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Student Journalist Participates in Mock Deposition for Communication Law Class

student Dominic Chiappone ’24 defended an article he wrote for The Daily Orange in a class exercise designed to simulate a deposition a journalist could face if sued for defamation.

The mock deposition was part of a communication law class taught by Newhouse Professor . The case centered on a story Chiappone had written for The Daily Orange involving campus police.

Lewis, who is a member of the New York State Bar Association鈥檚 media law committee, played the role of Chiappone鈥檚 attorney.

鈥淢ost civil lawsuits are resolved before going to trial, so that makes it rare that a journalist would have to testify in court if sued for libel,鈥 Lewis says. 鈥淏ut a journalist might have to sit for a deposition to answer questions about their reporting before a settlement is reached, or the lawsuit is dropped.鈥

Local attorney Cayley Young 鈥17, L鈥20, an alumna of the Newhouse School and College of Law, played the role of the plaintiff鈥檚 lawyer. Young, who works for the law firm of Martin Ganotis Brown Mould and Currie, peppered Chiappone with questions about his sources and fact-checking process.

鈥淚t鈥檚 good to get our students thinking about the kind of scrutiny they could face if someone sues over a story they鈥檝e written,鈥 Lewis says.

Had the hypothetical lawsuit been real, Lewis and Young agreed Chiappone would win.聽 According to Lewis, “He got his facts right and did his due diligence.”