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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Armstrong v Times Newspapers Ltd & Ors [2004] EWHC 2928 (QB) (17 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2004/2928.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2928 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Lance Armstrong |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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1. Times Newspapers Ltd 2. David Walsh 3. Alan English |
Defendants |
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Heather Rogers (instructed by Gillian Phillips) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 30th November and 6th and 7th December 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady:
Introduction
"It is a high threshold of exclusion. Ever since Fox's Act 1792 the meaning of words in civil as well as criminal libel proceedings has been constitutionally a matter for the jury. The judge's function is no more and no less than to pre-empt perversity".
"I do not mean that ingenuity should be expended in devising and setting out different shades of meaning. Distinct meanings are what should be pleaded; and a reasonable test of distinctness would be whether the justification would be substantially different. In the present case, for example, there could have been three different categories of justification proof of the fact of an inquiry, proof of reasonable grounds for it, and proof of guilt".
"We really must not jump to conclusions. The police are fair and know their job and we shall know soon enough if there is anything in it. Wait till we see if they charge him. I wouldn't trust him until this is cleared up, but it is another thing to condemn him unheard".
"A statement that a police officer is under investigation is no doubt defamatory, but the sting of the libel is not as sharp as a statement that he has by his conduct brought suspicion on himself. That point is reflected in a passage in the speech of Lord Devlin in Lewis already cited which refers to 'three categories of justification proof of the fact of the inquiry, proof of reasonable grounds for it and proof of guilt'".
"The fact of an official investigation into accusations against the police must be recognised as a news story in its own right, just as the Fraud Squad's investigation of Mr Lewis's company was".
The article in The Sunday Times
"LA CONFIDENTIAL
A book co-written by David Walsh of The Sunday Times will raise new questions about Lance Armstrong, five-time champion of the Tour de France and an icon of the sporting world. Alan English reports."
There is a caption underneath the photograph of Mr Armstrong:
"Heart of the matter: Lance Armstrong after victory in the Tour de France, a race he will attempt to win for a sixth time next month. The new book investigates the aftermath of a drug test on Armstrong during the 1999 Tour".
"This is of especial importance in the 'war against terrorism' where in a free society fearless reporting has often exposed information which it has been in the public interest to expose".
It is thus apparent that the author of the article had legal expertise to hand when it was written. That also emerges from the formula, adopted throughout the article, of referring to "questions" which need answering. There are about ten examples of this formula, which rather suggests to the casual observer that the article was tailored with legal advice, with a view to fitting neatly within Brooke LJ's third tier level of gravity as described in Chase. The question, therefore, essentially is whether this device has succeeded, or whether it would be perverse of a juror, or indeed of any reasonable and fair-minded reader, to conclude that the article conveys anything less than that there are "reasonable grounds to suspect" Mr Armstrong of taking drugs. That is a notch higher and corresponds to the second tier of gravity.
Delimiting the range of natural and ordinary meanings
"Armstrong is no ordinary cyclist, but there are those who fear that a man who has won five Tours de France in a row must have succumbed to the pressure of taking drugs".
The formula "those who fear that " is not an effective device to avoid a claim for libel.
"But the consequences of so holding are disquieting. It means that, so long as a slur on an individual's reputation is cast in level (iii) terms, it can be justified by reliance on the bare fact of assertions made by others, without any need to make them good. The court which decided Bennett was not asked to address this problem. Faced with it in the course of preparing to hear this appeal, it seemed to me, first of all, that there was no prior reason why the repetition rule should apply to this third and novel class of libel; secondly, that there were defensible theoretical reasons why it should not; but thirdly that there were strong practical reasons why it should among them that disapplying the rule will place a premium upon formulating slurs as levels (iii) allegations and defending them unembarrassed by the otherwise general restraint on repeating the allegations of others".
"If and in so far as the words complained of bore the following meanings, they are true in substance and in fact:
(i) That there are serious questions about drug taking in professional cycling including the question whether it was possible that the Claimant might have taken performance-enhancing substances in order to compete in a sport riven with drugs;
(ii) That there are reasonable and/or proper grounds to question, suspect that and/or investigate whether the Claimant might have taken performance enhancing substances in order to compete in professional cycling, a sport riven with drugs".
