Lobbyist Linked To McCain Sues NY Times
Vicki Iseman Charges Newspaper With Defamation For Linking Her, Senator Romantically
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Photo
Vicki Iseman attends the Radio and Television News Directors Foundation Awards Dinner in Washington, in this March 11, 2004 file photo. (AP Photo/Stephen J Boitano)
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Photo Essay
End Of The Trail
John McCain graciously concedes defeat in the presidential election.
The newspaper stood by the story.
Vicki L. Iseman filed the defamation suit in U.S. District Court in Richmond. It also names as defendants the Times' executive editor, its Washington bureau chief and four reporters.
Iseman represented telecommunications companies before the Senate Commerce Committee, which McCain chaired. In February, as McCain was seeking the Republican presidential nomination, the Times reported that McCain aides once worried the relationship between Iseman and McCain had turned romantic.
The article said that both McCain and Iseman denied any romantic relationship, but the lawsuit says most readers would find that obligatory.
"That The New York Times would make such aggressive and sensational allegations and insinuations in the face of on-the-record denials by Ms. Iseman and Senator McCain only reinforced the message to readers that The New York Times in fact believed that Ms. Iseman and Senator McCain had indeed engaged in an 'inappropriate relationship,' a relationship that was romantic, unethical, and a conflict of interest," the lawsuit says. "Otherwise, reasonable readers would conclude, The New York Times would never have printed the story at all."
The Times maintained its defense of the story in a statement Tuesday.
"We fully stand behind the article. We continue to believe it to be true and accurate, and that we will prevail," the statement said. "As we said at the time, it was an important piece that raised questions about a presidential contender and the perception that he had been engaged in conflicts of interest."
Richmond lawyer W. Coleman Allen Jr., who represents Iseman, said she waited until after the presidential election to file the suit because she didn't want it to become a distraction.
The lawsuit claims that other media outlets were investigating McCain's ties with Iseman and that the Times was so concerned about being scooped that it printed a story "to pack the maximum sensational impact with the minimum factual support." The lawsuit contends she suffered an "avalanche of scorn, derision, and ridicule" that damaged her health.
The lawsuit cites accounts from other media, political pundits and the Times' public editor, Clark Hoyt, that interpreted the article as meaning that McCain and Iseman had an affair.
In what the lawsuit calls the most damaging passage, the article said two former McCain associates had warned him that he was risking his career, and that he "acknowledged behaving inappropriately" and "pledged to keep his distance" from Iseman.
The story also pointed to a fundraiser that Iseman and McCain attended in Miami in 1999, when they flew back to Washington along with a campaign aide on the corporate jet of one of her clients.
"Ms. Iseman's relationship with Senator McCain was entirely professional, ethical, and appropriate," the lawsuit states, adding that it "was not different in kind from the cordial yet professional relationship that hundreds of lobbyists have with hundreds of members of Congress."
Keith Werhan, a constitutional law professor at Tulane University, said key to Iseman's case will be how the court defines her - as a public figure or a private figure. Public figures have to meet a higher standard of proof, and show malice by a news outlet.
Werhan also said the Times could be protected if it accurately quoted McCain's former aides about their perceptions of his relationship with Iseman.
"If all those statements are true, then it seems to me the Times is not at fault for reporting that," Werhan said.
"It's essentially hard to win a defamation suit," Werhan added. "The idea is the First Amendment has its thumb on the press' side of scales."
Iseman's lawsuit was first reported by Virginia Lawyers Weekly.
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As it turns out, the chosen one didn''t need the times to help he get elected. Nope, he had more help than he needed. And money
I can''t help but wonder where these guys were when such rags as the National Inquirer, the Globe, the World Report, etc., were reporting that the then-Great Emperor Bush II had fallen off the wagon and was hitting the "Jack Daniels" pretty hard. You could sure tell there was something hitting what little grey matter he had when he had press conferences, or spoke at White House events.
Then there was the story from the rags that "Uncle George" was fighting with First Lady Laura on a daily basis and a divorce was in the making. Considering that the First Lady is just as big a "Ditz" as "Uncle George" is, this story really seemed likely.
Finally, the story that "Uncle George" was "sleeping" with Candy Rice deserves some special attention!
Surprisingly, all these stories were ignored by the neocons even though the rags reach more people than the NYT does! No one from the Bush family is suing the National Inquirer over these stories as far as I know!
Maybe there was truth to them, huh???
SIG HEIL, WHAT''S ONE MORE SKELETON IN THE CLOSET!!!, BUSH!!!
Posted by peace4321 at 05:14 PM : Dec 31, 2008
So...
Not too long ago, Lee Enterprises shares were selling for $30.00 a share - now $.39
Newspaper (print) industry is taking a beating...
Poor Vicki is p*ssed that they were right and she needs to sue to keep from throwing up thinking about what she did. S-E-X with McSame - yuck!
Former lovers can become a distraction during a presidential election. Iseman and cindy could be twins. Now we know McCain''s type.
I bet this case will be dropped as fast as it was started.
Hope she loses like the rest of the nut jobs. They want things only their way when it makes them look good now who is using an frivolus law suite.
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by mizzerz
January 2, 2009 1:08 PM PST
- Iseman wants to sue the NY times about the things they stated the Mccain staffers were suspecting and trying to avoid. I wonder if the Mccain staffers are being sued too.
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