Court orders NY Times to return material to Project Veritas
A New York judge ordered the New York Times to destroy all copies of attorney-client privileged memos from Project Veritas.
The order signed by Judge Charles Wood of the State Supreme Court in Westchester County on Friday found the newspaper improperly obtained and published materials from the memos written by lawyers for the conservative group that discussed Project Veritas's methods of reporting. The group sued the New York Times in November 2020 for defamation.
The physical copies, the New York Supreme Court said, must be delivered to Project Veritas's counsel. If the New York Times does not comply by late January, the court warned the newspaper could face sanctions.
Christmas came early for our @dhillonlaw clients #projectveritas #jamesokeefe today! NY Trial court issued devastating opinion ruling that the @nytimes improperly obtained and published its litigation adversary’s non-waived privileged communications: pic.twitter.com/fdgxWiEjdM
— Harmeet K. Dhillon (@pnjaban) December 24, 2021A.G. Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times, said the newspaper plans to appeal.
...
What the court is saying is that parties to litigation may not illicit obtain and adversaries work product and attorney's opinions. By appealing the NY Times opens itself up to discover how it obtained the material. It is believed that the material was taken by the FBI when it issued a search warrant of dubious validity.
Comments
Post a Comment