Businessman in Facebook libel win
A businessman whose details were "laid bare" in fake libellous entries on Facebook has been awarded £22,000.
Mathew Firsht, managing director of Applause Store Productions Limited, sued an old schoolfriend, freelance cameraman Grant Raphael, for libel and misuse of private information.
A judge at the High Court in London ruled that Mr Raphael's defence to the action - that the entry was created by mischievous party gate-crashers at his flat - was "built on lies".
Deputy Judge Richard Parkes QC awarded Mr Firsht £15,000 for libel and £2,000 for breach of privacy.
Mr Firsht's company, which finds audiences for TV and radio shows and provides warm-up services for live audiences, including the evictions on Big Brother, was awarded £5,000 for libel.
He accused Mr Raphael of creating a false personal profile, and a company profile called "Has Mathew Firsht lied to you?", from a PC at the flat where Mr Raphael was living in Hampstead, north west London, in June last year.
Mr Raphael claimed that "strangers" who attended an impromptu party at the address that day sneaked off to a spare bedroom and created the profiles on his PC.
The profiles were on the site for 16 days until Mr Firsht's brother spotted them and they were taken down by Facebook.
The judge heard that the private information concerned Mr Firsht's whereabouts, activities, birthday and relationship status and falsely indicated his sexual orientation and political views.
© Independent Television News Limited 2008. All rights reserved.
Post to Fark
Post to del.icio.us
Digg this story
Post to reddit
Post to Facebook
Post to StumbleUpon
Post to GNN
ITN Source