Gary Condit sues tabloids for $209 million
By Harriet Ryan Court TV December 22, 2003
(Court TV) -- Former congressman Gary Condit hit three supermarket tabloids with
a $209 million defamation suit Friday for printing articles suggesting he killed
Washington intern Chandra Levy.
The stories published in The National Enquirer, The Globe and The Star portrayed
Condit as a "murderer" and "sexual deviant" and "caused
him to be exposed to public hatred, contempt and ridicule ... for things that
never happened," according to the suit filed in Palm Beach, Florida.
Levy, 24, vanished from her apartment in May 2001. Her aunt said she had been
conducting an affair with the married congressman, and the press focused on his
possible involvement in her disappearance even as police said he was not a suspect.
Condit, a six-term Democratic representative from California, was subsequently
voted from office.
A dog walker found Levy's remains in Rock Creek Park in May 2002. No one has been
charged in her death.
The suit against the tabloids' parent company, American Media Inc., asks for $11
million for each of 19 stories published between July 2001 and October 2002. The
reports carried headlines such as "Condit's goons killed pregnant Chandra"
and "Congressman & The Intern: Chandra killed in kinky sex game!"
In a statement issued Friday, American Media said, "We fully stand behind
the editorial integrity of what we have published and we will vigorously defend
any suit filed by Mr. Condit."
Condit has an $11 million defamation suit pending against author and Court TV
host Dominick Dunne. Condit's wife, Carolyn, settled a suit against the Enquirer
for a story alleging she "verbally attacked" Levy before she went missing.
Carolyn Condit said she never met or talked to the intern. Top