A third and final House committee has advanced a contentious defamation bill. But one critic testified the legislation will help its sponsor bring forward lawsuits against anyone criticizing his political allies.
At a House Judiciary Committee meeting, Milton gun shop owner Chris Smith discussed a lawsuit filed against his business. Santa Rosa County Commissioner Sam Parker filed suit against Smith's business in September over use of his likeness in a "taxation is theft" promotion, according to the Pensacola News Journal. The lawsuit was filed by attorneys at the same law firm where Rep. Alex Andrade, the bill's sponsor works.
"The fact that I'm getting sued right now and this makes it a little easier for his law firm to sue me and win also kind of hits home that he's filing the bill," Smith said.
Smith classified his store's promotion as "parody videos" that called out a local politician's alleged corruption. The store covered a local sales tax for customers.
The lawsuit claims the use of the County Commissioner's images were "uniformly derogatory," as reported by the News Journal.
Andrade, for his part, noted he isn't personally suing Smith.
"My firm is a law firm. There's a lawsuit being filed by another attorney at my firm that I have nothing to do with," the Pensacola Republican said. "It's not at all related to defamation. This bill would have no effect on that lawsuit."
He also has repeatedly insisted his bill won't outlaw name-calling, or even accusing politicians of being corrupt, as those are matters of opinion and not fact.
The House committee advanced the bill (HB 757) on a 14-7 vote Wednesday. Most votes against the bill came from Democrats, but Rep. Webster Barnaby, a Deltona Republican, also voted "no."
The legislation is next heading to the House floor.
Lawmakers moved the measure forward after supporting an amendment intended to limit venue shopping. Even with the change, many media outlets voiced concern that the legislation seeks to erase decades of precedent on what constitutes defamation.
Carol LoCicero, a libel defense lawyer for outlets including Newsmax and The Villages Daily Sun, said the legislation will lead to more lawsuits against conservative media.
"Florida already has greater than its fair share of libel cases," she said.
"The risk may be greatest for conservative voices. We've seen a wave of high-profile lawsuits and settlements. The Dominion voting case that Fox settled for $787 million. The verdict against Rudy Giuliani for $148 million, former President (Donald) Trump for $83 million. And just this month a jury awarded $1 million to climate professor Michael Mann in a case involving the National Review and the Competitive Enterprise Institute. The dangers are real."
Andrade brushed off the criticisms.
"Shocking. Media outlets and their attorneys are afraid that a bill that protects your reputation and recognizes that your reputation has value, (they) don't want it to pass," Andrade said.
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