subjugate Constitutional First Amendment rights to archaic commercial statutes. Now, the U.S. Congress and New York legislators must swiftly enact new long-arm statues, suitable to our electronic age, before further damage to the U.S. Constitution ensues.
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| Last Updated on Tuesday, 28 October 2008 15:53 |