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Outsports Sued Over Use
of Photo
By Outsports.com
| Update
(Oct. 15, 2004): Outsports is not able to comment on the
lawsuit at the present time. We will post more updated
information when we are able. We are no longer in need of
any further contributions at this point. Thanks so much for
all of your incredible support. |
Outsports.com is
being sued by a North Carolina man who said the website defamed him
by running his picture in a photo gallery from the 2004 Los Angeles
Marathon. Outsports is contesting the suit.
The suit was filed
in North Carolina Superior Court in July by Chris Harbinson, a
resident of Wake County, N.C. The suit is seeking damages in excess
of $10,000, along with punitive damages and legal fees.
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| Chris Harbinson is
suing Outsports.com over this photo of him from the 2004
Los Angeles Marathon. The photo was one of 150 photos
from the race and contained no caption or
identification. In his suit, Harbinson says he's not gay
and that the use of the picture was libelous. |
On March 7,
Harbinson was photographed stretching prior to the start of the
Marathon by Outsports photographer Brent Mullins, who was
credentialed to shoot the event. On March 22, Outsports ran
Harbinson’s photo as part of a
gallery of 150 images from the event, but did not use his
name.
In his suit,
Harbinson claims he is not gay and that his picture on Outsports
caused him to suffer “extreme embarrassment, public humiliation,
mental agony and damage to his name and reputation.”
The suit added that
Outsports “knew or should have known that false depiction of
Plaintiff as gay could subject Plaintiff to the general community’s
ridicule, contempt and disgrace (regardless of Plaintiff’s being gay
or otherwise), and to the gay community’s ridicule, contempt and
disgrace (as Plaintiff was not gay.)”
Outsports, which
has been regularly credentialed to photograph public sporting events
from Major League Baseball and the NFL to international swimming and
water polo, did not run captions with any of the Marathon photos,
and nowhere on the site did it say or imply that Harbinson was gay.
“We believe this
lawsuit is frivolous and without merit,” Outsports said in a
statement. “We have published thousands of images of athletes from
the famous to the obscure, and are appalled that in 2004 someone
would argue that their mere presence on our site would be
defamatory.”
“In addition, we
were credentialed to shoot the event, which took place on public
streets in Los Angeles, and were well within our First Amendment
rights. It would be chilling if gay-oriented publications were
subjected to different standards than the rest of the media when
covering the same event.”
Harbinson further
contends that use of his image on the Outsports home page as a link
inside to the Marathon story and gallery took advantage of him for
commercial purposes. Outsports also denies this charge.
On April 14,
Harbinson’s attorney, Aaron C. Hemmings of Durham, N.C., served
Outsports with a cease-and-desist order to remove the runner’s
picture. Outsports complied, honoring its policy to remove anyone’s
photo if requested for any reason. In answering the demand,
Outsports’ California attorney Devan Mullins wrote to Hemmings: “Mr.
Harbinson willingly had his photograph taken and chose to
participate in this very newsworthy and public event. … He was not
in any way defamed, portrayed in a false light or negligently
harmed. Thousands of athletes, gay and straight, have had their
pictures appear on the Outsports website. Athletes are bound
together by their particular interest in sporting events and not
their particular orientation. We would like to think that you and
your client are tolerant, fair and support the Constitution as much
as we do.”
Outsports is being
represented in North Carolina by libel attorney C. Amanda Martin,
with assistance from Atlanta-based attorney Cynthia Counts and from
the National Center for Lesbian Rights.
Aug. 17, 2004 |