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Mary has some questions about her true-crime screenplay, and whether it's ok to name names.
I'll give my answer... so stick around.
Hi, I'm Entertainment Lawyer Gordon Firemark, and this is Asked and Answered, where I answer
common Entertainment Law Questions to help industry professionals like you, realize your
dreams and achieve your goals.
Q: Mary writes: I am in the process of writing a crime script
about a famous Las Vegas casino magnate and his nemesis, a crime figure from the magnate's
home town . The magnate still has a son working in his casino empire. The time period is late
1940's-early 1950's. My father was a lawyer for the nemesis, who had a "hit" contract
out on him . All these men are long dead now. The material I am using is from newspapers
and magazines-and some stuff from my mom, also gone, as my dad never "talked about"
a client- but men always talk to their wives. Do you forsee any problem using their real
names in this script? I want their stories told-they were really characters, bigger than
life.
A: Well, true stories can be very compelling, but they **can** be a legal minefield.
First, when you're telling stories about real people, you have to be careful that you're
being truthful. Making false statements about people that harm their reputation(s) is Defamation.
Libel if it's recorded, published, etc., and Slander if it's merely spoken between individuals.
It doesn't really matter whether the people you're talking about are living or dead. You
still have to be truthful.
The best-practice when telling true-crime stories is to make sure that every factual
statement is borne out by proof. Corroboration coming from multiple, independent sources
should be used to footnote the facts contained in the script. News Media reports from the
time period are usually reliable, but it's best if the facts were reported in several
papers, etc. Interviews with the people involved or who investigated the cases are also great.
Court records are among the best source material you can use. If a person was convicted of
a crime, and you're telling the story of the commission of the crime, then as long as you're
true to the trial transcript's telling of things, you should be OK. But, if all you've
got to go on is stories from your now deceased parents, and you can't find other sources
to corroborate, I'd stay clear.
And, just changing the names probably doesn't help. If people would recognize the person
from the story, characteristics, etc., you could still face a lawsuit.
Bottom line. Make sure you can back up every incident or event that could be construed
as damaging to someone's reputation with proof.
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If you've got a question you'd like me to answer... head on over to http://firemark.com/questions.