Do civil rights attach to defamation by a government entity?
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Do civil rights attach to defamation by a government entity?
Asked on October 22, 2014 under Personal Injury, Delaware
Answers:
SJZ, Member, New York Bar / FreeAdvice Contributing Attorney
Answered 10 years ago | Contributor
It is not clear what is meant by "do civil rights attach to defamation by a government entity"--civil rights have nothing to do with defamation, and vice versa. Defamation is a common law tort; it occurs when a person or entity knowingly or with disregard for the truth makes a negative factual statement (not an opinion--it must be a factual statement) about someone, which statement damages that person's reputation. If defamation is committed, a person's race, religion, sex, etc. are irrelevant; there is liability due to defamation. And conversely, if the statement is not defamatory, it is not made defamatory because someone is in a protected category. A given governmental action could possibly give rise to civil rights and defamation claims, but they would be independent of each other.
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