The Legal Environment of Business: Text and Cases
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781337535878
Author: Frank B. Cross; Roger LeRoy Miller
Publisher: Cengage Learning US
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Chapter 5, Problem 6BCP
Summary Introduction
Case summary: The person SG became infamous because of his dishonest behavior. He used fabricated material for his articles that appeared in the TNR magazine and various other publications. He was under suspicion when he was enrolled as a law student at G University. He filed an application of enrollment in the California bar. The application was rejected by the Supreme Court, citing his previous dishonest behavior.
To explain: The role of the above circumstances in decreasing the importance of ethics.
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Patrick Clawson was described by reporter Karen Branch-Brioso in a newspaper story as a “1970s era St. Louis journalist turned private eye turned FBI informant.” The story was published in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. The fact that he had been characterized as an informant bothered Clawson, who saw it as damaging to his reputation. Accordingly, he brought a libel case against the Post-Dispatch. Recall that to be libelous, a statement must be false and “hold the victim up to ridicule, contempt, or hatred.” Clawson would have preferred the term whistleblower rather than informant because that term commands more respect. Why is the use of the term informant to describe Clawson not libelous?
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The Legal Environment of Business: Text and Cases
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