Current:Home > NewsDefamation case against Nebraska Republican Party should be heard by a jury, state’s high court says -StockHorizon
Defamation case against Nebraska Republican Party should be heard by a jury, state’s high court says
View
Date:2025-04-14 05:07:03
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court ruled Friday that a jury should decide whether former Republican state legislative candidate Janet Palmtag was defamed by her own political party in a 2020 race that highlighted a growing schism within the state GOP.
The high court’s decision reversed a lower court ruling in which a judge sided with the Nebraska Republican Party by tossing out the lawsuit before a jury could hear it.
The lawsuit centers on campaign mailers sent out by the party in October 2020 that falsely claimed Palmtag — a lifelong Nebraska Republican — had been charged with mishandling business trust accounts and had lost her real estate license. The mailers, sent to about 3,200 households of registered voters, included statements that Palmtag “broke the law and lost her real estate license,” and that her license had been “revoked.” The mailers also described Palmtag as “too irresponsible to keep her license.”
The mailers grossly mischaracterized a 2018 disciplinary case out of Iowa that found Palmtag’s real estate brokerage firm responsible for improperly transferring funds from an Iowa account to a Nebraska one. It was not Palmtag but another real estate agent who worked for the firm that had made the improper transaction. The company paid a $500 fine for the oversight.
Two years later, Palmtag canceled her Iowa real estate license, citing a lack of business for her firm there. The decision was not related to the disciplinary case, she said.
Palmtag demanded corrections to the mailers, but the state party refused. Following her loss in the November 2020 election, she sued the state GOP for defamation.
In 2022, a judge threw out the lawsuit, saying that while the state party’s mailers were defamatory, Palmtag would not be able to prove to a jury that the party acted with actual malice.
The state’s high court disagreed in its reversal, noting that Palmtag had shown that the GOP failed to investigate whether Palmtag was the subject of the Iowa real estate disciplinary case or whether that had been the catalyst for her inactivating her Iowa real estate license. Palmtag also presented as evidence text messages between then-state GOP Executive Director Ryan Hamilton and a GOP vendor, who responded upon being told of the party’s accusations against Palmtag, “OK that’s not real.”
“A jury could find the party chose not to investigate further in a purposeful avoidance of the truth,” Justice John Freudenberg wrote for the court.
Palmtag is “eager for a jury to hear the case,” her attorney, David Domina of Omaha said Friday.
The party’s mailers and other campaign efforts were intended to help state Sen. Julie Slama of Peru, Palmtag’s rival in the officially nonpartisan race.
Slama was appointed in 2019 to the seat by then-Gov. Pete Ricketts to fill a vacancy. When she ran for the seat in 2020, Ricketts backed her, but his predecessor, fellow Republican Dave Heineman, endorsed Palmtag. That exposed a split in the party, with some lined up to support Palmtag and Heineman — the longest-serving governor in Nebraska — while others backed Slama and Ricketts, who now represents Nebraska in the U.S. Senate.
Some Republicans expressed outrage over the mailers, while Ricketts and others supported the campaign attacks. But the party’s actions in the legislative race marked a new level in intraparty strife. Within days of sending the mailers, the state GOP and a political consulting firm it had hired were found liable for making illegal robocalls to help Slama in the race.
The Nebraska Public Service Commission found that the automated calls were made without proper disclosure and that neither the GOP nor the consulting firm had registered with the commission or filed a script of the call with the commission, as required by law.
Kamron Hasan, an Omaha attorney representing the Nebraska GOP, said the party is disappointed by Friday’s ruling.
“We’re still looking at next steps at this point,” he said.
veryGood! (229)
Related
- Average rate on 30
- Week 2 college football predictions: Expert picks for Michigan-Texas and every Top 25 game
- Recreational marijuana sales begin on North Carolina tribal land, drug illegal in state otherwise
- Empty Starliner on its way home: Troubled Boeing craft undocks from space station
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Scams are in the air this election season: How to spot phony donations, fake news
- Artem Chigvintsev Makes Subtle Nod to Wife Nikki Garcia After Domestic Violence Arrest
- Dolphins' Tyreek Hill detained by police hours before season opener
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Amy Adams 'freaked out' her dog co-stars in 'Nightbitch' by acting too odd
Ranking
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Pamela Anderson on her 'Last Showgirl' dream role: 'I have nothing to lose'
- The Best Target Products To Help Disguise Scuffs, Wires & All Your Least Favorite Parts of Your Home
- Notre Dame's inconsistency with Marcus Freeman puts them at top of Week 2 Misery Index
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- 2-year-old boy fatally stabbed by older brother in Chicago-area home, police say
- Sérgio Mendes, Brazilian musician who helped popularize bossa nova, dies at 83
- Unstoppable Director Details Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez's Dynamic on Their New Movie
Recommendation
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
Horrific deaths of gymnast, Olympian reminder of violence women face daily. It has to stop
After 26 years, a Border Patrol agent has a new role: helping migrants
Authorities search for a man who might be linked to the Kentucky highway shootings that wounded five
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
NFL schedule today: Everything to know about Week 1 games on Sunday
Kendrick Lamar to Perform at 2025 Super Bowl Halftime Show
A mural honoring scientists hung in Pfizer’s NYC lobby for 60 years. Now it’s up for grabs