Deadspin’s ‘provable false assertions’ in article about 9-year-old Chiefs fan in face paint, headdress just came back to haunt website in defamation suit

FILE - A young Kansas City Chiefs fan, dressed with a headdress and face paint, looks on during an NFL football game against the Las Vegas Raiders, Sunday, Nov. 26, 2023, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/David Becker, File)

FILE — A young Kansas City Chiefs fan, dressed with a headdress and face paint, looks on during an NFL football game against the Las Vegas Raiders, Sunday, Nov. 26, 2023, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/David Becker, File)

Sports blog Deadspin has lost its bid to dismiss a defamation lawsuit over an article accusing a young Kansas City Chiefs fan wearing a Native American headdress and blackface of being racist.

Delaware Superior Court Judge Sean Lugg denied Deadspin’s motion on Monday to dismiss the lawsuit, rejecting arguments that the article was opinion and protected from liability for defamation, The Associated Press reported.

“Deadspin published an image of a child displaying his passionate fandom as a backdrop for its critique of the NFL’s diversity efforts and, in its description of the child, crossed the fine line protecting its speech from defamation claims,” the judge wrote, the wire service reported. “Having reviewed the complaint, the court concludes that Deadspin’s statements accusing H.A. of wearing black face and Native headdress ‘to hate Black people and the Native American at the same time,’ and that he was taught this hatred by his parents, are provable false assertions of fact and are therefore actionable.”

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