July 24, 2024, published at 10:47 PM ET
CNNs chief national security correspondent Alex Marquardt testified that he had “no evidence” linking a decorated Navy veteran to the black market trafficking of Afghan refugees before airing a report that spawned a $1 billion defamation lawsuit against the embattled network.
RadarOnline.com has obtained an unredacted transcript of Marquardt’s deposition in the ongoing case brought by Zachary Young, who alleges that the a struggling network wanted viewers to believe he was “operating on a black market”.
Young’s allegations stem from a November 2021 episode Starring Jake Tapper who showed his photo during a discussion about the consequences of America failed withdrawal from Afghanistan.
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“The apparent effect of the first few seconds of the Segment is to set up a false narrative in which Young serves desperate Afghans in an illegal market – which he never did,” the lawsuit was filed last year in the states of Florida.
Young’s lawyers argued in a recent filing that the show’s producers “intended to target Young,” and that “Marquardt, the author and architect of the Segment” — “admitted it during deposition.”
When asked, “Did your reporting ever detect anything illegal going on regarding the evacuation process?” Marquardt responded, “No, that didn’t happen,” the transcript shows.
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The correspondent was then asked, “Did you think Mr. Young committed a crime?” to which he replied, “No. As far as I knew… he was simply asking for large sums of money to get Afghans out of the country.”
“You found no evidence that Mr. Young committed a crime, right?”
“No.”
Marquardt testified that CNN “used Mr. Young as an example of what was going on here: this black market, the exorbitant fees, the taking advantage of these Afghans — the exploitation.”
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He explained during the deposition that he and the show’s producers wanted to do the story as a way to expose Young “for participating in this black market that exploited Afghans at their most vulnerable time.”
Young complained that the resulting report listed the alleged “defamatory statements about black markets” in “photos of LinkedIn messages he sent” and in a photo of Young’s face.
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As noted in the filing, CNN issued a correction five months later, saying the term “black market” was used “incorrectly.”
But text messages visible The lawsuit revealed that CNN employees called Young a “s—bag” and “a——” while admitting that the story was “full of holes like Swiss cheese” and “not at all ready for prime time’. “.
Marquardt even reportedly joked to a colleague, “It’s your funeral bucko,” referring to Young, before the broadcast.
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The Military Vet Lawyers have predicted they could win up to a billion dollars if the court agrees that “CNN published defamatory statements that harmed Mr. Young, ruined his reputation and destroyed his business.”
After the segment aired, CNN “aggressively shared the same statements on numerous social media platforms,” the complaint alleges.
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In a motion for “partial summary judgment” last month, Young’s attorneys asked the court to agree that their client “never operated in an illegal market” and that CNN’s statements about Afghan black markets during the report “of and concerning” Young.
The network has said it did not intend to cause harm, argued that the language used was opinionated or ambiguous, and called the internal communications “journalistic bravado that reflected a genuine belief in the reporting.”
CNN’s lawyers recently did too moved to block the veteran’s bid to oust the host Jake Tapper in this case, arguing that this would cause “annoyance and embarrassment” to Tapper while “providing little useful information.”