Westmoreland v. CBS: 1984

views updated Jun 08 2018

Westmoreland v. CBS: 1984

Plaintiff: General William C. Westmoreland
Defendant: CBS, Inc.
Plaintiff Claim: That a certain television documentary broadcast by CBS concerning the conduct of the Vietnam War libeled the plaintiff
Chief Defense Lawyers: David Boies and Stuart W. Gold
Chief Lawyers for Plaintiff: Dan M. Burt and David M. Dorsen
Judge: Pierre N. Leval
Place: New York, New York
Dates of Trial: October 9, 1984-February 18, 1985
Decision: None. The case was settled out of court before it went to the jury.

SIGNIFICANCE: The principle of New York Times v. Sullivan remains strong: public figures must prove actual malice to win libel suits. Despite strong evidence of press misconduct in this and a related case, namely Sharon v. Time, Inc., both plaintiffs lost.

On January 23, 1982, CBS Television ran a documentary entitled "The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception" The narrator, Mike Wallace, took an aggressive investigative approach in preparing the documentary. The theme of the program was that the effects of infamous Tet offensive, which took American forces by surprise and caused much loss of life, could have been avoided if the actual size of North Vietnam's troop strength had been calculated accurately. The documentary placed much of the blame on the commanding general, William C. Westmoreland, who had been in command in Vietnam throughout the late 1960s and during the Tet offensive.

The CBS report took several liberties with the truth, however. For example, Wallace accused Westmoreland of juggling enemy troop figures to produce an artificially low count and please President Johnson:

Wallace: Isn't it a possibility that the real reason for suddenly deciding in the summer of 1967 to remove an entire category of the enemy from the Order of Battle, a category that had been in that Order of Battle since 1961, was based on political considerations?

Westmoreland: No, decidedly not. Thatthat

Wallace: Didn't you make this clear in your August 20th cable?

Westmoreland: No, no. Yeah. No.

Wallace: I have a copy of your August 20th cable.

Westmoreland: Well, sure. Okay, okay. All right, all right.

CBS had succeeded in making Westmoreland look like a liar and a fool, but in fact the cable in Wallace's possession had been sent by another officer in Saigon while Westmoreland was away, a fact known to CBS but not revealed on the program.

Incensed, after the program was televised, Westmoreland denied the allegations it raised about his conduct. The Capitol Legal Foundation offered to represent Westmoreland for free, and attorneys Dan M. Burt and David M. Dorsen filed Westmoreland's libel suit on September 13, 1982. CBS's chief attorneys were David Boies and Stuart W. Gold. Before the case went to trial, Boies and Gold succeeded in having it transferred from South Carolina, where the case was originally filed, to New York City, where it was tried before Judge Pierre N. Leval.

The trial began on October 9, 1984. On February 15, 1985, Leval ruled that under such First Amendment precedents as New York Times Company v. Sullivan (see separate entry), Westmoreland had to prove by "clear and convincing evidence" that CBS acted with actual malice in preparing a false documentary. Legally, this is a heavy burden of proof for the plaintiff in a libel suit, one which was invoked by Leval because Westmoreland was a famous general and thus a "public figure." Faced with the prospect of a lengthy legal battle against difficult odds, Westmoreland settled his case with CBS out of court on February 18, 1985. Both sides agreed to pay their own legal fees, and of the $120 million for which Westmoreland had sued, he got nothing.

At the same time the Westmoreland case was pending, another prominent military figure was pursuing a libel lawsuit. Israeli general Ariel Sharon sued Time, Inc., which publishes Time magazine, for having printed an article on February 14, 1983, that accused Sharon of encouraging certain Lebanese militia forces to massacre some Palestinians in 1982. The case was tried from November 13, 1984, to January 24, 1985, in New York City before Judge Abraham D. Sofaer. The jury found Time not guilty due to lack of actual malice, and Sharon dropped his case. However, jury members made a special point of stating that they thought Time had acted "negligently and carelessly" in preparing the article.

Generals Westmoreland and Sharon ran into the same obstacle in their cases: despite strong evidence of press misconduct, under the New York Times Company v. Sullivan case's standard they couldn't make the difficult showing necessary for public figures to win libel suits.

Stephen G. Christianson

Suggestions for Further Reading

Adler, Renata. "Annals of Law: Two Trials." (Part 1) The New Yorker (June 16, 1986): 42-85.

. "Annals of Law: Two Trials." (Part 2) The New Yorker (June 23, 1986): 34-79.

. Reckless Disregard: Westmoreland v. CBS, Sharon v. Time. New York: Vintage Books, 1988.

Benjamin, Burton. Fair Play: CBS, General Westmoreland, and How a Television Documentary Went Wrong. New York: Harper & Row, 1988.

Roth, M. Patricia. The Juror and the General. New York: William Morrow & Co., 1986.

Westmoreland V. CBS

views updated May 09 2018

Westmoreland V. CBS (1985).On 22 January 1982, CBS Television broadcast a 90‐minute documentary, CBS Reports: The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception. The program was produced by George Crile and based in large part on reporting by Sam Adams. Crile was the co‐author. The narrator—who also conducted some of the interviews—was Mike Wallace of 60 Minutes.

The program charged that Gen. William C. Westmoreland, while U.S. military commander during the Vietnam War, had led a conspiracy prior to the surprise Tet Offensive (1968) to keep down official intelligence estimates of enemy strength, thereby deceiving President Lyndon B. Johnson, the rest of the military, and the American public. Further, such a “reduction” in enemy strength resulted in the surprise at Tet, with greater troops losses. Most important, public support for the war plummeted.

Three days later, General Westmoreland held a press conference challenging the program and asking for an apology. CBS stood by the broadcast, but an article in TV Guide charged the program with at least eight major errors and violations of CBS procedures.

On 13 September 1982, Westmoreland brought suit against CBS for libel, asking $120 million. The trial—Westmoreland v. CBS—lasted from October 1984 to February 1985. On 17 February 1985, just as it was to go to the jury, the two sides settled, each stating that it had proven its major points.

Burton Benjamin, longtime CBS News executive, was also asked to produce an internal evaluation. After an exhaustive investigation, he concluded the program was “seriously flawed”: it was out of balance; “conspiracy” had not been proven; friendly witnesses had been coddled and those opposing the thesis treated harshly. Mike Wallace stood by the program, but later said that it took him two years to get his confidence back.

The controversy provided an ironically fitting epilogue to arguments between the press and the military over Vietnam.
[See also Culture, War, and the Media; Film, War and the Military in: Newsfilms and Documentaries; Vietnam War.]

Bibliography

Don Kowet , A Matter of Honor: General William C. Westmoreland versus CBS, 1984.
Burton Benjamin , Fair Play: CBS, Westmoreland, and How a Television Documentary Went Wrong, 1988.

Lawrence W. Lichty

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