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1In May, Kevin O’Leary—a star from the TV show Shark Tank—said that some fake, robot-written comments were flooding his social media. These comments disagreed with his plan to build a huge data center in Utah. He blamed people he said were connected to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), which is the group that runs China’s government.
Now those claims may have gotten him in trouble.
On Wednesday, two groups from Utah and the people who started them sued O’Leary and Fox News (a TV news channel where he made some of those comments). They say his claims about them being tied to the CCP hurt their reputation in a way that can’t be undone.
They say O’Leary’s words caused:
They want:
Important: The lawsuit says O’Leary and Fox News ran a “smear campaign”—that means a planned effort to make someone look bad with false info.
O’Leary’s lawyer, Jeff Neiman, told Fortune magazine that the lawsuit is just a “cash grab”—meaning he thinks they are suing just to get money. He says the groups used O’Leary’s comments to raise funds for themselves.
Neiman also said:
He said: “The plaintiffs have put their operations, funding, and coordination squarely at issue. We welcome that, and we look forward to discovery and uncovering the facts related to the misinformation campaign against the data center in Utah.”
The lawsuit says O’Leary went on at least 10 TV or media appearances to link the two Utah groups to the CCP.
Here are two examples:
He said similar things between May 11 and June 3.
Fox News was also sued because they:
Fox News said they later corrected the record on every program and publicized it.
O’Leary’s lawyer says Kevin clarified his remarks weeks ago and offered to talk to the groups, but they said no.
On June 25, O’Leary posted on Instagram:
“Recently I appeared on various news programs and would like to clarify that I have no evidence that Alliance for a Better Utah, Elevate Strategies, Gabrielle Finlayson, Taylor Knuth or Josh Kanter are funded by China or the Chinese Communist Party.”
But the law firm for the plaintiffs (Platkin LLP) says:
The Alliance for a Better Utah did join a lawsuit against MIDA (a state group that first approved the data center). But personally, Kanter and Finlayson:
The plaintiffs say O’Leary blamed the wrong people.
The big fight is about O’Leary’s Stratos Project:
Why people opposed it:
At a May 4 meeting, people shouted “Shame!” and “Cowards!” before officials left and voted virtually to approve it.
After that:
O’Leary then made the project smaller:
This is part of a bigger U.S. trend: many people don’t want huge data centers near them. A Gallup survey found 7 in 10 Americans oppose one nearby. But some places, like Loudoun County, Virginia, say data centers brought tax money and lowered property taxes.
Kevin O’Leary said Utah groups opposing his data center were linked to China’s government. Those groups and their founders sued him and Fox News for defamation, saying it hurt them badly. O’Leary later said he had no proof, but the plaintiffs say that was too late. The case is about free speech, blame, and a big tech project many locals didn’t want.
1. What does “defamation” mean in kid terms?
It means saying false things about someone that hurt their name or life.
2. Why did O’Leary think China was involved?
He said robot-written comments against his data center looked like work tied to the Chinese Communist Party, but later said he had no evidence.
3. What is a data center?
It’s a big building with lots of computers that help run AI and the internet.
4. Did Fox News get in trouble too?
Yes, because they kept putting O’Leary on air and let him say the claims without fixing them at the time.
5. Is the data center being built anyway?
O’Leary made it smaller, and some officials who approved it lost their jobs, but the project is still moving forward in a reduced form.