Judicial Follies: Unwanted publicity ...Middle East

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Judicial Follies: Unwanted publicity
In 1974, freshman U.S. Senator William Scott of Virginia was picked by investigative magazine New Times as the dumbest man in the U.S. Congress. (The article was written by then little-known Nina Totenberg, long before she had a national profile.) Asked why he did not sue the magazine for defamation, Scott actually made an astute observation: if he lost the lawsuit (which, as a public figure, he was likely to do), many people might have taken this as confirmation of the allegation. Alas, not all public figures from the Old Dominion were quite as canny as “dumb” Sen. Scott — as shown by the defamation lawsuit once filed against a newspaper called “The Richmond Voice” (or just “the Voice”). Th

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