CNN Doesn’t Want Tap­per Ques­tioned About Oth­er Defama­tion Set­tle­ments

CNN Doesn’t Want Tapper Questioned About Other Defamation Settlements

As part of the lat­est devel­op­ments in the $1 bil­lion defama­tion suit against them, CNN was attempt­ing to keep anchor Jake Tap­per from being com­pelled to answer depo­si­tion ques­tions about his salary and com­ments he had made on-air regard­ing Fox News’s defama­tion set­tle­ment with Domin­ion Vot­ing Sys­tems. That’s accord­ing to a court fil­ing exclu­sive­ly obtained by News­Busters.

As News­Busters report­ed in late Novem­ber, Plain­tiff and Navy vet­er­an Zachary Young via lead coun­sel Vel Freed­man want­ed the court to com­pel Tap­per to answer some of the “more than thir­ty ques­tions” CNN’s coun­sel direct­ed him not to answer:

Mr. Tap­per sat for depo­si­tion on Novem­ber 20, 2024. In the course of less than two hours, CNN’s coun­sel direct­ed Tap­per not to answer more than thir­ty ques­tions. The end result was that CNN pre­vent­ed Plain­tiffs from (1) gath­er­ing basic finan­cial infor­ma­tion (e.g., Tapper’s salary); (2) explor­ing issues the jury might need to assess a puni­tive dam­ages award (e.g., Tapper’s opin­ion on what finan­cial penal­ty might deter CNN from future mis­con­duct); and (3) from even ask­ing for clar­i­fi­ca­tion of Tapper’s answers or get­ting com­plete answers to the ques­tions the wit­ness did answer (e.g., inter­rupt­ing the wit­ness mid-answer say­ing: “Just answer the ques­tion as asked”).

In their counter motion to keep Tap­per from being deposed a sec­ond time, CNN’s lawyers argued:

When the Court per­mit­ted Plain­tiffs to depose Tap­per as part of puni­tive damages/financial worth dis­cov­ery, it express­ly instruct­ed that Plain­tiffs were not to explore fact[1]discovery issues, and, if they did, CNN would be well with­in its rights in object­ing and instruct­ing the wit­ness not to answer. That’s exact­ly what CNN coun­sel did here, cit­ing to the Court’s deci­sion and Rule 1.310 of the Flori­da Rules of Civ­il Pro­ce­dure, which express­ly per­mits coun­sel to instruct a wit­ness not to answer in order “to enforce a lim­i­ta­tion on evi­dence direct­ed by the court[.]” CNN’s coun­sel only instruct­ed Tap­per not to answer when Plain­tiffs’ coun­sel posed ques­tions that were fla­grant­ly out­side the scope of the depo­si­tion as set by the Court. Plain­tiffs are not enti­tled to re-open Tapper’s depo­si­tion to pose ques­tions out­side of the bound­aries the Court cor­rect­ly cir­cum­scribed.

Regard­ing ques­tions about Tapper’s salary, CNN con­tend­ed that that infor­ma­tion doesn’t speak “to CNN’s resources and prof­itabil­i­ty” as Young’s fil­ing argued. Rather, “What speaks to “CNN’s resources and prof­itabil­i­ty” is the total amount CNN spends on com­pen­sa­tion rel­a­tive to the rev­enue it gen­er­ates.”

The fil­ing also sug­gest­ed, “CNN has pro­duced doc­u­ments dis­clos­ing that infor­ma­tion, in addi­tion to pro­duc­ing infor­ma­tion about the 7 over­all amount The Lead in par­tic­u­lar spends on employ­ees and on-air tal­ent.”

They also pro­vid­ed this assump­tion as why infor­ma­tion about Tapper’s was specif­i­cal­ly request­ed: “Their only pur­pos­es for press­ing Tap­per to dis­close his salary are to harass him and to inflame the jury by call­ing atten­tion to the salary num­ber of one its more rec­og­niz­able on-air tal­ents.”

Evi­dence was not pro­vid­ed as how they came to that con­clu­sion.

Fur­ther in the fil­ing, CNN’s lawyers defend­ed inter­ject­ing and instruct­ing Tap­per not to answer ques­tions about his opin­ions regard­ing the $785 mil­lion set­tle­ment Fox News paid to Domin­ion and if that seemed enough of a puni­tive dam­age, sim­i­lar to what CNN could be on the hook for in this case:

In many instances, Plain­tiffs’ coun­sel set up the ques­tion by play­ing a clip of 8 Tap­per express­ing opin­ions on some oth­er mat­ter entire­ly. For instance, Plain­tiffs’ coun­sel played a clip of Tap­per com­ment­ing on Fox News’ $787.5 mil­lion set­tle­ment with Domin­ion, and then asked these ques­tions:

Q. Mr. Tap­per, do you think this 785-and-a-half-mil­lion-dol­lar set­tle­ment was enough to finan­cial­ly dis­in­cen­tivize Fox from engag­ing in fur­ther defama­tion?

Mr. Tobin: I instruct Mr. Tap­per not to answer that ques­tion for the rea­sons I’ve stat­ed.

Q. Mr. Tap­per, do you believe a sim­i­lar sanc­tion against CNN would dis­in­cen­tivize CNN from engag­ing in defama­tion.

Mr. Tobin: Same instruc­tion.

They point­ed out that they did allow Tap­per to answer if/how “he, per­son­al­ly, would be greater incen­tivized to tell the truth if CNN were hit with a mas­sive puni­tive dam­ages award.”

“On that ques­tion, Tap­per tes­ti­fied that his core and ani­mat­ing pro­fes­sion­al com­mit­ment is to doing his best to always report the truth, and that, accord­ing­ly, no puni­tive dam­ages award would increase his com­mit­ment to truth-telling,” CNN’s lawyers para­phrased.

On the mat­ter of Tap­per telling the truth; he once insist­ed there was “no rea­son to doubt” Gaza death toll claims by the Hamas ter­ror­ist orga­ni­za­tion, mis­led Amer­i­cans about how “Rus­sia hacked the [2016] elec­tion,” and per­pet­u­at­ed the lie that the U.S. Supreme Court gave Pres­i­dent-elect Trump the abil­i­ty to assas­si­nate his polit­i­cal oppo­nents.