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Libel: Proof of Fault

Multiple Choice Quiz



1

Very important to the principles underlying Justice William Brennan's opinion in New York Times v. Sullivan (1964) is the idea that:
A)The ad was really criticism of the way government did business.
B)Public debate should be robust and uninhibited.
C)Error cannot be avoided completely in heated debates.
D)Public officials must accept public criticism and complaints as part of their jobs.
E)All of the above are correct.
2

The actual malice rule applies when libel plaintiffs are:
A)Public figures.
B)Public officials.
C)Private persons.
D)A and B are correct.
3

A limited public figure is a person who:
A)Works for the state or federal government.
B)Has voluntarily entered an important public controversy.
C)Has actually influenced the outcome of a public issue.
D)All of the above are correct.
4

Generally speaking, athletes and show business people:
A)Would be considered public figures because they choose to draw attention to themselves.
B)Would be public figures only if they tried to resolve an important public issue.
C)Would be considered private persons.
D)B and C are correct.
5

In Rosenblatt v. Baer (1966), the court said people are public officials if they:
A)Work for the government.
B)Hold a government job in which the public is more interested in their qualifications and performance than in most government jobs.
C)Hold a government job in which more education or experience is required than in most government jobs.
D)Hold a government job in which they supervise a budget.
6

In Soke v. The Plain Dealer (1994) and Clark v. Clark (1993), the courts said police officers:
A)Are private people.
B)Are public figures when they are involved in controversial cases.
C)Are public officials because they hold government jobs.
D)Are public officials because they hold the power of life and death over citizens in their communities.
7

An example of an all-purpose public figure might be:
A)Madonna.
B)A woman in your city who has been mayor and chair of the school board, owns the local supermarket, serves on the board of a local bank and the YMCA, is active in eight civic organizations including the Rotary Club and the Chamber of Commerce, and is part of a large family that founded a college in the town 150 years ago.
C)Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates.
D)All of the above are correct.
8

Time Inc. v. Firestone (1976) reinforced the idea that a public controversy in libel law:
A)Is any controversy that's interesting to the public.
B)Probably needs to affect a larger group of people than those involved in the controversy.
C)Involves government officials.
D)Must be covered extensively by the press.
9

The status of an involuntary public figure in a libel suit:
A)Is uncommon.
B)Occurs commonly for attorneys and doctors, whose professions bring them in contact with the public.
C)Is reserved for criminals, who generate controversy by disobeying the law.
D)Has become more common in the 1990s as a result of the popularity of talk shows.
10

Based on what courts refer to as "bootstrapping," a libel plaintiff:
A)Cannot be turned into a limited-purpose public figure if she has run for public office on a "no new taxes" platform.
B)Cannot be turned into a limited-purpose public figure by the mere fact that the press creates interest in her as an individual.
C)Becomes a limited-purpose public figure automatically if she responds to questions from the press.
D)Becomes a limited-purpose public figure if she has worked for the press.
11

In Zupnik v. Associated Press (1998) and Krauss v. Globe International Inc. (1998), the courts:
A)Said celebrity spouses are all-purpose public figures.
B)Said celebrity spouses are not all-purpose public figures.
C)Said celebrity spouses are limited-purpose public figures.
D)Disagreed over whether celebrity spouses are public figures.
12

To determine whether a business is a public figure, courts:
A)Begin with the assumption that a business that advertises is a public figure.
B)Assign public figure status only when the business has attempted to influence the political process, such as through political action committees or PACs.
C)Approach the matter on a case-by-case basis.
D)Consider whether it is a government-regulated business.
E)C and D are correct.
13

Generally speaking, when courts consider negligence in a libel case, they want to know whether the journalist:
A)Committed "journalistic malpractice."
B)Made "an extraordinary effort to ensure accuracy."
C)Made a good faith effort to avoid error.
D)Complied with the federal standard of simple negligence.
14

In Street v. NBC (1981), the court said once someone is designated as a limited-purpose public figure:
A)The person remains a limited-purpose public figure in regard to that issue.
B)The person will be a limited-purpose public figure in regard to any public issue he or she becomes involved in.
C)The person remains a limited-purpose public figure for 25 years.
D)The person remains a limited-purpose public figure unless they move away from the geographic area in which they were known.
15

In cases such as Harte-Hanks Communications Inc. v. Connaughton (1989), the U.S. Supreme Court has said a showing of ill will:
A)Is not enough to prove actual malice.
B)Is enough to prove actual malice only when the plaintiff is a limited-purpose public figure.
C)May be accepted by lower courts as a showing of actual malice.
D)Deprives reporters of their First Amendment privileges because the Amendment was not designed to protect people engaged in personal attacks.