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Appeal Decision: Annelize Jerling vs. The Herald


Sat, Apr 11, 2015

ANNELIZE JERLING                                                                           APPLICANT

versus

THE HERALD                                                                                       RESPONDENT

MATTER NO: 1019/04/2015

__________________________________________________________________

DECISION: APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL

[1]     A rumour which turned to be a hoax, was circulated on 9 March 2015 that a 7 year old had been kidnapped, raped and murdered.  Applicant complained to the Office of the Press Ombudsman that the respondent, in its edition of 12 March 2015, mentioned that she posted the hoax on a social media page.  Respondent, complained the applicant, said that applicant had poste the hoax report in the Public Servant News Network (“PSNN”), read by thousands of people.  Applicant argues that it could clearly be established that the message had been imitated by a certain Christian Beer, who also posted further false messages related to the main one.  The applicant complained that as a result of the allegation, her working relationship with eg SAPS had been damaged, including as a Unit Commander of the Victim Support Unit.  She served in the Community Policing Forum.

[2]     The Respondent denied saying that the original hoax was posted by the applicant in the PSNN.  It also contends that it was the applicant herself who put the story as an update in the PSNN.  This, really, was the gist of the defence.

[3]     In his Ruling of 23 March 2015, the Ombudsman dismissed the applicant’s complaint, and she now seeks leave to appeal the Ruling to the Appeals Panel.  For the application to succeed, the applicant must show that she has reasonable prospects of success before the Appeals Panel, in the event the application is granted.  To answer this question, I must consider the complaint, the response and the reasons given by the Ombudsman in his Ruling.

[4]     It appears that the original hoax story was posted by one Beer in the public space; at least, this is common cause, or cannot be disputed. 

[5]     Regarding posting the story in the PSNN, the applicant says she has no “problem with the Herald reporting on my comment but I do have a problem with the Herald creating an impression with the readers that I posted the original hoax on the PSNN page ...”.  The applicant’s complaint is based on the following statement by the respondent in its article.  “In addition a further 65000 followers of the PSNN page received the false report.  The Humewood Community Policing Forum’s Annelize Jerling, a Herald GM Citizen of the Year Finalist – put the report on PSNN.”  She construes the words “put the report” as tantamount to saying she posted the initial hoax; she would have preferred the applicant rather said that she “commented” (on the original hoax).  As the Ombudsman correctly puts it, the “gist of Jerling’s complaint is that the story portrayed her as initiator of the hoax, while she says that she merely responded to it.”  Such an impression cannot arise because the article clearly says she put the report on PSNN after Beer’s initial post, as the Ombudsman points out.  The mentioning of her name was not to create or bolster an impression that she was the poster.  Reference to her name was merely to show that she was linked with the fighting of the crime as a member of the Policing Community Forum, and as someone who had been recognized for her services.

[6]     For the reasons given above, as also for those by the Ombudsman, the applicant has no reasonable prospects of success, and the application is dismissed.

Dated 11 April 2015

Judge B M Ngoepe, Chair, Appeals Panel