A University of Notre Dame professor has filed a defamation lawsuit against a student-run publication over news coverage of her abortion-rights work. The case is raising questions about press freedom and academic freedom at one of the nationâs preeminent Catholic universities.
Tamara Kayâs suit, filed in May, alleges falsehoods in two articles published by The Irish Rover in the past academic year. The Rover defended its reporting as true in a motion filed earlier this month to dismiss the case, under a law meant to protect people from frivolous lawsuits over matters of public concern.
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Kay, a professor of global affairs and sociology, asks for unspecified punitive damages after she âhas been harassed, threatened, and experienced damage to her residential propertyâ and âcontinues to experience mental anguishâ because of the two articles.
Published in October and March after public events in which Kay participated, the articles cover her remarks about her support for abortion rights. The lawsuit alleges that the articles contained âfalse and defamatoryâ information, arguing that they misinterpreted a sign on her door about helping students access healthcare and denying two quotes about academic freedom and her work at a Catholic institution.
âThe note on my door referenced sexual assault, and the inadequate resources and support for student survivors at Notre Dame,â Kay told The Associated Press via email.
She added that she had asked the Roverâs faculty advisors to retract or correct the story, and that Notre Dame officials refused to intervene on her behalf.
âAll of this is utterly devastating,â Kay said. She said her public writing and public speech âare all fair game for reporting and critique, as long as that reporting is accurate. It has not been.â
Notre Dameâs Office of Media Relations didnât answer repeated requests for comment from the AP. Neither did Kayâs attorney in the lawsuit.
In the motion filed under Indianaâs anti-SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation) law, the Irish Rover argued that â as an âindependent, non-profit, student publication âdevoted to preserving the Catholic identity of Notre Dameââ â its coverage of a Notre Dame professorâs public statements and actions about abortion qualify under the lawâs public interest and free speech criteria.
The motion added that the stories were âat least substantially trueâ and âdid not contain defamatory imputation.â Exhibits include a transcript of the March event and since-deleted tweets by Kay last fall referring Notre Dame colleagues to websites with information on where to find abortion providers and how to procure abortion pills.
That âtargeted advocacyâ â just as Indiana's abortion ban first went briefly into effect â motivated Notre Dame student W. Joseph DeReuil, 21, to seek comments from Kay and write a news story, he told the AP.
DeReuil, the Roverâs editor-in-chief during the last academic year, said he is a practicing Catholic and believes the Churchâs teaching that life starts at conception and thus abortion is intentional killing.
âI do wish at times that, I guess, Notre Dame would take, as an institution, a stronger stance in favor of the Catholic position on some of these issues,â he said.
He added that he condemned harassment of abortion rights advocates and specifically the threats mentioned in the lawsuit by Kay.
DeReuil said he was confident his reporting was factually correct and hoped the suit would be dismissed, instead of consuming his senior year.
âYouâll face pushback, but you can still be a normal, cheerful, happy student,â he said. âItâs not going to affect you negatively in the long term if youâre standing up for what you believe is true.â
The Roverâs attorney, James Bopp, Jr., said lawsuits like this can create a chilling effect.
âIf we fail, it will send the message that if you speak out about the abortion issue, then you risk punishment through the legal system, and particularly if you speak out on the pro-life side,â said Bopp, who has worked on major national cases on behalf of anti-abortion and free speech causes.
While the Churchâs position on abortion is unwavering, not all Catholics agree with it. Some oppose it based on their sense of Catholic teachings about individual conscience or social justice, said professor Samira Mehta, an expert on gender and religion at the University of Colorado.
Itâs rare to have faculty sue students for libel over an issue broaching âdiametrically opposed worldviews,â said Jonathan Gaston-Falk, an attorney with the Student Press Law Center. The organization defends press freedom rights for high school and college journalists and their advisors; it is not involved in this litigation.
âLibel can be boiled down to a false statement of fact that harms somebodyâs reputationâ â and is published with knowledge of that falsity and malice if the person is a public figure, Gaston-Falk added.
According to Indiana law, courts have six months to rule on an anti-SLAPP motion.
Indiana was the first state to enact sweeping abortion restrictions after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022.
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