*

*
Politics Extra
Enquirer reporters give the scoop on what your politicians are doing


Jessica Brown,
Hamilton County reporter


Jon Craig,
Enquirer statehouse bureau


Jane Prendergast,
Cincinnati City Hall reporter


Malia Rulon,
Enquirer Washington bureau


Carl Weiser,
Blog editor


Howard Wilkinson,
politics reporter

Powered by Blogger

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Remember Washingtonienne?

Matt Apuzzo of The Associated Press reports:

WASHINGTON – When Robert Steinbuch discovered his girlfriend had discussed intimate details about their sex life in her online diary, the Capitol Hill staffer didn’t just get mad. He got a lawyer.

Soon, though, the racy tidbits about the sex lives of the two Senate aides faded from the front pages and the gossip pages. Steinbuch accepted a teaching job in Arkansas, leaving Washington and Jessica Cutler’s “Washingtonienne” Web log behind.

While sex scandals turn over quickly in this city, lawsuits do not. Steinbuch’s case over the embarrassing, sexually charged blog appears headed for an embarrassing, sexually charged trial.

Lurid testimony about spanking, handcuffs and prostitution aside, the Washingtonienne case could help establish whether people who keep online diaries are obligated to protect the privacy of the people they interact with offline.

Cutler, a former aide to Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio, says she created the blog in 2004 to keep a few friends up to date on her social life. Like a digital version of the sex-themed banter from a “Sex and the City” episode, Cutler described the thrill and tribulations of juggling sexual relationships with six men.

One of those men was Steinbuch, a counsel to DeWine on the Judiciary Committee. Cutler called him the “current favorite” and said he resembled George Clooney, liked spanking and disliked condoms.

“He’s very upfront about sex,” she wrote. “He likes talking dirty and stuff, and he told me that he likes submissive women.”

When Ana Marie Cox, then the editor of the popular gossip Web site Wonkette.com, discovered and linked to Cutler’s blog, the story spun out of control. Cutler was fired and Steinbuch says he was publicly humiliated. He went to court seeking more than $20 million in damages.

The case is embroiled in thorny pretrial issues, with each side demanding personal information from the other. Steinbuch wants to know how much money Cutler received from the man she called her “sugar daddy.” Cutler demanded Steinbuch’s student evaluations from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law School, where he teaches.

Steinbuch also recently added Cox as a defendant in the case, though he has not served her with court papers. A trial date has not been set, but Matthew Billips, Cutler’s attorney, said there are no settlement talks that might head off a trial.

“I have no idea what he wants,” Billips said. “He’s never said, ‘This is what I think should be done.’”

Neither Steinbuch nor his attorney returned phone calls seeking comment. In court, attorney Jonathan Rosen said Steinbuch wants to restore his good name. Students in his legal ethics class all search the Internet and learn about the blog, Rosen said.

“It’s not funny and it’s damaging,” Rosen told a judge. “It’s horrible, absolutely horrible.”

To win, Steinbuch will have to prove that the details of their sexual relationship were private and publishing them was highly offensive. Billips argues that Cutler never intended to make the blog public but, in the information age, data is easily copied and distributed beyond its intended audience.

If the case goes to trial, its outcome will be important both to bloggers and to people who chronicle their lives on social-networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook. Marc Rotenberg, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said he may teach the Washingtonienne case this spring during his class at Georgetown Law School.

“Anybody who wants to reveal their own private life has a right to do that. It’s a different question when you reveal someone else’s private life,” he said, adding that simply calling something a diary doesn’t make it one. “It’s not sitting in a nice, leather-bound book under a pillow. It’s online where a million people can find it.”

Rotenberg asked, what if Cutler had secretly videotaped the encounters and sold the videos without Steinbuch’s consent? There has to be a line somewhere, he said.

Since being fired, Cutler moved back to New York, wrote a novel based on the scandal, posed nude for Playboy and started a new Web site, where she solicits donations “for slutty clothes and drugs.”

She wouldn’t discuss the case but said she’s amazed by what has happened.

“The fact that anyone was interested in the first place was a surprise,” she said. “The fact that there was a lawsuit in the first place was a surprise. That it’s still going on is a surprise.”
U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman was surprised, too.

“I don’t know why we’re here in federal court to begin with,” Friedman told attorneys for both sides in April. “I don’t know why this guy thought it was smart to file a lawsuit and lay out all of his private, intimate details.”

In that sense, the Washingtonienne lawsuit has become a study into when to make a federal case out of something and when to just let it go away. It’s a question lawyers wrestle with all the time.

