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Ingrid H. Shafer, Ph.D.
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Posted 26 July 2000
Last revised 28 March 2005
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

<American Center for Democracy (ACD) 
 
 
 


Another First Amendment Landmark Case?<  
It's Rachel Ehrenfeld vs. Sheik bin Mahfouz, a Saudi sheik who has  successfully sued the American writer for defamation--in England. Journalists,  says Floyd Abrams, "should line up and support the lawsuit."

By  Thomas Lipscomb

(March 21, 2005)  -- When Rachel Ehrenfeld, author of the book "Funding Evil: How Terrorism Is  Financed and How to Stop It," opened her apartment door just before 10 p.m. on  March 3, she believed she was simply receiving some legal papers from London.  But this was no ordinary messenger. According to Ehrenfeld, the visitor  carried a warning as well: &ldquoYou had better respond. Sheik bin Mahfouz  is a very important person, and you really ought to take very good care of  yourself."I expected to receive some legal papers, not  a threat from a Saudi sheik in my own country," Ehrenfeld told me last  week.

The ease with which foreigners, like this billionaire Saudi  sheik, now pursue damaging lawsuits against American writers and Publications  in foreign courts is astonishing. Bin Mahfouz is listed as number 210 on the new Forbes list of 620 billionaires in the world.

This is already  a year in which federal prosecutors are trying to force a New York Times  reporter to give up confidential sources while the Federal Election Commission  warns that it intends to use the McCain-Finegold Act to question to what  degree various kinds of speech are really free or constitute a campaign  contribution.

"This is no ordinary legal dispute," states Daniel  Korenstein, Ehrenfeld's attorney. "It is perhaps one of the most important  First Amendment cases since Sullivan vs. The New York  Times."

Sheik Khalid Salim a bin Mahfouz has allegedly endowed  and arranged financing for a number of Islamic charity organizations that have  been accused of funding terrorism. Ehrenfeld asserts, &ldquoThere are currently over 10 lawsuits outstanding by numerous plaintiffs in the United  States claiming billions of dollars in damages from Mahfouz's alleged involvement in financing the 9/11 attack of the World Trade  Center."

On his Web site, Mahfouz says he is "increasingly  angered" over accusations such as Ehrenfeld's. "There is no truth to these  reports," reads the statement. "We condemn terrorism in all of its forms and manifestations."

In an attempt to circumvent the First Amendment  protection of American writers like Ehrenfeld, Mahfouz has successfully sued  or settled with over 30 Publications and authors for defamation and libel in  British courts for years. "That many legal actions brought in a  plaintiff-friendly jurisdiction evidences a consistent campaign by Mahfouz to  silence any author, journalist, or publication who attempt to analyze or  document any role he may have had in funneling the money of the Saudi royal  family or wealthy Saudi families to terrorist activities," Korenstein points  out.

While the standards for libel and defamation in the United  States put the burden of proof on the plaintiff, in the United Kingdom it is  up to the defendant. And credible testimony alone does not establish proof. If  an author cites a quotation by the former secretary of state, Madeleine Albright, which is attacked as defamatory, the direct testimony of Albright is insufficient proof without the underlying material she based her statement upon.

Because of the heavy expenses involved in countering  Mafouz's suits and the very different standards of proof in British courts,  authors and Publications with assets in the United Kingdom have settled,  including The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and The New York  Times. (A list of the legal actions is on the Mahfouz Web  site.)

But Ehrenfeld never published "Funding Evil" in the United  Kingdom. Fewer than 30 copies entered the United Kingdom, presumably through Internet sales and special orders following its publication in the United States in 2003. And yet she had a default judgment entered against her by British Judge Eady on December 7, 2004, for defamation of Mahfouz. A penalty  hearing has been set for April 29 to consider Mahfouz's claim for legal  expenses and damages, a retraction by Ehrenfeld of the passages objected to in  the suit, and injunctive relief preventing any further appearance of her book  in the United Kingdom.

"Dr. Ehrenfeld is a respected scholar,  who, to my knowledge, does not make irresponsible charges," the former  Director of the CIA, R. James Woolsey, who wrote the forward to "Funding  Evil," told me recently. "She currently serves with me and former Secretary of  State George Schulz on the board of directors of The Committee on the Present  Danger. We are dedicated to winning the war on terrorism, and the contribution  of members like Rachel Ehrenfeld has been invaluable."

Ehrenfeld  is currently the director of the New York-based American Center for Democracy.  She has been a research scholar at the New York University School of Law, a  visiting scholar at the Columbia University Institute of War and Peace  Studies, and a fellow at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International  Studies.

As an American citizen, Ehrenfeld has ignored the  Mahfouz British action and default judgment. "If American authors can be  silenced by actions of foreign courts in their own home jurisdiction in the  United States, what use are the First Amendment guarantees of freedom of  speech?" she said. "To establish that protection for myself and other writers,  I have sued Mahfouz in the United States Federal Court in the Southern  District of New York in December."

According to Floyd Abrams,  whose law practice specializes in First Amendment cases, "This is an important  issue. It imperils American authors writing for Americans about issues of  interest to them. American authors should line up and support the  lawsuit."

James Goodale, former general counsel and vice chairman  of the New York Times Co., points out that "The Mahfouz suit is totally  unfair. Ehrenfeld has not published her book in the United Kingdom. She published it in the United States and has no control over special orders that have the book sent abroad through the Internet."

Mahfouz has not  accepted service in America of Ehrenfeld's complaint,and no counsel has  appeared for Mahfouz in this matter.

Thomas Lipscomb  (letters@editorandpublisher.com) is a senior fellow at the Annenberg Center  for the Digital Future and a frequent contributor to the Chicago  Sun-Times.


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Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld is Director of the American Center for Democracy and author of Funding Evil: How Terrorism is Financed-And How to Stop It.  She is a member of the Committee on the Present Danger.
 

 
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