Yet the cases – which never even went to a full hearing – cost the publisher £1.5m. Tom Burgis, author of the book Kleptopia: How Dirty Money is Conquering the World, also published by HarperCollins, came under a similar attack from the Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation, a Kazakh mining company. A judge dismissed the case at a preliminary hearing this March.
All legal systems have to balance free speech with the protection of reputation. But even after a series of reforms to libel law, the UK tilts heavily towards the latter compared to other free countries; the US expressed its disapproval when the UK passed a law in 2010, making English libel judgments unenforceable in America.
In 2020, the Foreign Policy Centre think tank examined the pressures on investigative journalists around the world, and found that the UK was “by far the most frequent” country of origin for Slapp actions, issuing nearly as many as all the EU nations and the US combined. There’s no doubt this has led to self-censorship by UK publishers. Cambridge University Press declined to publish Putin’s Kleptocracy by the US political scientist Karen Dawisha, due to worries about litigation.
Foreign Secretary Liz Truss reportedly asked Government lawyers to find “literally any way” to crack down on Slapps last month. The consultation paper published by the Justice Secretary Dominic Raab, soon after, threw the kitchen sink at the problem in terms of potential solutions.
It mooted a series of new reforms to defamation law, including expanding the available defences, and requiring, as in the US, that claimants show “actual malice” (i.e. the defendant either knows the statement was wrong or was reckless). It also suggested putting a cap on recoverable costs and, most radically, proposed passing anti-Slapp laws, such as already exist in the US and Canada.
The consultation paper floats the possibility that, in Slapp cases, the burden of proof should fall on the claimant instead of the defendant: they’d have to prove the defamatory statement is not true. Caroline Kean, who represented Catherine Belton and Tom Burgis, argues that such laws should go further.
Judges should decide at the outset of a case whether it relates to public interest journalism – i.e. whether the individual or company is worthy of scrutiny. If so, the case should be halted and resolved by granting a prominent right to reply, and correcting any factual errors.
Not necessarily. Reforming defamation has been a painfully slow process. Even coming up with a legal definition of a Slapp would be difficult. “One person’s Slapp case is another person’s legitimate attempt to defend their reputation and/or privacy rights,” says the legal commentator David Allen Green.
Many lawmakers are also chary of giving too much latitude to the British media, with its long tradition of privacy invasion and occasional recourse to illegality. Ironically, though, defamation law has never been effective at getting redress for normal people from the press, because of high costs. Libel is the archetypal rich man’s law.
Article source: https://www.theweek.co.uk/news/law/956384/slapps-the-lawsuits-that-silence-free-speech