Three University of Virginia graduates and members of a fraternity profiled in a debunked account of a gangrape in a retracted Rolling Stone magazine story have filed a lawsuit against the publication and the article's author, court records show.
The three men, George Elias IV, Stephen Hadford and Ross Fowler, filed suit US District Court in New York yesterday. They are also suing Rolling Stone's publisher, Wenner Media.
A lawyer for the men said they suffered "vicious and hurtful attacks" because of inaccuracies in the November 2014 article, which was written by journalist Sabrina Rubin Erdely. In their lawsuit, the three 2013 graduates said the article "created a simple and direct way to match the alleged attackers" from the alleged gangrape to them based on details provided in the story.
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For instance, Elias' room at the fraternity house was "the mostly likely scene of the alleged crime" based on the details in the Rolling Stone article.
"Upon release of the article, family friends, acquaintances, co-workers and reporters easily matched (Elias) as one of the alleged attackers and, among other things, interrogated him, humiliated him, and scolded him," the lawsuit said, adding that Hadford and Fowler "suffered similar attacks."
In the lawsuit, their lawyer said each of their identities was listed online by anonymous users when the article first came out and each of their "names will forever be associated with the alleged gangrape."
"These claims had a devastating effect on each of the plaintiffs' reputations," their lawyer, Alan L Frank, wrote in yesterday's filing.
The men are suing on three counts, including defamation and negligent infliction of emotional distress, and are asking for at least USD 75,000 for each count.
Erdely and a spokeswoman for Wenner Media did not immediately return a request for comment yesterday.
The Charlottesville Police Department has said it found no evidence to back the claims of the woman identified in the story only as "Jackie," who said she was raped in 2012 by seven men at the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house.
A UVa associate dean sued Rolling Stone magazine for more than USD 7.5 million in May, saying a debunked and retracted account of an alleged gang rape on campus cast her as the "chief villain."
A report published by the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism earlier this year said Rolling Stone failed at virtually every step of the process, from the reporting by Erdely to an editing process that included high-ranking staffers.


