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Devin Nunes' Libel Claim Over Rachel Maddow Show Broadcast Can Proceed for Now, as to One Assertion
From today's decision in Nunes v. NBCUniversal Media, LLC by Judge P. Kevin Castel (S.D.N.Y.):
Plaintiff Devin Nunes, a former Member of the House of Representatives, alleges that he was defamed by defendant NBCUniversal Media, LLC. According to Nunes, statements made on the March 18, 2021 broadcast of The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC portrayed him in a false and defamatory light. The statements purported to describe Nunes's conduct regarding a package addressed to him from Andriy Derkach, a Ukrainian legislator with ties to Russian officials and intelligence services….
On December 11, 2019, a package was delivered to the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence …, of which Nunes was Ranking Member. It was addressed to Nunes from Andriy Derkach and was handled solely by Nunes' staff and delivered, unopened, to the offices of the FBI. That same day, Nunes sent a letter to Attorney General William P. Barr advising him of the receipt of the package.
On July 29, 2020, the Intelligence Committee held an open business meeting. During this meeting, Representative Sean Maloney asked Nunes two questions. First, Maloney asked if Nunes had received materials from Derkach. Second, Maloney asked if, in the event that Nunes had received materials, whether he was prepared to share them with the Committee. When asked if he wished to respond to the questions, Nunes declined.
In March 10, 2021, the National Intelligence Council declassified a report titled "Foreign Threats to the 2020 US Federal Elections" (the "DNI Report"). The report stated that Derkach and his associates sought to use prominent Americans to "launder their narratives to US officials and audiences." The report also stated that Derkach provided materials to individuals linked to the Trump administration and attempted to contact several senior U.S. officials.
In the March 18, 2021 broadcast of The Rachel Maddow Show, host Rachel Maddow discussed the declassified DNI Report as part of a longer segment about Derkach, Russian disinformation and election interference. Maddow referred to the report and discussed the package addressed to Nunes, as well as the interaction between Nunes and Maloney at the Intelligence Committee meeting. Maddow said that Nunes had accepted a package from Derkach and refused to answer questions about the package. Maddow also said that Nunes refused to hand the package to the FBI.
The court allowed the libel claim to proceed as to the last sentence in the statement that "Congressman Nunes has refused to answer questions about what he received from Andriy Derkach. He has refused to show the contents of the package to other members of the intelligence community. He has refused to hand it over to the FBI which is what you should do if you get something from somebody who is sanctioned by the U.S. as a Russian agent." (Emphasis added.)
A reasonable viewer could plausibly understand the speaker to assert that Nunes "refused" turn over the Derkach package to the FBI. A reasonable viewer could conclude that such conduct is significantly more serious than what was suggested in the Committee proceeding. A refusal to turn over the package to the law-enforcement body tasked with investigating and enforcing the intelligence laws is factually distinct from declining to publicly answer questions raised in a public legislative proceeding, and could plausibly be understood by a reasonable viewer to suggest unlawful conduct on the part of Nunes. Because the assertion involving Nunes's interactions with the FBI does not speak to the events of the Intelligence Committee meeting and "suggested more serious conduct than actually suggested at the proceeding," it does not fall within the fair report privilege.
NBCU also relies on the then-newly declassified DNI Report stating that Derkach and his associates sought to use prominent Americans to "launder their narratives to US officials and audiences" and that Derkach both provided materials to individuals linked to the Trump administration and attempted to contact senior U.S. officials. Had Statement Two merely reported on the DNI Report and noted that Nunes did not answer questions about receipt of package from Derkach, it is doubtful that it would have been actionable. But the Statement also focuses on Nunes' refusal to turn the material over to the FBI. The Statement in this respect was false, not just technically but also in substance and meaning, and capable of injuring Nunes in his profession….
A public figure alleging defamation must "prove that an allegedly libelous statement was made with actual malice, that is, made with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not." To survive a motion to dismiss, "malice must be alleged plausibly in accordance with Rule 8." "When actual malice in making a defamatory statement is at issue, the critical question is the state of mind of those responsible for the publication."
"The hurdles to plausibly pleading actual malice, though significant given the First Amendment interests at stake, are by no means insurmountable." "[W]hether actual malice can plausibly be inferred will depend on the facts and circumstances of each case" and "a court typically will infer actual malice from objective facts …." "[A] public-figure plaintiff must plead 'plausible grounds' to infer actual malice by alleging 'enough fact[s] to raise a reasonable expectation that discovery will reveal evidence of' actual malice.'" A failure to investigate is not alone sufficient to establish actual malice, but "reliance on anonymous or unreliable sources without further investigation may support an inference of actual malice." The actual malice analysis also may weigh whether the speaker knew and ignored "the journalistic consensus" about a disputed statement, any revisions made during the editorial process and whether the speaker "had a personal connection … that animated his [or her] hostility …."
