The
article alleged that Mr
Gutnick -- a multimillionaire
rabbi nicknamed Diamond Joe --
was involved in tax evasion
and money laundering.
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hyperliks added by this website]
Wednesday December 11, 2002David
Irving comments: I HAVE A personal interest in
this article, about one of the
traditional enemies of free
speech in Australia. The
plaintiff, Mr Joseph
Gutnick, is one of the
multi-millionaire businessman who
had a prominant role in lobbying
Australian governments (past
& present) to prevent my
obtaining an entry visa to
lecture. Others include the
Leibler brothers (Mark
(below) &
Isi). Gutnick's influence on Prime
Minister John Howard was
exposed during last year's
federal election, when a letter
from Gutnick to Howard was leaked
to the media. The contents were
essentially a threat to withhold
further political donations to
Howard's Liberal party if
Gutnick's demands were not met.
My Australian sources suspect
that Howard's office leaked the
letter to embarass Gutnick, so
the allegiance may be less strong
now than it once was. Related
file:
Our
dossier on some of the origins of
anti-Semitism
David
Irving and Australia |
How
Diamond Joe's libel case could change the
future of the internet Australian
court gives millionaire go-ahead to sue US
website David Fickling in
Sydney and Stuart Millar ONCE it was heralded as
the last bastion of freedom of speech, a
realm which transcended national law and
the whims of the courts. But last night
the internet was facing up to a harsh new
reality after Australia's supreme court
ruled that a local businessman could sue a
website for libel in Melbourne even though
it was based in the United States.
In a case which opens up a legal
minefield for web publishers across the
English-speaking world, the high court
judges decided that an internet article is
published wherever it is read, rather than
where the publisher is based. The landmark
ruling is the first instance in the
developed world of a libel trial being
admitted in a foreign jurisdiction purely
because of the possibility of an article
being downloaded from the internet. Media companies and internet
campaigners immediately denounced the
decision amid fears that it would open the
floodgates for a wave of libel actions
from around the world. They said the
"chilling" ruling would seriously
undermine the internet's much-cherished
reputation for freedom of speech and
raised the threat of "forum-shopping" by
wealthy litigants looking for the easiest
jurisdiction to ensure their victory in
libel proceedings. The case centres on a two-year-old
article about Melbourne gold mining
magnate Joe Gutnick, published in
the American business magazine
Barron's. The article, entitled Unholy Gains,
alleged that Mr Gutnick -- a
multimillionaire rabbi nicknamed Diamond
Joe who became a local hero in Melbourne
after he saved the local Australian Rules
football club with a A$3m (£1.1m)
cash injection -- was involved in tax
evasion and money laundering. Most significantly, it claimed that he
was the biggest customer of Nachum
Goldberg, (below) a Melbourne
money launderer jailed in 2000 for
washing A$42m (£15.5m) in used notes
through a bogus Israeli charity. Mr
Gutnick is suing the American business
information company Dow Jones, which owns
Barron's as well as the Wall St
Journal. He has brought the case in
Victoria, where libel laws give him a
better chance of winning than in the US,
where 98% of Barron's' readers
live. The
magazine has 14 subscribers in Australia,
of which five are in Victoria. But
1,700 of its internet subscribers had paid
their bills using Australian credit cards,
and the court ruled yesterday that this
was enough to admit the case in
Victoria. "Publishers are not obliged to publish
on the internet," the ruling stated. "If
the potential reach is uncontrollable then
the greater the need to exercise care in
publication." Barron's offices are in New
York, and Dow Jones had argued that the
place of internet publication was New
Jersey, where the magazine's web servers
are based. The company's defence even at
one point floated the suggestion of
declaring the internet a libel-free zone,
based on a 1928 legal decision about the
meaning of "publication". In a clear
indication of how serious the
implications of the ruling may be, 18
of the world's biggest media
organisations -- including AOL Time
Warner, Amazon and Yahoo! -- made
submissions to the court urging the
judges to dimiss Mr Gutnick's action.
Mr Gutnick said after yesterday's
verdict that the case had been a David and
Goliath battle against "all the strongest
media in the world". "You have to be careful what you write,
and if you offend somebody or write
malicious statements about people, like
what was done in my case, you can be
subject to being
prosecuted,"
he told the Nine Network. Dow Jones issued
a statement expressing "disappointment" at
the verdict. "The result means that Dow
Jones will defend those proceedings in a
jurisdiction which is far removed from the
country in which the article was prepared
and where the vast bulk of Barron's
readership resides." The court made it clear that they were
not ruling whether Mr Gutnick had been
libelled, merely that the case could now
go ahead. Crucially, however, the court made
clear that a claim could only be brought
in Australia if the person claiming libel
had a reputation there that could be
defamed. This will make it difficult for
many foreign nationals to use the
Australian courts to pursue internet libel
actions. But the ruling has thrown internet
publishers into disarray and left them
facing a choice between two equally costly
and undesirable options: restricting
access to their websites to prevent people
in potentially difficult legal
jurisdictions reading them; or employing
international legal teams to vet all
content to ensure that it complies with
the libel laws in each of the countries it
is likely to be read. Andrew Kenyon, an expert on
internet media law at the University of
Melbourne, said the case could lead to
media organisations having to use software
to impose geographic restrictions on where
their content could be viewed. "This is going to make the biggest
difference in the US, and I think we will
see American media organisations now
factoring in the possibility of defamation
in other countries. It's important because
it's the highest court in the country
saying this, but I think a lot of media
lawyers had been expecting something like
this for some time." Lance Taylor, founder of the UK
web design association, said: "It's quite
ludicrous. This decision will open up a
minefield of potential litigation against
web-based publishers. In the rush to
regulate the internet with ill-conceived
laws, countries like Australia will put a
stranglehold on the future development of
the internet and its associated
technologies." Ian Brown, director of the
London-based internet thinktank, the
Foundation for Information Policy
Research, also voiced dismay. "This type
of ruling will simply result in many US
websites blocking access to non-American
readers, destroying a rich resource for
the rest of the world."
Related
items on this website: -
Move
to censor websites is a step in right
direction, says Alan Gold
(right)
-
Traditional
Enemies make further progress in
muzzling Internet: Dow Jones Must
Defend Action by Gutnick (right)
On Web Defamation in Australia
-
Dec
14, 2001: Australia's High Court Says
Dow Jones Can Appeal Ruling
-
Sydney
Morning herald: Jail not kosher for
three in money laundering
scheme
-
Dirty
Laundry
-
Fred
Toben's Australian Website ordered to
stop "denying Holocaust"
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