Spitzer lawsuit: Ex-N.Y. gov. faces $90M defamation lawsuits
Spitzer lawsuit: The two executives, William Gilman and Edward McNenney, worked for Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc., and were the target of a prosecution by Spitzer when he was attorney general of New York.
AP/File
NEW YORK
Eliot Spitzer and Slate magazine are being sued by two ex-insurance executives who claim the former New York governor and the online publication defamed them in a column.
The two executives, William Gilman and Edward McNenney, worked for Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc., and were the target of a prosecution by Spitzer when he was attorney general of New York.
Gilman filed a $60 million suit in Manhattan federal court and McNenney filed a $30 million suit in state court.
Spitzer wrote the column in 2010 in response to a Wall Street Journal editorial he said disparaged the cases he brought against Marsh.
Both Spitzer and Slate's editor say the suits are frivolous.
A judge convicted Gilman and McNenney in 2008 of violating state antitrust laws. The convictions were later overturned.