" that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that the Claimant has taken performance enhancing substances in order to compete in professional cycling".
Shortening the particulars of justification
"In endurance sports, maximal oxygen intake, VO2max, is a major determinant of performance. An athlete's VO2max depends on a number of variables, including:
(i) ventilation: the respiratory function of the lungs;
(ii) transport of inhaled oxygen through the pulmonary membranes to the blood the diffusion capacity of the lungs, diffusion-distance;
(iii) oxygen transport capacity of the blood, determined by haemoglobin concentration and cardiac output;
(iv) capacity of the working tissue to absorb and metabolise the delivered oxygen enzymatic systems of the muscles, mitochondrion.
Maximal cardiac output is a key determinate of VO2max".
"Some of the variables above can be influenced by endurance training; others cannot".
"Haemoglobin is the protein contained in red blood cells that transports oxygen from lungs to tissue. Manoeuvres that increase total body haemoglobin increase VO2max; and manoeuvres that decrease total body haemoglobin reduce VO2max. The changes appear to be independent of total blood volume. Increased VO2max and total body haemoglobin increase performance".
"Erythropoietin is one of a number of hormones that stimulate red cell production. Recombinant EPO ("EPO") was developed for clinical purposes and became available commercially in about 1987".
"In 1994, the UCI introduced Anti-Doping Examination Regulation ("AER"), which included the introduction of some out of competition random blood tests".
"In 1994, riders from the Gewiss Team were placed first, second and third in the Fleche Wallonne. At that time, Michel Ferrari was working for the Gewiss Team. Shortly after the victory, he was interviewed about EPO and said words to the effect that, if used properly, it was no more dangerous than orange juice. His comments about a performance-enhancing drug led people to believe that Mr Ferrari felt there was nothing wrong in principle with the use of EPO as part of a medical programme".
I am persuaded that this apparent public position, on the part of Mr Ferrari, has a role to play in the material relied upon as reasonable grounds to suspect.
"The initial stance in the discussion between the Claimant, Mr Swart and Mr Andreu was that if they were going to ride the Tour de France that year, they would have to be on a doping programme; their view was that, in order to get results, they would have to do so".
It is said that they then planned that each team member would organise his own programme for himself. It is not alleged that Mr Armstrong thereafter used EPO or indeed any other drug, although it is asserted that Mr Swart obtained EPO from a pharmacy in Switzerland. Ms Rogers submits that this discussion (whatever the Claimant chose to do after it) is relevant and constitutes grounds for suspicion (particularly in the context of the Claimant's denial that there were any discussions of doping at Motorola). Mr Spearman submits that there is a fallacy in her argument highlighted by the words "whatever the Claimant chose to do after it". I disagree, since an apparent willingness to participate could provide grounds for suspicion that he did take drugs. Accordingly, I will permit the introductory rubric to the paragraph together with sub-paragraphs (iii) to (vi). For reasons similar to those already advanced in respect of other paragraphs, I consider that sub-paragraphs (i) and (ii) are impermissible.
"It is absolutely essential that there is clarity on what is being alleged so as to be able to ascertain whether the particulars are capable of providing reasonable grounds to suspect the Claimant of doping. As things stand, the confirmation that the Claimant is not being referred to by the compendious use of the word 'riders' demonstrates that none of this paragraph is capable of providing such reasonable grounds".
I agree. The allegation that other riders were, or may have been, taking drugs does not comply with the conduct rule; nor, in my view, does it constitute "strong circumstantial evidence".
Section 5 of the Defamation Act 1952
Qualified privilege: applying the Reynolds criteria
"Above all, the court should have particular regard to the importance of freedom of expression. The press discharges vital functions as a bloodhound as well as a watchdog. The court should be slow to conclude that a publication was not in the public interest and, therefore, the public had no right to know, especially when the information is in the field of political discussion. Any lingering doubts should be resolved in favour of publication".
Security for Costs
A costs-capping order