- May 3, 2010
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MarkvW said:Obviously, the US has no uniform law regarding the enforcement of foreign judgments. But that doesn't mean that the several states can't have their own laws regarding the enforcement of foreign judgments. Some do. I've read Florida, NY, and Calif statutes that pertain to the enforcement of foreign judgments in those states.
Ask Pelkey about this!
Worth noting:
The Libel Tourism Protection Act
The Ehrenfeld judgment created a great stir in the US. Dr Ehrenfeld and her supporters campaigned for legislation to protect Americans against foreign libel laws. In 2008 the State of New York passed the Libel Terrorism Protection Act, an odd name which presumably implies that Eady J is a libel terrorist. It provides that a foreign judgment in defamation proceedings should not be enforceable in the US unless the foreign law provides “as least as much protection for freedom of speech and the press as would be provided by both the US and New York constitutions.” It does not seem to matter whether the claimant is a national of the foreign jurisdiction, suing to vindicate his reputation in his home country or even whether the defendant submitted to the foreign jurisdiction. Similar legislation has been passed in California, Illinois, New Hampshire, Florida and Hawaii. A Bill has been introduced into the US Senate by Senators Arlen Specter and Joseph Lieberman which goes further and gives the defendant a cause of action in the US to recover any damages he has paid and costs he has incurred in the foreign proceedings, as well as damages for “the harm caused to the US person due to decreased opportunities to publish, conduct research or generate funding.”
http://www.southeastcircuit.org.uk/education/ebsworth-lecture-libel-tourism
So the question is - could Landis counter-sue the UCI, McQuaid and Verdruggie?
