TRO Against Alleged Defamation, and Also Banning “Harassing Conduct”
From Owen v. Askew, decided July 24 by Judge Ann Aiken (D. Ore.); I’m skeptical about this, because the relief is before any trial on the merits (and thus isn’t based on any final determination on the merits that certain allegations are false), because it’s an ex parte TRO entered just six days after the suit was filed and before defendant was even served, and because it extends beyond even alleged defamation to “harassing conduct.” (For more, see my Anti-Libel Injunctions and Overbroad Injunctions Against Speech (Especially in Libel and Harassment Cases.) But whatever I think, the judge thought different, and the decision struck me as worth noting. Here’s the judge’s summary of plaintiff’s allegations:
Plaintiff in this case is the owner of a business, Elegance & Geekery LLC, which sells hair accessories. Defendant Breana Askew is a resident of Florida who does business as Breromi. Defendant Kiandra Demone Boyce is a resident of Georgia.
Beginning on July 14, 2025, Askew “began a coordinated online campaign making false statements,” including “publicly accusing Plaintiff of design/invention theft, racism, selling counterfeit versions of goods Defendant Askew claimed she owned patents and trademarks covering, and encouraging the public to report Plaintiff’s online shopping platforms on sites like Etsy, Shopify, and TikTok as fraudulent and/or engaged in illegal activity including selling counterfeit goods.”
Askew’s campaign is based on her claim that Plaintiff is selling a hair accessory which Aske
Article from Reason.com
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