OMEN
04-16-2007, 11:16 PM
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Jennifer Lopez, seen performing on ‘American Idol’ on April 11, and husband Marc Anthony are seeking a ‘six-figure settlement’ from the National Enquirer, said lawyer Paul Tweed.
DUBLIN, Ireland - Jennifer Lopez and her husband, Marc Anthony, are suing the National Enquirer in European courts over the tabloid’s claims they were linked to a drug scandal, their Belfast lawyer said Monday.
Paul Tweed, who specializes in bringing U.S.-based celebrities’ libel cases to British and Irish courts, told The Associated Press that actress-singer Lopez, 38, and singer Anthony, 37, were seeking “a six-figure settlement” from the Enquirer, based in Boca Raton, Fla., and its parent company, American Media Inc.
Tweed said the lawsuit would be filed Tuesday in a Belfast court, and in subsequent days in courts in Dublin, London and Paris.
A telephone message left at the National Enquirer wasn’t immediately returned Monday. A spokesman for AMI, Richard Balvo, said he had no comment.
“It would be our policy to not comment on it at this time, Balvo said.
The lawsuit also seeks an apology and retraction for an article that appeared in different versions of the Enquirer’s U.S. and international editions.
The version published March 12 in British and Irish editions alleged the couple were “caught up in a heroin scandal” — and reprinted a 2004 picture of Anthony standing beside photographer Michael Star, who is facing charges of heroin possession and child pornography in the U.S.
The article quoted an alleged friend of Star as saying Star and Anthony were friends.
Tweed told the AP this was untrue and that Anthony didn’t know Star even as an acquaintance. Anthony posed for the 2004 photograph, Tweed said, in keeping with his usual hospitality toward backstage concert fans.
There has been a growing trend in international libel suits brought by U.S.-based celebrities in European courts, where libel laws favor the celebrity, not the publication.
“The First Amendment restrictions in U.S. libel law make it virtually impossible for international celebrities or other high-profile individuals to sue successfully,” Tweed said. “But with the advance of the Internet, and with U.S. publications now extending their distribution network into Europe, they must subject themselves to libel laws in these jurisdictions.”
Tweed said he received approval Monday from Lopez’s Los Angeles law firm, Lavely & Singer, to proceed with the lawsuit.
It will be Tweed’s second lawsuit against the Enquirer. In July, he secured a published apology in the European edition of the Enquirer for an article that claimed pop singer Britney Spears was about to divorce Kevin Federline.
Associated Press
Jennifer Lopez, seen performing on ‘American Idol’ on April 11, and husband Marc Anthony are seeking a ‘six-figure settlement’ from the National Enquirer, said lawyer Paul Tweed.
DUBLIN, Ireland - Jennifer Lopez and her husband, Marc Anthony, are suing the National Enquirer in European courts over the tabloid’s claims they were linked to a drug scandal, their Belfast lawyer said Monday.
Paul Tweed, who specializes in bringing U.S.-based celebrities’ libel cases to British and Irish courts, told The Associated Press that actress-singer Lopez, 38, and singer Anthony, 37, were seeking “a six-figure settlement” from the Enquirer, based in Boca Raton, Fla., and its parent company, American Media Inc.
Tweed said the lawsuit would be filed Tuesday in a Belfast court, and in subsequent days in courts in Dublin, London and Paris.
A telephone message left at the National Enquirer wasn’t immediately returned Monday. A spokesman for AMI, Richard Balvo, said he had no comment.
“It would be our policy to not comment on it at this time, Balvo said.
The lawsuit also seeks an apology and retraction for an article that appeared in different versions of the Enquirer’s U.S. and international editions.
The version published March 12 in British and Irish editions alleged the couple were “caught up in a heroin scandal” — and reprinted a 2004 picture of Anthony standing beside photographer Michael Star, who is facing charges of heroin possession and child pornography in the U.S.
The article quoted an alleged friend of Star as saying Star and Anthony were friends.
Tweed told the AP this was untrue and that Anthony didn’t know Star even as an acquaintance. Anthony posed for the 2004 photograph, Tweed said, in keeping with his usual hospitality toward backstage concert fans.
There has been a growing trend in international libel suits brought by U.S.-based celebrities in European courts, where libel laws favor the celebrity, not the publication.
“The First Amendment restrictions in U.S. libel law make it virtually impossible for international celebrities or other high-profile individuals to sue successfully,” Tweed said. “But with the advance of the Internet, and with U.S. publications now extending their distribution network into Europe, they must subject themselves to libel laws in these jurisdictions.”
Tweed said he received approval Monday from Lopez’s Los Angeles law firm, Lavely & Singer, to proceed with the lawsuit.
It will be Tweed’s second lawsuit against the Enquirer. In July, he secured a published apology in the European edition of the Enquirer for an article that claimed pop singer Britney Spears was about to divorce Kevin Federline.
Associated Press