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Dan Rather Loses Lawsuit

January 13, 2010 by m.coonce · Leave a Comment 

Dan rather won’t be seeing any of the money from his $70 million dollar lawsuit. Yesterday the NY Supreme Court decline to hear the case and said the lower courts ruling (in which his case was dismissed) will stand.

Dan Rather was removed from the CBS anchor chair over the President Bush/National Guard story. It turned out most of the documents sited had been fakes.

“I believed then and I believe now that it’s important the public understand how much influence in collusion big government and big business can have in affecting how the news is handled,” Rather said in an interview Tuesday. “And that should not be.”

“Nobody likes to lose,” he added. “But I thought carefully before I went into this. I decided, win or lose, some things are worth fighting for. And this is worth fighting for. And I have no intention of giving up the fight.”

A CBS spokesman declined to respond, saying simply, “We will let Dan have the last word on his lawsuit.”

Dan Rather’s $70M lawsuit against CBS thrown out

September 30, 2009 by m.coonce · Leave a Comment 

A New York court on Tuesday dismissed Dan Rather’s $70 million breach of contract lawsuit against CBS Corp., noting that the network continued to pay the anchor $6 million a year even after he left the evening news broadcast.

Rather sued CBS and its top executives in 2007, claiming he had been removed from his “CBS Evening News” anchor post over a report that examined President George W. Bush’s military service.

The Appellate Division of the state Supreme Court — New York’s trial-level court — said the complaint “must be dismissed in its entirety.”

The five-judge panel ruled unanimously that a lower court “erred in declining to dismiss Rather’s breach of contract claim against CBS.”

The court said there was no breach of contract, because CBS still paid Rather his $6 million annual salary after the disputed 2004 broadcast under the “pay or play” provision of his contract.

Rather’s lawyer, Martin Gold, said he was “extremely disappointed” in the decision and would appeal it to the Court of Appeals, New York’s highest court.

CBS said in a statement it was pleased with Tuesday’s ruling.

“The lawsuit is now effectively over,” CBS said.

The dispute began with a piece Rather narrated for the now-defunct “60 Minutes II,” in which he reported that Bush got preferential treatment during his Vietnam War-era service in the Texas Air National Guard.

Rather cited new documents CBS had obtained, but the authenticity of the documents later came under attack.

Rather kept reporting for “60 Minutes” but was dumped by CBS in June 2006 after 44 years with the network.

His 2007 lawsuit claimed fraud and breach of fiduciary duty, as well as breach of contract. A court threw out the fraud claims in September 2008.

CBS said it expects Rather’s related lawsuit against CBS chief executive Leslie Moonves and Andrew Heyward, former head of CBS News, to be dismissed, as well.

General counsel Louis Briskman said that action “is technically still pending, but it’s hanging by a thread.”

Rather, 77, now produces an hourlong news program for cable channel HDNet.

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