Libel in a sentence as a noun

Also will suspend the UK libel law for the Daily mail.

The imbalance in the UK libel system has given rise to libel tourism [1].

Why, exactly is it OK for you to make up a pseudonym and libel Ms. Jones?I demand disclosure.

She has a very long history of libel and public feuds related to her "music project.

For Crystal Cox it means that the case will be retried in district court, this time using a more precise definition of libel.

Libel in a sentence as a verb

Besides the libel, it doesn't really paint you in a good light either, especially if you're going to be looking for a job.

I volunteered to take a police polygraph test, hired a lawyer and initiated a libel suit.

While I sometimes wish something like this existed, it seems ripe for abuse and/or open to some sort of libel law violation should it get out of control.

Not engaging in a certain amount of diligence leaves the journalist open to both reputational risk and the possibility of libel litigation.

Best answer would be a class action to subpoena Yelp for the IP & personal info of the posters of questionable negative reviews that had survived the removal of legitimate positive reviews, and file a lawsuit against the authors and Yelp for libel.

Libel definitions

noun

a false and malicious publication printed for the purpose of defaming a living person

noun

the written statement of a plaintiff explaining the cause of action (the defamation) and any relief he seeks

verb

print slanderous statements against; "The newspaper was accused of libeling him"