The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected an appeal from Don Blankenship, a former coal company CEO who ran for president in 2020, after he argued that major news outlets defamed him, while Justice Clarence Thomas argued that a landmark defamation ruling should be revisited.
A lower court ruled against Mr. Blankenship, the former chief executive of Massey Energy, after he served a year in prison on a misdemeanor charge following a West Virginia coal mine explosion that left 29 people dead in 2010. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a district court’s determination that CNN, Fox News, and 14 other outlets sued by the former CEO did not act with “actual malice” amid coverage of his unsuccessful 2018 U.S. Senate campaign, even if they failed to meet journalistic standards.
That ruling established the “actual malice” standard, which found that if a plaintiff in a defamation lawsuit is a public official or a candidate for public office, they have to prove that a statement was made with “actual malice,” which means the defendant knew the statement was not true or had recklessly disregarded whether it might be false or not.
The Supreme Court had previously turned away Mr. Blankenship’s appeal of his misdemeanor conviction in connection to the 2010 mine explosion.
In a comment posted on social media last month, Mr. Blankenship that his “lawsuit seeks to overturn New York Times v. Sullivan, an infamous Court ruling which legalized the defamation of candidates for public office upon the request of current government officials to do so.”
In his petition to the Supreme Court, Mr. Blankenship took umbrage with how MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, and other outlets described him as a “felon” and said they defamed him. He was never charged or convicted of a felony, but instead, the former executive was convicted by a jury in 2015 of a federal conspiracy charge that was classified as a misdemeanor.
Mr. Blankenship ran for the West Virginia U.S. Senate seat in 2018 before losing to GOP nominee Patrick Morrisey in the primary. Mr. Morrisey, who is now the state’s attorney general, ultimately lost to Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), who had been seeking reelection.
About two years later, Mr. Blankenship launched his campaign for the Constitution Party nomination in the 2020 presidential election. He received about 60,000 votes in all.
Justice Thomas’s Response
Justice Thomas, an appointee of former President George H.W. Bush, has previously stated that the Supreme Court should overturn the landmark 1964 ruling. He reiterated his stance again on Tuesday, writing a brief opinion that “I continue to adhere to my view that we should reconsider the actual malice standard.”“The Court usurped control over libel law and imposed its own elevated standard in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,” he wrote, adding that the court “did not base this ‘actual malice’ rule in the original meaning of the First Amendment. It limited its analysis of the historical record to a loose inference from opposition surrounding the Sedition Act of 1798.”