Vindication and Advocacy for Michael Jackson and other deceased persons whose Legacy is allowed to be tarnished because there is no law to protect the deceased from defamation. Offenders, those who defame, should be required to give account for their personal thoughts, views, or attitudes; especially those based mainly upon emotion instead of reason or knowledge.
Showing posts with label Defamation of the deceased. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Defamation of the deceased. Show all posts
Sunday, January 1, 2012
DarkChild's Community Call - Live & Recorded Episodes:
DarkChild's Community Call - Live & Recorded Episodes:
What’s Going On? The Legal Aspects of CaDefLaw (Part 2)
Julie Noel and Stephanie Anthony, Cadeflaw Legal Analysts, discuss the legal aspects of the Anti-Defamation Legacy Law.
Date: January 6, 2012
Time: 5:30pm until 7:30pm, EST
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Defaming The Dead: A Legal Remedy for Absurd Charges That LBJ Murdered JFK
Excerpt from Article
A Clear Legislative Solution Is Needed In This Area
The best solution, however, is the one Lisa Brown urged: State legislatures ought to address the gap in the law regarding the reputations of the dead. Rhode Island has a law to this effect, albeit a very limited one. And many civil law jurisdictions -- Quebec is one example -- allow such actions.
Some may respond that this would "chill" freedom of speech under the First Amendment. No more so, however, than for the living.
Moreover, unlike the living, the dead have lost the power of counterspeech -- the power to respond. The underlying philosophy of the First Amendment is that there must be a open marketplace of ideas, where the truth will emerge from "uninhibited, robust, and wide-open" debate. But the dead are not in a very good position to participate.
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