Joyce McKinney, subject of Errol Morris’ documentary Tabloid, has filed suit in Los Angeles Superior Court against the filmmaker and other individuals and associated companies such as Moxie Films, Sundance Select and IFC Films. McKinney alleges among other things misappropriation of likeness, defamation, misrepresentation, fraud, intentional infliction of emotional distress and breach of contract. McKinney asserts in the suit that she was approached in 2009 and led to believe that her cooperation in a project for a Showtime series would help clear her name in connection with a long-ago scandal. Instead, she claims, the resulting movie held her up to public ridicule and reinforced a false image of her as having kidnapped a Morman missionary in England in 1977 and holding him against his will and repeatedly raping him. She was arrested and British tabloids and TV had a field day with what became known as the “Manacled Mormon” story. McKinney maintains that she was rescuing her fiance from a cult.
In an effort to gain access to photographs, home movies and other memorabilia, the suit claims, representatives of Morris including a person identified as Ajae Clearway and Mark Lipson repeatedly badgered her and tricked her into letting them carry away plastic bins full of newspaper clippings and other material that Morris was allegedly going to peruse for images he could use in the documentary — which plaintiff maintains she had been falsely led to believe would be part of a Showtime series. Additionally McKinney alleges that during the course of her interactions with people associated with making the movie, Lipson agreed to help save her service dog that was scheduled to be put to death at a pound but instead allowed it to happen then taunted her about it.
In November 2010, McKinney says in the suit she traveled to New York to the Doc NYC festival to see the film that Morris had made. Afterward she became distressed at “having been deceived” about how she would be depicted, the movie’s revival of the “Manacled Mormon” story and use of personal memorabilia she claims was stolen as well as many purportedly false and negative statements and portrayals in Tabloid. McKinney is seeking unspecified compensatory, punitive and other damages as well as civil penalties, attorneys’ fees and court costs.


That’s Academy-Award winning Errol Morris, whose “Thin Blue Line” got an innocent man off of death row. Stephen Hawking & the subjects of “Fast Cheap & Out of Control” are probably pretty happy about how they came out in his previous films, and if Fred Leuchter & Robert MacNamara didn’t sue…
If you google this woman, there’s an image of a very long letter she sent to Errol Morris. She’s deranged. Truly delusional. I’d be astonished if this survives summary judgment. (And what’s the big deal with whether it ends up as a Showtime series vs. a feature film? What possible bearing could that have on the project?)
Note to Greg M: What planet have YOU been on? Randall Adams –subject of Thin Blue LIne DID sue Errol Morris, for stealing his story rights (the same trick Morris tried on Joyce McKinney). Randall Adams won, and Morris was forced to restore them to Adams, and had also promised to pay him. Adams was represented by Randy Schaeffer — a lawyer from Texas. Joyce’s multi million dollar suit is commandeered by top notch libel attorney Steve Tidrick and Andrew Younkins of Oakland California, and they KNOW Joyce is telling the truth. They believe in her. She believes in them. They are kind, and sense her pain for the nightmare Morris created for her an her family. Lipton and Morris evil WILL be exposed! Watch and wait!
Is this a situation where Errors and Omissions Insurance would come into play?
If you’ve seen TABLOID, it’ll become clear within a few minutes that McKinney is a narcissistic headcase who believes everyone in her life is plotting against her. In fact, McKinney’s reaction to the film is pure narcissistic rage. When the lawsuit fails – and it will – you can bet she’ll see an elaborate conspiracy behind it. At any rate, the film is great.
Oh, wow. This is a real blast from the past. Joyce McKinney could lay claim to being the first reality celebrity superstar, such was her impact in Britain back in the ’70s. The papers were full of her exploits, portraying her as anything from as sweet and innocent as a nun (in whose habit she dressed to skip bail and flee from charges of kidnapping and sexual assault) to a seriously unbalanced fantacist stalker. I suspect her case won’t get far but it might be a lot of fun, particularly to see how her legal team frames the allegation that Mormons comprise a cult.
Who would have expected this response from someone so sane?
Joyce McKinney is a hoot. So is the documentary.
But McKinney is clearly delusional. I’m guessing this lawsuit is timed for the DVD release?
Since she helped promote the original release, I suspect that while she thinks the film was not exactly flattering, it is a good way to feed her narcissism.
McKinney came to an event at the Sheraton Universal Hotel in 2007 put on by Final Draft and was escorted out by hotel security because she was stalking the speakers (screenwriters), trying to convince someone to write her version of the story. Delusional is just the tip of the iceberg with this lady.
The sleazy predator lawyers who actually take on cases brought by deranged people like this should be stripped of their license to practice. Think how much money and strife and time that would save us all.
Joyce has a top notch attorney who specializes in Slander, Libel, and Defamation cases. He is a neat guy with a GREAT personality and intelligence to boot. And he knows a good case when he sees one!
The question here is: Is “anon” connected with the Mormons…or Morris’ cronies? Are they now starting to slander Joyce’s ATTORNEY on the internet, as they have JOYCE in the past? To defame a lawyer is really cruisin’ fer for a bruisin”…. Cuz a lawyer can sue for free!
Well not exactly “for free”, an attorney still has to pay the judgement if they lose the case, and of course there is the hidden cost of not being unpaid for the time he spends working on his own case.
Also: Rape is rape, no matter who it happens to. It shouldn’t automatically become comedy when it happens to a man on a movie screen, PARTICULARLY in documentary format. The fact that Morris made this movie in a way that so nakedly reinforces that stereotype is alarming and a big boost in support of the rape culture quietly lurking beneath the surface of our society.