Former Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura has long cast himself as a working-class brawler taking on the power and media elites. He'll have a chance again Tuesday before the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, meeting in St. Paul.
Attorneys will debate whether a celebrity like Ventura is entitled to a $1.8 million award.
Some of the nation's most powerful news corporations have enlisted the nation's most prominent First Amendment attorneys in an attempt to overturn the verdict Ventura won last year against the estate of late author Chris Kyle.
The New York Times, Washington Post, Hearst Corp., Newspaper Association of America and the National Association of Broadcasters are among those that declared in a brief that "they are concerned about what they view as the unjustified and potentially crippling awards in this case."
Ventura finds the media position reprehensible.
"It's amazing that the media is stepping into this court case and demanding that wrongdoing be rewarded, that they should be able to profit from wrongdoing," he said in an August interview with the Star Tribune, which has not joined the media brief. "Where in the First Amendment does it say you can lie and profit from the lie and you're protected?"
The case pits Ventura, the former wrestler and governor of Minnesota from 1998 to 2002, against Taya Kyle, the widow and executor of the estate of the late Chris Kyle, whose bestseller, "American Sniper," was the subject of Ventura's defamation lawsuit.
Taya Kyle's attorneys have drafted Washington lawyer Lee Levine, described by one legal magazine as "the greatest First Amendment attorney in the United States."