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How public is your privacy?
Written by: René Jakl
Photo by: Věroslav Sixt
Is it possible to publish information
that harms a person's honor with impunity if the information is
true? And what if its verity cannot be proven? Parodoxically, the
answer to the first question can be NO, and to the second, YES.
It depends on the circumstances.
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As follows from the administration of justice, untrue information
always encroaches on one's personal sphere," says attorney
Helena Chaloupková, who specializes in this issue. This poses a
problem with satire, for example, which cannot be judged in terms
of truth or falsehood, or with cases where freedom of speech over-rides
personal protection. Chaloupková's first encounter with this came
in the case of former minister Karel Březina, who sued Reflex magazine
for publishing one part of a harsh satire series, "Green Raoul",
in which he played an ignominious leading role. The Prague Municipal
Court and the Superior Appellate Court sided with Březina, stating
that even satire has its limits. However, according to Chaloupková,
who represents Reflex, the case is still being debated before the
Supreme Court and the Constitutional Court.
Forman film lovers probably know that in the US Březina wouldn't
have a chance. In a Forman film that parallelled a true story, a
clergyman was subjected to similar satire in a commercial advertisement
published in Larry Flynt's erotic magazine. Cases in which justified
interest in freedom of speech overrides protection of personal honor,
even when information that cannot be proven true is involved, have
occurred, for example, in the administration of justice by the European
Court for Human Rights. True, this is not binding on Czech courts,
but Chaloupková says that it could serve as a guideline. The status
of the plaintiff is also important when judging a case. A so-called
"public personality" has to expect to attract heightened
public interest - the courts recognize this, and so does the media.
That might by one of the reasons why Václav Klaus didn't sue the
tabloid Blesk for publishing his picture with his alleged mistress.
If one learns in advance that unpleasant information is slated for
publication, he can try to prevent it by getting a restraining order.
If he isn't successful, he must protect himself by filing a subsequent
complaint of his own. In any case, the protection of a person's
honor is one of the more intricate legal disciplines, where there
are no universal answers. This is borne out by the fact that such
cases are first tried in regional, not district, courts, and before
special panels of judges.
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suggestions to The Prague Tribune (Legal Labyrinths Column), Na
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