'Indiana’s Anti-SLAPP law provides a way for defendants who are accused of defamation without any basis in law and fact to recoup their attorney fees and is intended to be a deterrent for people bringing these types of frivolous cases,' pro-life attorney James Bopp explained.
The judge declared that 'the allegedly defamatory statements' made by Notre Dame's student newspaper had been printed 'with good faith and with a reasonable basis in law and fact.'
Sociology professor Tamara Kay has written numerous pro-abortion articles, reportedly offered to assist with abortion costs, and shared abortion travel financing information on social media.
'Notre Dame fails to provide witness to its Catholic mission when its public-facing offices elevate false and immoral arguments in one of the most important moral debates before us,' the school's pro-life organization wrote in response.