John Travolta,
along with his attorney Marty Singer, comes out victorious in a legal
proceeding against Robert Randolph, the author of a book about the
actor's alleged homosexual activities in a spa. A defamation lawsuit
filed against them is dismissed by the judge.
Randolph claimed Travolta and Singer made false statements about him. He
accused them of dissuading the public from buying his book, "You'll
Never Spa in This Town Again", by inducing people to believe that he was
an unreliable source.
Randolph complained about Singer's letter sent to Gawker two years ago
in response to an article called "The Secret Sex Life of John Travolta"
which he contributed to. The lawyer claimed the writer "sustained
'permanent brain damage' and had to 'retrain' his brain."
In response to the lawsuit, Travolta and Singer fired off an anti-SLAPP
motion which barred any lawsuits that violated certain First Amendment
rights. In the latest hearing, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Malcolm
Macky agreed that the letter was not subject to a libel claim.
Judge also pointed out that the plaintiff gave no proof to support his
allegation. "Defendant Singer has amply established that he sent the
11/23/10 letter to Gawker Media in good faith and in serious
consideration of litigation," the ruling read as quoted by The Hollywood
Reporter. "As such, the letter is privileged."
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