Friday, June 5, 2026

Taibbi Lawsuit Over Owned Was Dismissed Now Anti SLAPP Attorneys Fees of $179000 Opposed

SDNY COURTHOUSE, June 2 –  In the libel case by Matt Taibbi against Eoin Higgins and Hachette Book Group over the book "Owned," an oral argument on the defendants' motion to dismiss on First Amendment grounds was held on March 25 by U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York Senior Judge George B. Daniels.

   Inner City Press was there, one of only four people in the courtroom gallery (the other three were court staff) and live tweeted, here and some below followed by an extra.

On May 5, Judge Daniel dismissed the case, saying no defamatory statement had been alleged. 13 page order on Patreon here.

On June 2, Taibbi's Florida-based lawyer filed opposition to the defense's motion for $178,732.50 in attorneys' fees, saying that 312.90 hours billed was too much, at the partner rate of $675 - $735 per hour and associate rate of $460-$545 per hour.  As Inner City Press has previously reported, there are arguments, and Circuit-splits, on the applicability of states' anti-SLAPP laws. Our view: there is a need for a Federal anti-SLAPP statute. Inner City Press will report Judge Daniel's decision in this case - for now, he'll be away at the Second Circuit's Judicial Conference.

From March 25:

Judge Daniels: What's the most defamatory statement you've got?
Garson: The cover. Bought. Owned. Cashing in. That he says he will follow the money and name names.

Judge: It's hyperbole. 

Judge Daniels: If I saw, Mr. Garson is bought by the plaintiffs' bar, is that defamatory?
Garson: If someone says, that judge is bought by the Mafia, it's defamatory
Judge: I'm not so sure. Why did they write the book?
Garson: To make money
Judge: Exactly (laughs) 

Garson: Pardon the pun, but it's a hatchet job, a Hachette job - this is unique. I acknowledge that a headline and an article can differ
Judge: You're not complaining about the content of the book.
Garson: Inside cover. An article you can see right away. A book? 

McNamara: Meanings are developed through context. New York has a heightened standard. You had a case about Michael Lewis' book, you found that "moron" was opinion and not actionable. You were affirmed by the 2d Circuit. Here, the plaintiff does not like the cover 

Judge Daniels: OK, I will get back to you [Inner City Press remained on alert for his ruling and first reported it]

Extra / analysis on X for Subscribers here and Substack here

The case is Taibbi v. Higgins, et al., 1:25-cv-9511 (Daniels)