Loading...
|| LAW ||
Share EMAIL PRINT
 
1 2 3 NEXT  Page 1 of 3

Lambda vs. Howard K. Stern

Anna Nicole Smith's lawyer-turned-lover Howard K. Stern is suing an author for $60 million for claiming in a book that he's gay. Lambda Legal doesn't like that, because there's "nothing shameful about being identified as gay."



Anna Nicole Show costar Howard K. Stern is suing an author in Manhattan district court for claiming in a tell-all book that Stern is gay. Stern is demanding $60 million in damages, but if the efforts of legal activists are successful, he may not get a cent.

Lambda Legal, the country's largest legal organization dedicated to gay rights, recently filed a "friend of the court" brief in the case, arguing that it is not defamatory under New York law to falsely identify someone as gay. Attorneys for the organization say gay defamation suits "impermissibly stigmatize lesbians and gay men" and are based on "outdated prejudices." Judge Denny Chin is set to decide soon whether the case should proceed to trial.

"It seemed inappropriate -- especially in 2009 -- for [a gay defamation] claim to have weight," said Thomas Ude, a senior staff attorney with Lambda Legal. "There's nothing shameful about being identified as gay."

Lawyers for the book's author, Rita Cosby, have made a similar argument.

"Stern is relying on this court to affirm a discriminatory, humiliating, and outdated notion about the community's response to homosexuality," Cosby's lawyers said in a motion seeking to dismiss the charges.

Stern, of course, played lawyer -- and later rumored lover -- to former supermodel Smith, who died in 2007 of an accidental drug overdose. In the months leading up to her death, Smith maintained that Stern was the father of her infant daughter, Dannielynn.

DNA testing later proved that Stern was not Dannielynn's dad.

For Stern to win the defamation suit, he must show that the false statement damaged his reputation. But what is considered a stain on one's reputation changes over time. In the past, courts have recognized defamation claims based on false accusations of being black, being a communist, being Roman Catholic, etc.

Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Facebook. 1 2 3 NEXT  Page 1 of 3
Share EMAIL PRINT
 
Reader Comments
  • Name: newz4i
    Date posted: 4/12/2009 11:32:00 AM
    Hometown: phoenix

    Comment:

    I'm gay. (sue me)

  • Name: john in SF
    Date posted: 4/12/2009 1:15:00 AM
    Hometown: San Francisco

    Comment:

    He obviously needs to find some way to pay for the huge legal bills that will be coming his way. Especially if they try him for murder or manslaughter, a real possibility since they are looking again at what really happened with Anne Nicole Smith.

  • Name: Paul
    Date posted: 4/11/2009 2:21:00 PM
    Hometown: New York, NY

    Comment:

    It might be problematic for some macho construction worker and his friends in Alabama, but Stern? Please. It's just another way for people to make a quick buck. In 2009, it's no insult; get over it.

  • Name: Ben
    Date posted: 4/11/2009 5:14:00 AM
    Hometown: NY

    Comment:

    The fact of the matter is, being called "gay" IS defamatory in the current social climate of the US. We can say it shouldn't be, but we really can't claim that it isn't.

  • Name: Michael
    Date posted: 4/10/2009 8:14:00 PM
    Hometown: NY, NY

    Comment:

    Yes, but in Manhattan?

  • Name: John
    Date posted: 4/10/2009 6:51:00 PM
    Hometown: Charlotte

    Comment:

    This reminds me of the old days when the ACLU would pop up defending the Grand Dragon of the KKK in behalf of some abstruse legal point to demonstrate that the Law is really just a game of strategic skill. Living your gay life openly in the parts of America that are not West Hollywood, DC or Ptown is significantly more challenging than LAMBDA seems willing to acknowledge. In the parts of America that provide absolutely no legal protections based upon sexual orientation (I live in North Carolina) there is plenty of shame still attached to being identified as gay. When you read about elderly gay people in nursing care facilities being stigmatized, isolated and shunned by other residents and staff solely because they are gay, you have to wonder what bubble of unreality has disconnected these lawyers from the practical concerns of everyday life. We aren't post-homophobic yet.

  • Name: RGW
    Date posted: 4/10/2009 4:25:00 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco

    Comment:

    Howard K. Stern is a creep pure and simple. He didn't care that he looked like creep while he kept Anna Nicole drugged up and out of it for the last years of her short life; never mind he possibly even played a hand in her (and her sons) death. Prior to that he was caught lying that he fathered Anna Nicoles baby; potentially denying the real father from raising his own child. This case should be thrown out for every good reason this article describes, but also because Howard K. Stern never had a problem with his creepy public image to begin with. Being called gay is the least of his problems (if you can even call it that. The recent arrest came way too late for this creep.

  • Name: Owen
    Date posted: 4/10/2009 3:47:00 PM
    Hometown: W. Hollywood

    Comment:

    So, should file a lawsuit for being perceived as "straight"? LAMBDA is not being reactionary Chris, it may seem that way to you if you're insulted by your own homosexuality.

  • Name: chris
    Date posted: 4/10/2009 3:22:00 PM
    Hometown: Los Angeles

    Comment:

    Are you kidding me? Sure, there's nothing wrong with being gay, but if you AREN'T gay, it sure as hell doesn't help to be called that! While 60 mil is a little ridiculous, who wants to have to explain to every woman he meets that no, he's not gay after all, no, he's not in the closet, yes, he does want to sleep with her! I mean, seriously, this is a case of LAMBDA being a little reactionary. The anti-gay advocates are going to love this one: "Gay rights group tries to stop straight man from identifying as heterosexual because there's 'nothing shameful about being identified as gay'." Just what we need.



More Online Only
  • Health and Treatments Living the Questions 

    Being diagnosed with HIV no doubt affected his focus, but this week has Advocate columnist Tyler Helms living the questions of a friend, a stranger, and a mentor — and wondering what you do when tomorrow is now a question.

  • News A Final Request

    Roi Whaley is battling stage III lung cancer. His husband, a native of the Philippines, was denied asylum in the United States and now lives thousands of miles away. Will the government keep this couple apart at the moment they need each other most?

  • News Kristin Davis Makes the Ballot

    The former New York madam talks about making marriage equality a priority in her bid for governor, who's not in her little black book, and what she would say to Eliot Spitzer.

  • Commentary The Imaginary Debate

    Actor and blogger Chad Lindsey asks, if the secular and devout can comfortably share space at a drive-in theater in Michigan, why can’t the political right share lower Manhattan?

  • Commentary Cross Country Speed Dating

    Would you like to go on a date with this guy? Kevin Patrick Richberg tells you how you can make it happen, and why he's hitting up 30 states in 30 days to find Mr. Right.

  • Internet Video Content Flag Ruffling Some (Peacock) Feathers

    Fresh from attracting 3 million viewers to his "California Gays" video, Ryan James Yezak ups the budget and takes on another Katy Perry tune — the very gay "Peacock."

  • Television Hear What Happens Live

    Fresh off his Emmy win for Top Chef, Bravo executive Andy Cohen talks about Monday night's Real Housewives of New Jersey reunion and being shoved by a table-flipper.

  • Fitness The New 60

    Psychotherapist and Advocate columnist Robert Levithan looks back on his life experiences and finds the journey to personal truth can be complicated and rewarding.

  • Washington D C View From Washington

    The White House may continue to wear blinders on same-sex marriage, but the world is transforming around them as conservatives take up the mantle of equality.

  • DVDs The Hot Sheet

    Katy Perry secures her gay fan base, J. Lo finds her Back-Up Plan, the latest adaptation of Dorian Gray stays gay, and Heart returns for the first time in six years.

Facebook Activity