How an Ontario mom fended off a $120K libel lawsuit over her Facebook posts | CBC Radio - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 09:22 AM | Calgary | -16.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
As It Happens

How an Ontario mom fended off a $120K libel lawsuit over her Facebook posts

Katie Mohammed of Stouffville, Ont., has become the first person awarded damages under Ontario anti-SLAPP rules that protect ordinary citizens from litigious companies.
Katie Mohammed has been awarded $7,500 in damages under Ontario's anti-SLAPP laws. (Katie Mohammed)

Story transcript

AStouffville, Ont.teacher has become the first person in Ontario to be awarded damages under provincial rules designed to protect the free speech of ordinary citizens.

"It was like a weight has been lifted off my shoulders," Katie Mohammed told As It Happens guest host Helen Mann.

Her ordeal began last fall on her son's first day of senior kindergarten. She said she was snuggling on the couch with her family when someone knocked on her front door.

"It was a man and he told me that he was there regarding comments I had made on Facebook about a company," Mohammed said.

He handed hera letterfromUnited Soils Managementthreatening to sue her for libel over posts she had made in two private community Facebook groups "StouffvilleMommies" and "StouffvilleBuy and Sell."

In the posts, Mohammed expressed concern about the company'splan to deposit fill in alocal pit, writing the process could"potentially poison our children."

She directed readers to a local newspaper article in which several town councillors warned the hydro-excavation trucks used for the process could contaminate the nearby drinking water supply an allegation the company vehemently denies.

I just collapsed on the floor when I found out that they were suing me for $120,000.- Katie Mohammed, teacher

United SoilsdemandedMohammed retract her statements and apologize immediately. She says she did as they asked both on Facebook and in personalizedletters to the company.

"I didn't think any more of it until the Friday after the first week ofschooland I got another knock at the door and it was the same man and he said, 'Katie Mohammed, it's a lawsuit now,'" she said.

"And I went into the kitchen and I opened it up and I read through itand I just collapsed on the floor when I found out that they were suing me for $120,000."

Dismissed under anti-SLAPP laws

Mohammed said she couldn't afford to fight a lawsuitand she certainly couldn't afford to pay the damages.

"Oh my goodness, I was terrified," she said. "Where am Igoing toget this money from? Am Igoing tohave to sell my family home to do this? And what about my kids' education funds?"

She also feared the lawsuit would affect her job as a teacher, if people found out.

"What is the community going tothink about thisand what are they going tothink about me?"

The community, however, had Mohammed's back. In fact, the mayor called her this week to give her the good news that the lawsuit had been thrown out.

Ontario Superior Court Justice ThomasLedererruledin Mohammed's favour, citing the province's "strategic lawsuits against public participation" rulesoranti-SLAPPmeasures.

The provincial rules came into effect in October 2015 and are designed to protect ordinary citizens from being silenced on issues of public interest by lawsuits from big companies.

"If this action is allowed to proceed, there is no way of knowing how many people interested in this issue, or for that matter any other public concern, will feel intimidated and not take part for fear of being subject to a similar lawsuit," the judge wrote.

What's more, he awarded Mohammed$7,500 in damages, to be paid by United Soils,writing: "I accept that this action unnecessarily caused Katie Mohammed stress that affected her day to day life."

As It Happens reached out to the company's owner,Alec Cloke, who declined to comment.

"Now that I have the ruling, I feel a lot more confident and I feel that free speech as been protected," Mohammed said.

"If it hadn't been for the SLAPPlaws, then I don't know where I would befinancially, trying to fight this in the courts."

Mobile users: View the document
(PDF KB)
(Text KB)
CBC is not responsible for 3rd party content