Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel receive apology over article in ‘Heat’ magazine

Defendant accepts article was false and withdraws any inferences that questioned state of couple’s marriage

Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel: German publisher Bauer apologised and accepted an article in Heat about the couple was false. Photograph: PA
Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel: German publisher Bauer apologised and accepted an article in Heat about the couple was false. Photograph: PA

Hollywood couple Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel have received an apology in the High Court in Dublin over an article published last month in Heat magazine.

The singer and his actress wife sued German publishers Bauer Consumer Media (BCM) for defamation over the article in the September 6th, 2014 edition of the magazine.

Jim O’Callaghan SC, for the couple, told the President of the High Court, Mr Justice Nicholas Kearns, he was pleased to tell the court the matter could be settled on the basis of an apology to be read on behalf of the defendant.

Simon McAleese, solicitor for BCM, said an article was published under the headlines: Justin Timberlake gets flirty with another woman, it's not his wife! and The flirty photos that rocked Justin and Jessica's marriage.

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The apology stated: "The article was based on an unfounded report regarding Justin Timberlake's alleged behaviour at a club, following a performance in Paris, to celebrate a birthday, and also included a number of purported statements improperly attributed to Jessica Biel which Heat now understands had never been made by her".

False

The defendant accepts the article was false and withdrew any inferences that questioned the state of the couple’s marriage.

Bauer also “regrets any embarrassment caused to the couple and unreservedly apologises to them”.

Mr O’Callaghan told the judge the proceedings could be struck out in relation to both actions brought by the couple.

In a statement afterwards, the couple’s solicitor Paul Tweed, said his clients were very satisfied with “this categoric retraction of what was a false and unfounded story”, together with the comprehensive apology read in court.

He said the couple will not be making any further comment in relation to the matter.

They will “not hesitate to take similar legal action if false allegations regarding the state of their marriage are repeated”, the solicitor added.

The couple were not in court.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times