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Realty Firm Sues Over Tweet


Posted by Kathy Gill on
Tuesday, July 28th, 2009 at 2:24 pm

Update: Twitter Case As Countersuit

On Monday, a Chicago realty company sued Amanda Bonnen, a (reportedly former) tenant, $50,000 for libel. The cause? She posted a tweet in May that the company considers defamation:

chicago_realty_tweet

According to the Chicago Sun Times:

Jeffrey Michael, whose family has run Horizon for more than 25 years, said: “We’re a sue first, ask questions later kind of an organization.”


One has to ask: Did Michael sue Yelp or Brett C for this April 2008 review (far more detailed and scathing than Bonnen’s? Two items in that review:

-Cockroach infestation-They could never fix the problem.
-Health code violations abound-mold, no working fire alarms, uncovered light bulbs fire hazard.

Or this review from May 2008 that notes:

… a sheet that was stapled to my rent increase with a list of several new building code violations that have been found …

Will they sue the other Yelp commenters who are piggybacking with links to the Bonnen story?

As others have pointed out, Bonnen had fewer than two dozen followers, so it is unlikely that her initial tweet reached a very large audience. However, the lawsuit is another matter. I wouldn’t be surprised to see it a trending topic.

If you believe that there is no such thing as bad publicity, then Horizon Realty is certainly making hay with the lawsuit. They’ve garnered headlines from around ChiTown and across the country. [I am not in this camp.]

But if it is still a “tenant market” (according to another person on Yelp), Horizon might want to rethink this “sue first” strategy. [I wouldn't rent from them, if I were in the market.]

This post first appeared at WiredPen

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  1. Well, if I were horizon, I would have contacted Bonnen and apologized if there was mold. And if horizon had in fact been defamed at all by the tweet, then they should have issued a statement through the press that was honest, saying that they will fix the problem.

    People have the right to express their opinions about companies, public or not. Especially if it was true, which I believe it was. Why else would Horizon get on the defensive so fast?

    Horizon looks even worse by the way they are handling all this.

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