On Tuesday, a judge denied former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s request for a new libel trial against The New York Times.
It was the House GOP candidate and former vice presidential nominee’s second attempt to lance the Times over a 2017 editorial she said harmed her reputation. The piece in question falsely linked her campaign rhetoric to a 2011 mass shooting. The Times issued a correction to the post the next day.
U.S. District Court Judge Jed Rakoff dismissed Palin’s case in February after hearing arguments from both parties. Palin and her team “wholly failed to prove her case even to the minimum standard required by law,” he said at the time.
And he didn’t mince words when rejecting Palin’s request on Tuesday either. According to the Associated Press, Rakoff wrote that Palin and her team failed to provide “even a speck” of evidence showing the Times acted with actual malice when they published the editorial.
Palin’s attorneys claimed Rakoff made mistakes during the jury selection and deliberation process that warranted his recusal or a new trial, but the judge rejected those claims outright.









