Search:      
E & P Web
  America's Oldest Journal Covering the Newspaper Industry Sunday, November 22, 2009  
 
Syndicated Editorial Cartoons - Columnist Features Syndicates


'Ziggy' Cartoonist Donating Royalties to LIVESTRONG
Columnist Kathleen Parker to Speak at University of South Carolina
'Stone Soup' Creator Travels to Thailand with Habitat for Humanity
Former 'San Diego U-T' Editorial Cartoonist's Lawsuit Gets Thrown Out
Judge OKs Warren Beatty Lawsuit Against Tribune Media Services
Raleigh 'News & Observer' Cartoonist Powell Retires

Visit 'E&P' Blogs Today for News, Video, Comments, and Analysis!
Joe the Plumber Hits Media Coverage, Tells 'E&P' He Hopes Palin Does Not Run in 2012
'E&P' on Twitter: Here's How to Hit the Tweet Spot!
McClatchy Launches Digital Editions on the Kindle
As 'NYT' Chicago Pages Debut, Local Papers Deliver 'Exclusives'
EXCLUSIVE: Newspaper Sites' Time Spent Dropped in October
UPDATE: AP Layoff Count Hits 90, Meets Goal
'Indy Star' Leads Fight for Lobbying-Laws Reform
Ad Revenue Sees 13th Consecutive Quarter of Decline in Q3
NYT Co. Board Amends Bylaws to Ensure Transparency in Shareholder Nominations

| This week's top stories

    Share on LinkedIn
SAVE | EMAIL | PRINT | MOST POPULAR | RSS | REPRINTS


Former 'San Diego U-T' Editorial Cartoonist's Lawsuit Gets Thrown Out

By E&P Staff

Published: November 11, 2009 12:00 PM ET

NEW YORK Former San Diego Union-Tribune editorial cartoonist Steve Kelley, who alleged that newspaper officials intimidated his successor, Steve Breen, into dropping plans to develop a joint comic strip with him, has had his suit thrown out in court.

San Diego Superior Court Judge Jay M. Bloom has ruled that Kelley hadn't "produced evidence of any unfair or unlawful business practice" by the U-T.

Kelley’s suit, filed in 2008, alleged that the newspaper's executives "applied undue pressure and coercion" on two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Steve Breen, who remains at the paper. The cartoonists had been working together on a newspaper comic strip titled "Dustin," but Breen stepped away from the partnership.

Judge Bloom said in his ruling that even if the newspaper’s officials had made derisive comments about Kelley's loyalty and team spirit, as the cartoonist alleged in the suit, such statements were merely opinion.

Kelley was fired from the newspaper in 2001 after his editors refused to run a cartoon poking fun at teens in low-riding jeans.

Breen replaced Kelley, who went on to become a cartoonist at the (New Orleans) Times- Picayune. Year later, they began developing the "Dustin" comic strip together. Breen had testified he stopped work on “Dustin” for several reasons, including his workload at the paper.


E&P Staff (syndicates@editorandpublisher.com)

SAVE | EMAIL | PRINT | MOST POPULAR | RSS | REPRINTS
SUBSCRIBE TO EDITOR & PUBLISHER »


Back to Advanced Search














Ads by Google
E&P welcomes your feedback and comments: letters@editorandpublisher.com.
By using this link, you agree to allow E&P to publish your comments on our letters page. To send comments not for publication, please use our Contact Us page.

See letters from readers.