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Ladao v. Faits

Ill. App. Ct.June 28, 2019No. 1-18-0610Cited 4 times
Plaintiff WinFaits

Case Details

Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

Plaintiff Ronald Ladao prevailed in his libel and false light claims against Lauren Faits over her blog post describing a 2003 incident at an anime convention. The appellate court affirmed the jury verdict in plaintiff's favor, rejecting defendant's arguments regarding protected opinion, substantial truth, and qualified privilege defenses.

What This Ruling Means

**Ladao v. Faits: Court Protects Worker from False Online Statements** This case involved Ronald Ladao, who sued Lauren Faits over a blog post she wrote about an incident that allegedly happened at an anime convention in 2003. Ladao claimed that Faits published false and damaging statements about him online that hurt his reputation. He argued these statements constituted libel (written false statements that damage someone's reputation) and false light invasion of privacy (publishing misleading information that puts someone in a bad light). The court ruled in Ladao's favor. A jury found that Faits had indeed published false and damaging statements about him. When Faits appealed, claiming her statements were protected opinion, substantially true, or covered by legal privilege, the appellate court rejected these arguments and upheld the jury's decision. **What This Means for Workers:** This ruling shows that people cannot hide behind blogs or social media to publish false, damaging statements about others. If someone posts lies about you online that hurt your reputation—whether related to work incidents or personal matters—you may have legal recourse. However, pursuing such cases requires proving the statements were false and caused actual harm to your reputation.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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