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this territory is moderated
Only 8 hours ago, we saw this: #733583
Given the defamation angle the plaintiff was taking, they should have been prepared for the anti-slapp. Those laws are good, in general, as they enforce higher standards for historically abused defamation claims.
The judge appears to believe that the crypto project is actually a scam:
Turning first to the defamation cause of action, here Exceptional has not adequately shown a substantial basis in either law or fact. The two main issues Exceptional faces here are that it has offered nothing but mere conclusory remarks as to either that the statement that YieldNodes is an “investment scam” is false or that Chainalysis made the statements with actual malice. When, as is the case here, a defamation action involves Anti-SLAPP issues of public interest, “a plaintiff must show by clear and convincing evidence that the statements were false, and made with either knowledge of their falsity, or reckless disregard of whether the statements were false.” Gillespie v. Kling, 217 A.D.3d 566, 566 (1st Dept. 2023).
and
The closest Exceptional comes to pleading facts that show malice is the statement that Chainalysis did not revoke the 2022 Flagging after Exceptional “told them it was false”, but nowhere does Exceptional offer any facts as to why the statement is false. Conclusory allegations do not suffice to establish a substantial basis. L.Y.E. Diamonds, Ltd. V. Gemological Institute of America, Inc., 169 A.D.3d 589, 591 (1st Dept. 2019).
As @siggy47 said on the thread above, a better plaintiff (with better lawyers) could probably have done much better here.
(As an aside, thanks to L0la L33tz and TheRage for citing & linking to the actual source documents. See how fucking easy it is <insert EVERY OTHER FUCKING REPORTER & NEWS SOURCE>?)
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