Covington Incident
The lawsuit stems from a Jan. 18 incident that took place after the March for Life anti-abortion event in Washington. Sandmann and other students from the religious private school in Kentucky were waiting for their bus near the Lincoln Memorial when they were approached by several Native American activists.The encounter was extensively covered by media using short video clips that made it appear as though the students were chanting and cheering in mockery of one of the Native American activists, 64-year-old Nathan Phillips.
Some of the students were wearing hats with President Donald Trump’s campaign slogan “Make America Great Again”—a fact emphasized by various media.
CNN reported the incident, allegedly using titles such as “Teens Taunt Native American Elder” and “Teens Harass Native American War Veteran.”
Longer video footage of the incident showed the students began to cheer and chant their school chant in response to offensive remarks sent their way by a small group of Black Hebrew Israelites nearby.
43 Minutes
The suit alleges that CNN defamed Sandmann in at least four television broadcasts, nine online articles, and four Twitter posts.“Contrary to its ‘Facts First’ public relations ploy, CNN ignored the facts and put its anti-Trump agenda first in waging a 7-day media campaign of false, vicious attacks against Nicholas,” the suit stated.
The network ran 43 minutes of coverage on the Covington incident over the first two days, the Media Research Center (MRC), a right-leaning media watchdog, reported.
It took CNN a week to initially tell its viewers about the lawsuit, according to MRC.
Sandmann is also suing The Washington Post and NBC Universal for their coverage of the incident, demanding $250 million and $275 million respectively.
One of Sandmann’s lawyers, Todd McMurtry, didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Neither did CNN.
