Syracuse, NY (Sports Network) - The defamation lawsuit filed against Syracuse
and head men's basketball coach Jim Boeheim by two men who accused an
assistant coach of molestation has been dismissed.
Supreme Court Justice Brian F. DeJoseph threw out the case Friday, saying the
suit failed "as a matter of law" because Boeheim's statements questioning the
accusations were clearly matters of opinion and not fact.
Former Syracuse ball boys Bobby Davis and Mike Lang were seeking damages for
diminished career opportunities, damage to their reputations and what they
said was "lasting emotional harm" in the wake of the comments.
Davis and Lang accused Bernie Fine of molesting them during the 1980s and 90s.
In November, Davis told ESPN's "Outside the Lines" that he was molested by
Fine for more than 12 years beginning in 1983, before he was in the seventh
grade.
The men had hired civil rights attorney Gloria Allred for their suit against
Boeheim after the longtime Syracuse head coach defended Fine while questioning
the motives of the accusers, intimating they would sue for money.
Boeheim apologized for his comments, but the suit went forward.
DeJoseph wrote that the "content, tone, and purpose of Boeheim's statements
would clearly signal to the reasonable reader, that what was being read in the
articles published in the days after the initial ESPN report were likely to be
an opinion - a biased, passionate, and defensive point of view of a basketball
coach - rather than objective fact."
Thus, DeJoseph said, the claim against the coach failed as a matter of law. He
dismissed a suit against Syracuse because it was "predicated on the same
alleged defamatory statements."
Fine, who was fired by the university in late November, has not been charged
with a crime and has denied the allegations.
The Sports Network