For the better part of ten years, Netflix and all the major streaming services that produce true-story material have been working around rather than through a particular issue. The issue is that, unlike fictional dramas, documentary and docudrama formats implicitly assert accuracy. When a movie begins with the phrase “based on a true story,” or when a documentary portrays itself as an exploration of actual events involving specific, living individuals, viewers have a different perception of what they are seeing than they would if they were viewing a blatantly fabricated thriller. Legal exposure results from that belief. Additionally, as Netflix’s collection of true-crime and spy-related programming has grown significantly, so too has the number of genuine people who have discovered that their own lives are portrayed in ways that they claim are just incorrect.
The Wasp Network case is a good place to start since it deals with the very convergence that the topic is highlighting: actual historical persons, intelligence operations, and a Netflix production that claimed to be “based on a true story.” Jose Basulto, the head of the Miami-based Cuban exile group Brothers to the Rescue, filed a lawsuit against Netflix for Olivier Assayas’ 2019 spy thriller. The narrative of the Cuban Five, a group of Cuban intelligence agents who infiltrated Miami expatriate communities in the 1990s and were ultimately found guilty of espionage and conspiracy, is dramatized in the movie. In addition to claiming that the movie misrepresented him as a terrorist and a puppet of the US government, Basulto’s complaint also claimed that Netflix had made concessions to the Cuban government during production. In other words, the streamer had allowed a foreign government to influence the historical narrative of a movie it was distributing to hundreds of millions of subscribers as an accurate account. Ana Martinez, a second plaintiff, filed her own action, alleging that the same movie misrepresented her as a promiscuous party girl.
Important Information
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Legal Context | Defamation lawsuits against Netflix over depictions of real people in spy-related films and documentaries — an increasingly litigated area of streaming law |
| Wasp Network Case | Jose Basulto v. Netflix — Brothers to the Rescue leader sued Netflix over 2019 spy thriller; alleged film falsely depicted him as a terrorist and drug trafficker at Cuba’s direction |
| Wasp Network Settlement | Netflix and Basulto settled in January 2024, days before trial was set to begin; terms undisclosed |
| Ana Martinez v. Netflix | Second defamation suit over Wasp Network — woman played by Ana de Armas claimed she was falsely depicted as a promiscuous “party girl” in the true-story spy film |
| Netflix’s Documentary Defense | Netflix argued “modern day audiences of docudramas understand that they are watching dramatizations, not exacting recreations of events” |
| Linda Fairstein v. Netflix | Settled June 2024 — former prosecutor sued over When They See Us; alleged she was depicted as a “racist, unethical villain”; Netflix donated $1 million to the Innocence Project |
| Hatchet Wielding Hitchhiker | Taylor Hazlewood sued Netflix in 2023 after photo from his Instagram was used alongside audio calling a “stone-cold killer” in a true crime documentary — court found Netflix could have defamed him |
| Afflicted Docuseries | Seven documentary subjects sued Netflix for defamation, fraud, and invasion of privacy — case ultimately dropped in 2023 |
| CIA Publication Review | Former CIA officers must submit writings for pre-publication review; the agency has sued officers who published without approval — a separate legal constraint on intelligence figures speaking publicly |
| Broader Pattern | Netflix faces ongoing pattern of defamation suits from people depicted in true-crime and spy-adjacent content — raising unresolved questions about documentary standards and disclaimer requirements |
Before the lawsuit was filed, Netflix’s answer to Basulto’s defamation letter provided insight into the company’s perspective on this issue. The business contended that contemporary viewers are aware that they are witnessing dramatizations rather than precise reenactments of historical events. For a show that is entirely imaginary, that is an acceptable stance. A movie that begins with a “based on true events” card, identifies actual persons by name and face, and informs viewers that what they are seeing is based on historical reality finds it more difficult to maintain this position. Early in 2024, as the lawsuit was about to go to trial, both parties reached a secret settlement, which is the most typical result in similar circumstances. There was no conclusive solution to the fundamental legal question of when a docudrama’s deviations from the historical record qualify as legally actionable defamation.
Similar circumstances led to a more intense public discussion in the Linda Fairstein case, which was decided in June 2024. Netflix and director Ava DuVernay were sued by former Manhattan prosecutor Fairstein over the 2019 miniseries When They See Us, which depicted the investigation and trial of five youths who were eventually found not guilty of the 1989 Central Park jogger rape. Fairstein claimed that she was portrayed as a racist villain who created false convictions and that she was given credit for words and actions that lacked supporting facts. After years of litigation, the case survived a move for summary judgment and was scheduled for trial before a settlement was reached. Netflix consented to give the Innocence Project $1 million. No money was given to Fairstein. The tension is exemplified by DuVernay’s stance throughout the case, which states that the show is not a documentary and that its “movements, dialogue, and actions” are not linked to particular factual sources. The viewers were unaware that they were witnessing a combination of artistic license and research. They believed they were observing the events.

Here, it’s difficult to ignore the pattern. Many defamation lawsuits from individuals portrayed in spy-adjacent, criminal, and intelligence-related programming have been settled or litigated by Netflix. Another layer was given by the Hatchet Wielding Hitchhiker case, in which a court determined that Netflix may have defamed a man whose Instagram photo was taken without permission and placed next to audio referring to an unconnected individual as a “stone-cold killer.” Seven participants in the Afflicted documentary series filed a lawsuit because they believed their medical issues were misrepresented. Since none of these instances resulted in a final decision on the underlying legal issues, the industry has not been compelled to make any long-term changes to its procedures.
The situation is more complicated for former intelligence officers. Throughout their careers and beyond, CIA officials are subject to pre-publication review regulations. Before being published, any book, article, or public statement pertaining to their work must be submitted to the Publications Review Board of the CIA. This leads to an imbalance: the cops themselves have little power to publicly change the record, even if they think what is being displayed is incorrect, while a streaming platform is free to dramatize or film their actions. The components are present, but it is still uncertain if that asymmetry will finally be included in a defamation case involving intelligence content.