A court in Ontario, Canada has ruled the slang term ‘groomer’ – used to describe individuals targeting young people or minors for exploitation and especially sexual activity – is not protected speech when used against drag performers who seek audiences of kids. The ruling was made as part of a defamation case against someone who allegedly called a drag performer and a LGBTQ organization “groomers”.
The court claimed there was no public interest served by the term as it was allegedly used to insinuate pedophilic behavior where there was no such evidence. The incident occurred in a small Canadian town called Dryden, a little over 200 miles north of the U.S. border-town of International Falls in Minnesota. Local blogger Brian Webster, posting on Facebook, accused a drag queen story hour hosted at a local library of being “groomers” and indicated participants were plotting to abuse children.
It is alleged violent threats made against the drag queen story hour were the result of Webster’s post, with a local LGBTQ group, Rainbow Alliance Dryden filing a defamation suit for $95,000 in punitive damages. The blogger attempted to have the defamation suit thrown out, citing Ontario Canada’s anti-Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation (anti-SLAPP) laws. However, Ontario Superior Court Justice Tracey Nieckarz ruled just before Christmas the province’s anti-SLAPP statutes did not apply to Webster’s posts.
“I simply cannot find any public interest in protecting a harmful trope that associates 2SLGBTQI people with sexual predation against children,” the judge wrote in her decision. “On the other hand, there is considerable public interest in allowing individuals who are the victims of such conduct to publicly defend their reputation in a court of law.” Webster faces a second defamation suit in Thunder Bay, Canada for similar claims made in that locality as well.