Jury selection is expected to start on Monday in a trial in which Home Box Office faces libel claims over a report linking British sporting goods company Mitre Sports International to child labour in India.
The trial in federal court in Manhattan is the culmination of years of litigation over the report on Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel, which first aired in September 2008.
Mitre, established in 1817, is the world’s oldest manufacturer of soccer balls. The company says it does not use child labor and firmly opposes it.
It has said some children depicted in the HBO report as stitching Mitre soccer balls in India for five cents per hour or less were induced to pretend on camera that they were child laborers. Some children shown in the report were also described as victims of debt bondage and child slave labour.
Mitre, which is owned by the London-based Pentland Group, has called the report a “hoax” and a “hatchet job,” aimed at tarnishing the reputation of a company at the forefront of global efforts to eradicate child labour.
“The evidence will show not only that this television show was false but it was told with HBO’s clear knowledge of its falsity,” Lloyd Constantine, an attorney representing Mitre, said. “Virtually everything in the show is false and HBO knew it at the time it was telecast.”
HBO says it stands by the report, alternately titled Childhood Lost and Children of Industry. Ray Stallone, spokesman for the Time Warner subsidiary, has repeatedly dismissed the libel case as "without merit."
The premium channel is better known for entertainment than news. But HBO also has a reputation for producing top-notch news documentaries and that reputation could take a hit if it is found guilty of “staging” any part of a news report.
“The accusation that HBO or its Indian (news) stringers fabricated footage is false,” Mr Stallone said on Friday.
Mr Constantine declined to detail the damages Mitre is seeking. But the company’s lawsuit, filed on October 23rd, 2008, said the amount would total “tens of millions of dollars.”
“Mitre has suffered and continues to suffer substantial damage to its name, mark, business and reputation,” the complaint said. It cited a decision by Wal-Mart to remove all Mitre Cobra soccer balls from its shelves after the report aired as one example of that damage.
District judge George Daniels, in a written opinion clearing the way for the trial to proceed last year, made the point that “substantial truth suffices to defeat a charge of libel” under New York law.
That principle is likely to be a pillar of HBO’s defence in the case, since it has argued in court papers that its report was “substantially true.”
Child labour is pervasive in India and HBO contends that children in the country are involved in the manufacture of soccer balls, including Mitre-branded balls.
But Daniels also gave Mitre an apparent advantage in the case by ruling – in a move protested in an amicus brief filed by leading media organisations, including Reuters –that Mitre was hardly a household name and cannot be considered a “public figure.” The protest centred on concerns about press freedom and the protections traditionally awarded US journalists in reporting about public officials and public figures.
The ruling means that Mitre does not have to prove “actual malice” on the part of HBO, a tough standard in libel cases. Instead, Mitre only needs to convince the jury that HBO was grossly irresponsible in matters such as fact-checking and editing.
Kevin Baine, a defence lawyer for HBO, said Mitre still faces a tough court battle.
“Mitre has the burden of proving that HBO said something about Mitre that was false, and that HBO was grossly irresponsible in its reporting. HBO’s position is that it was responsible and careful in its reporting, and that what it said about Mitre was true,” Mr Baine said.
– Reuters