Hat tip to ACAIR.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations took another legal spanking in the courts.
CAIR claimed its good [sic] name was impugned by a retired Congressman. Federal Court said "bologne," then the Apellate Court backed up the Federal Court.
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NewsObserver.com
Published: Apr 12, 2006 12:30 AM
Modified: Apr 12, 2006 02:30 AM
AP
Appeals court says judge was right to scuttle suit
A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld the dismissal of an American Muslim civil rights group's defamation lawsuit against former U.S. Rep. Cass Ballenger, who linked the group to terrorists in a 2003 interview.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations sued Ballenger for $2 million, saying the congressman's comments damaged its reputation and good name. The group has denied any links to terrorism.
In the October 2003 interview with The Charlotte Observer, Ballenger blamed the breakup of his 50-year marriage partly on the stress of living near CAIR's headquarters, which was close enough to the U.S. Capitol that, he said, he and his wife worried "they could blow the place up." He also called CAIR "the fundraising arm for Hezbollah."
A three-judge appeals court panel in Washington upheld the March 2005 decision of a federal district court judge to dismiss the case.
U.S. District Judge Richard Leon agreed with Ballenger that the comments were made in his capacity as a federal employee and that the lawsuit should be converted into one against the U.S. government.
Then, because the doctrine of sovereign immunity bars most lawsuits against the federal government, Leon threw the case out.
Ballenger retired from his 10th District seat in 2004 after nine terms and was succeeded by fellow Republican Patrick McHenry.
© Copyright 2006, The News & Observer Publishing Company
Sunday, April 16, 2006
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