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Apology Ends Defamation Suit

March 17, 2010

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An unusual defamation suit by a professor against an emeritus professor has ended -- without the $2 million payout that the plaintiff had sought, but with a statement by the lawsuit's target that the plaintiff is not a terrorist. Both sides are claiming victory in a case that raised questions about the freedom of academics to attack union leaders. But the plaintiff says that the issue is the right of faculty leaders to stand up to unrelenting personal attacks.

The suit was filed in 2007 over comments made by Sharad Karkhanis, an emeritus professor at Kingsborough Community College who publishes The Patriot Returns, an online newsletter that features regular, caustic criticism of the City University of New York's faculty union. According to the newsletter, the Professional Staff Congress, which is an affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers, is a poorly-run union that focuses too much on leftist politics to be effective on behalf of its members.

One of the issues in the lawsuit was comments Karkhanis wrote about Susan O'Malley, an English professor at Kingsborough, who was at the time a member of the union's executive board. The comments focused on O'Malley and her push to protect the job rights of Mohammad Yousry, who was fired from CUNY and who was convicted (in a controversial case that some believe was unfair) of supporting terrorist activities and of Susan Rosenberg, a CUNY instructor who served jail time for her role in the Weather Underground. In several references, Karkhanis mocked O'Malley for her efforts on behalf of these individuals, whom he dubbed terrorists, and questioned why she was so focused on them. In comments he says are satire, he referred to O'Malley's "Queda-Camp," to her desire to "bring in all her indicted, convicted and freed-on-bail terrorist friends" to college jobs, and so forth. He wrote that she "does not worry about the 'ordinary' adjunct -- but she is worried about convicted terrorists."

The tough tone is the style of the newsletter, which calls Barbara Bowen, the president of the union, "Dear Leader," after the North Korean dictator.

As justification for seeking $2 million in damages, O'Malley said that she was being accused of being a terrorist. While she has said that her reputation was being slandered, others have said that the suit set a dangerous precedent for academic freedom in that a faculty member was being attacked in the courts for his criticism of a powerful figure (even if in this case the powerful figure was a union leader, not an administrator). One blog was formed to defend The Patriot Returns by academics who said they were staying anonymous to avoid being sued by O'Malley.

As part of the settlement, Karkhanis has issued a statement in his newsletter in which he says that he does not believe O'Malley to be a terrorist. Since Karkhanis has maintained that he never believed her to be a terrorist, but was engaged in satire, he maintains this is no defeat. The statement says: "We do not believe Professor Susan O'Malley to be a terrorist, and deeply regret if she, or any of her associates, understood us to have labeled her as such. We are sorry if anything published in The Patriot Returns has been interpreted in such a way. We do not believe that anything published in The Patriot Returns has exceeded the bounds of permissible speech, but express our profound sorrow if Dr. O'Malley sustained any damage to her reputation or suffered any emotional pain or suffering as a result of these statements."

The lawyer representing Karkhanis, Mark E. Jakubik, also published a statement in the newsletter, arguing that this is a full victory for his client. "The settlement did not involve an admission of liability or wrongdoing by Dr. Karkhanis. To the contrary, as is clearly iterated in the statement, we continue to believe that none of the material published in The Patriot Returns that was at issue in the lawsuit was defamatory or otherwise actionable for any reason. Second, there is no financial aspect to the settlement, and Dr. Karkhanis is not required to make any payment whatsoever to Dr. O'Malley or anyone else. Third, Dr. Karkhanis remains free to publish The Patriot Returns without prior restraint. In sum, we believe that, given the terms upon which Dr. Karkhanis agreed to resolve this matter, the settlement represents a significant victory for free speech and academic freedom, and The Patriot Returns will continue to stand as an unabashed defender of those values."

In an interview, O'Malley said that the case "was never about money" so that she did not view the settlement as anything but a victory.

She said that she sued after being attacked for years, and after being attacked in ways that not only were personally hurtful, but that limited her ability to lobby in Albany on behalf of faculty interests. "Everywhere I would go, they would say 'Oh, you are the one being attacked all the time,'" she said.

The repeated attacks, which she said represented the thinking of conservative faculty members, were not satire, she said, because it was never clear what was satire and what was not. Further, she said that the attacks were "an attempt to silence me," so her suit was not an attack on free expression, but a defense of it. She said she was legitimately concerned about being branded a terrorist and thought her name might end up on a government no-fly list. She said that she returned to Kingsborough -- after being on leave to perform various faculty governance roles -- and found that many faculty members didn't know her, but had read about her in the newsletter.

Ultimately, O'Malley said, she hoped that the case might "create some good case law" about what can be done "when people are spreading lies" online. But she said she felt she had won a victory in that, since she sued, she hasn't been attacked in the same way. "I just wanted it quiet for a while," she said.

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Comments on Apology Ends Defamation Suit

  • Carifying One Point
  • Posted by Mark Jakubik at The Jakubik Law Firm on March 17, 2010 at 7:00pm EDT
  • As counsel to Sharad Karkhanis, I would first like to thank Scott Jaschik for wirting a factually accurate, fair and even handed piece on the settlement of this case. I would, though, like to clarify one point. The headline of this piece notwithstanding, Sharad's statement is NOT an apology. The word apologize does not appear anywhere in the text, and the substance of the statement is clear that it is essentially an expression of regret if anyone misunderstood anything that had been published in The Patriot Returns.