Lanny Davis, the former special counsel to President Clinton who now advises companies during times of crisis, tells clients to decide whether they want justice or simply to set the record straight and get a message across.

“If you’re looking for justice, the court system is the only thing you have,” Davis said. “If you’re looking to get the full story, good and bad, into one coherent narrative, the court system is perhaps the worst possible forum.”


11 Comments:

at 11:25 AM, December 27, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

since you are moderating, this seems like the easiest way to ask a question. why do your blogs have unprintable characters in them when viewed on a windows pc:

WASHINGTON –

is the leadoff on your current blog, presuming that you can see that washington is followed by an lowercase a with a hat on it and then a backwards epsilon and reverse doublequotes.

 
at 3:47 PM, December 27, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

...WASHINGTON –...

Sometimes copywrite works have embedded characters that will result in gibberish when cut and pasted !

Who knows where the fishwRap got the story ?

Unless the story came from the local wRong wingnut press release, the fishwRap doesn't have an original copy. Nor were they likely the originator ?

 
at 4:14 PM, December 27, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

Who knows where the fishwRap got the story ?

Ummm.... seems pretty obvious when you can see through the hate.

"Matt Apuzzo of The Associated Press reports:"

 
at 4:35 PM, December 27, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

...Ummm.... seems pretty obvious when you can see through the hate....

That does not mean they cut and pasted from AP, now does it ?

In fact, I'm unaware of the AP using embedded works ?

Since one would assume that the fishwRap would pay to use the copywrite work ?

Ummm... maybe you have the answer ?

Or, maybe you would prefer to talk about something much bolder ?

PATHETIC !

 
at 9:56 PM, December 27, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

Last time I checked, the Enquirer is a member organization of the Associated Press. As such, they are free to use the AP's works as-is, as long as they cite the source.

Bold italics person: your ignorance is seriously undermining your credibility.

If you are who I think you are, you are also bringing discredit upon the University of Cincinnati as well.

 
at 10:42 PM, December 27, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

wow, wheels within wheels

 
at 9:37 AM, December 28, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

....Last time I checked, the Enquirer is a member organization of the Associated Press. As such, they are free to use the AP's works as-is, as long as they cite the source....

Ummmm..., unless they cut and pasted from a source other than AP feed !

...Last time I checked, the Enquirer is a member organization of the Associated Press....

Oh yes, phony-baloney - You are the fishwRap police !

lol, lol, lol

Your ignorance and obsessive pursuit of bold endeavors are undermining your credibility !

PATHETIC !

HAD ENOUGH, VOTE DEMOCRATIC 2007 !

 
at 10:22 AM, December 28, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

I would like to extend to you an invitation to the pants party.

This is not a good look for me!

Bucka-bow, dee buck.

I do the cha-cha like a sissy girl. I lik-a do da cha-cha.

Ohhhh. My apologies. Bulla blah, bulla blabity bulla la

Kaa kaa poo poo. PEE PEE

PATHETIC!

 
at 1:25 PM, December 28, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

The bold face boy's comments are starting to sound more & more like bad Babelfish translations. Less & less coherent on each passing day.

 
at 3:09 PM, December 28, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

Time to analyze known writings of the two main suspects to bold italics person.

Is it a former UC College Democrat or none other than Cincinnati's own increasingly irrelevant whistleblower practicing psyops?

 
at 11:33 AM, December 29, 2006 Anonymous Anonymous said...

.....Kaa kaa poo poo. PEE PEE....

Emulation is the highest form of flattery !

We can see the HTML impersonator admire us !

You are not the only "FOLLOWER" !

It is a pleasant realization when the wRong wingnut whackos consider us their "Number One" !

HAD ENOUGH, VOTE DEMOCRAT 2007 !

 
Post a Comment*

* Our online blogs currently are hosted and operated by a third party, namely, Blogger.com. You are now leaving the Cincinnati.Com website and will be linked to Blogger.com's registration page. The Blogger.com site and its associated services are not controlled by Cincinnati.Com and different terms of use and privacy policy will apply to your use of the Blogger.com site and services.

By proceeding and/or registering with Blogger.com you agree and understand that Cincinnati.Com is not responsible for the Blogger.com site you are about to access or for any service you may use while on the Blogger.com site.

<< Home


Blogs
Jim Borgman
Today at the Forum
Paul Daugherty
Politics Extra
N. Ky. Politics
Pop culture review
Cincytainment
Who's News
Television
Roller Derby Diva
Art
CinStages Buzz....
The Foodie Report
cincyMOMS
Classical music
John Fay's Reds Insider
Bengals
High school sports
NCAA
UC Sports
CiN Weekly staff
Soundcheck