  • Let's hope "The Patriot" goes away
  • Posted by Confused CUNY adjunct , CUNY Adjunct at CUNY on March 18, 2010 at 6:00am EDT
  • I have been a CUNY adjunct for years and over time, received "The Patriot Returns" stuffed into my faculty mailbox by an unknown source, and I believe, sent via inter-campus mail.

    As a newcomer to the system, it was a bizarre "publication", and it took me ages to figure out what the ranting author was talking about. (I think the first clue was from a mention of this photocopied newsletter in the official union newspaper, the Clarion, perhaps a letter to the editor.)

    I welcome dissent, though I do not agree with this conservative faction. However, this author's diatribes certainly did not reflect poorly on the union or Ms. O'Malley, but certainly raised eyebrows.

  • Good Article, Misleading Title
  • Posted by Mitchell Langbert , Associate Professor at Brooklyn College on March 18, 2010 at 6:00am EDT
  • I appreciate this mostly accurate article but the title is misleading. No one thought that "Sue" O'Malley was really a terrorist or ran an Al Qaeda training camp, so in saying that he is sorry that anyone concluded from Patriot Returns that O'Malley really was a terrorist and did run an al Qaeda training camp Karkhanis is not apologizing. Nor should he. The Professional Staff Congress is dismally run, and, if anything, Karkhanis did not go far enough.

    You contradict yourself with respect to Karkhanis's calling Mohammed Yousry a terrorist. In the third paragraph you correctly state that Yousry was convicted of abetting terrorists, but then a couple of lines later claim that Karkhanis dubbed Yousry a terrorist. Someone who associates with and abets terrorists in effect demonstrates support for terrorism. Conviction of association with terrorism, which was demonstrated by abetting it, is what dubbed Yousry a terrorist. If you want to take issue with Yousry's conviction, you might demonstrate your doubts with a few shards of evidence. You won't find much evidence from the extremists who you state call the conviction unfair.

    In the concluding paragraph you quote Professor O'Malley as saying that she hopes that the case might create some good case law. I showed that statement to a couple of my undergraduate business students who happened to be visiting me and they started laughing because they know from their undergraduate business law class that settled cases do not create case law. I told them not to laugh just because a senior faculty member is less knowledgeable than they are. After years as an officer of the CUNY faculty union O'Malley might be thought to have picked up some sense of the real world. My students are planning to initiate a class discussion on this in my elementary management skills course next year.

  • Posted by Assoc.Prof @ Brooklyn College , Assoc Prof. at Brooklyn College - CUNY on March 19, 2010 at 12:15pm EDT
  • I always understood Prof. Karkhanis to be satirical and not to be taken literally. It is very unfortunate that the union did not understand this also.

    Like Prof. Karkhanis I believe that the union is not properly representing us. They spend too much effort on Stella D'Oro bakers and the war in Iraq. The mission of the union is to represent the faculty's interests in term of our employment with NYC. Instead of faithfully representing us they put their energies into unrelated matters. It's not that the fate of Stella D'Oro bakers or the Iraq war are are unimportant. It's just not the job of this union.

    We have a new contract coming up. Will Dear Leader step aside and hire a professional negotiator? Or, will we again end up with a contract that leaves us lower paid than our colleagues at SUNY and other institutions, working in building without heat, and with asbestos, mold, and chipping paint? Will we continue teaching bulging classrooms because the union can't get the city to hire the right amount of faculty? Will we have to conitnue teaching in unsafe, deplorable conditions? Our working conditions are dismal and the union seems unable or unwilling to get the job done right!

    I always look forward to e-mails from The Patriot Returns. Prof. Karkhanis' writing style is witty and enjoyable and he gives a balanced view to the rhetoric in the PSC publications.

  • Thin skinned Liberals
  • Posted by Prof. Jonathan Helfand , Professor at Brooklyn College on March 19, 2010 at 4:45pm EDT
  • I have enjoyed "The Patriot Returns" for years. It has been a witty source of put-downs ridiculing our pompous union leadership and their Left wing politics. It is sad that at least one of their number was so thin-skinned as to take up the cudgels against Sharad. As to her complaint that his jibes interfered with her ability to lobby in Albany, it is hard to believe that she said that with a straight face.

    Right on Sharad! I look forward to your newsletter and hope to read it right through my own retirement.

  • Victory for freedom of speech and conscience
  • Posted by Phil Orenstein , Instructor/Mechanical Engineering Technology at Queensborough Community College on March 23, 2010 at 5:15am EDT
  • O'Malley claims victory because she was able to see peace and quiet after she sued. However, quite the contrary, it happened immediately following her lawsuit against Karkhanis that the notoriety soon began with her name making headlines and the news of the "It's all very, very silly" lawsuit was featured in newspapers, on-line newssites and the blogosphere. Enduring the satirical publicity perhaps on 6 or 7 separate occasions in The Patriot Returns, she was having a very peaceful life as the "Queen of Released Time" since her important bureaucratic administrative duties released her from the mundane task of teaching. But she, like the leftwing bellyacher she and her cohorts are, who feel justified in using lawfare or any means necessary to silence dissent or opposition to their holy pursuit of revolutions of yesteryear, she shot herself in the foot. Well, the verdict is in, that O'Malley lost because dissent will not be quashed nor silenced, from Karkhanis or anyone else, who have the right to their free expression of speech and conscience in condemnation of her depraved yearning to bring convicted and formerly imprisoned terrorists into the classroom to teach and serve as a model for our youthful generation.