The Complaint asserts that NBCU and Maddow had knowledge that the Derkach package had in truth been given to the FBI, based on a July 29, 2020 article published on the Breitbart website. The Breitbart article quotes Rick Crawford, a Republican member of Congress, as stating in part:
Here's the thing: it's standard practice that if you get a package from unknown source in a foreign country, it's probably a good idea to call the FBI and let them handle it and not handle those packages and don't open them and go, 'Hey I wonder what this is? I guess it's Christmas came early this year.' No, you follow the protocol, which is you turn that over to the FBI. That's what happened. [Emphasis added.]
After quoting this passage, the Complaint states: "MSNBC and Maddow had no source that had told them prior to publication of the Statements that Plaintiff had 'refused' to turn over the Derkach package to the FBI." It states that Maddow "provided no source for the defamatory Statements about Plaintiff because, in truth, Maddow fabricated the Statements, including the story that Plaintiff 'refused' to turn over the package to the FBI."
It further asserts that other reports reviewed by Maddow and her producers "confirmed the package had been turned over to the FBI" but that they "purposefully evaded the truth" and "chose not to interview important witnesses …."
NBCU points to a July 23, 2020 article published in Politico with the headline, "Democrats: Packets sent to Trump allies are part of foreign plot to damage Biden." The article described "concerns" of "[t]op congressional Democrats" that packets were "mailed to prominent allies of President Donald Trump," including Nunes and then-White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney. The article included the following passage:
The packets, described to POLITICO by two people who have seen the classified portion of the Democrats' letter, were sent late last year to Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), Sens. Lindsey Graham (R- S.C.) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), and then-White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney.
The packets were sent amid a Democratic push to impeach Trump over his effort to pressure Ukraine's president to investigate Biden and his son Hunter the sources said. Graham and Grassley denied having received the material, and Mulvaney and Nunes declined repeated requests for comment. One person familiar with the matter said the information was not turned over to the FBI. The FBI declined to comment. [Emphasis added.]
This Politico article is not cited or referenced in the Complaint, nor is it cited or referenced in the segment. Because the article goes beyond the pleadings and the materials integral thereto, it is not properly considered on a motion to dismiss. On this bare record, the Court declines to convert the motion to one for summary judgment….
The court held, however, that the other statements that Nunes claimed were libelous were either substantially true, expressions of opinion, or fair reports of the House of Representatives proceedings; those were all the following statements, except the part (marked in strikeout font) that was found actionable (see above):
Statement One: "Andriy Derkach is sanctioned by the U.S. government as a Russian agent. He is singled out by name by the Director of National Intelligence as someone under Vladimir Putin's direct purview who helped run this organization targeting our election last year. Congressman Nunes accepted a package from him. What was in it?"
Statement Two: "Congressman Nunes has refused to answer questions about what he received from Andriy Derkach. He has refused to show the contents of the package to other members of the intelligence community. He has refused to hand it over to the FBI which is what you should do if you get something from somebody who is sanctioned by the U.S. as a Russian agent."
Statement Three: "Still, the Republicans have kept Mr. Nunes on as the top Republican on the intelligence committee. How does that stand? How does that stay a thing?" …
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Perhaps I’m missing something. But how does the fact that Breitbart published an article quoting someone who said that Nunes should have given the package to the FBI establish that Maddow recklessly disregarded a substantial probability that Nunes had actually turned over the package to the FBI?
You appear to be missing several somethings.
This bit seems to be the most important:
The real telling comment is this:
On this bare record, the Court declines to convert the motion [to dismiss] to one for summary judgment….
The bar for a claim to survive a motion to dismiss is extremely low. The plaintiff just has to assert a valid claim, no matter the merit. So just by saying "they read articles like this Breitbart one that the package got handed over," that's enough for the claim to survive the motion to dismiss, even if there's no evidence.
But the judge is strongly hinting that it won't survive summary judgement, which is where actual judgement of the merits of the claim comes into play.
That's true. All you have to do to survive a motion at the pleadings stage is to specify the allegedly defamatory words. You don't have to show that they're actually defamatory.
You do have to show they're capable of defamatory meaning.
True but not hard to show here.
It is also after discovery, which news sources avoid like the plague. Nunes' lawyers will not have a chance to delve into why MSNBC and Maddow thought the statements it was making were true.
Assuming they ever did...
Rachel Maddow's whole brand is being a know-it-all. Easily-disproven lies aren't in her interest.
This is true to some extent of Democrats in general. Lying doesn't fit well with an image of smart competence, which is what they're going for. The Republicans are going for ruthless authoritarianism, so lies are actually on-brand (as is stupidity among the lesser pols so that they don't get in the way, hence Walker and Cannon).
But there's a catch to that: Their gig is an image of smart competence, which doesn't actually require smart competence depending on how credulous the audience is.
For instance, Democratic media routinely perpetrate the stupidest mistakes imaginable about guns, but it doesn't seem to give them a reputation as idiots among their target audience, who aren't particularly informed on the topic themselves.
So, since their target audience is Democrats, who can safely be assumed to be open to uncritically believing the worst of Republicans, like Nunes, they don't have to be accurate about him to maintain a good reputation.
Totally agree that Democrats have their priors and their questionable conclusions, including Rachel Maddow. But with very few exceptions, they take the facts as they come. (The one exception I can think of, sitting here, being their uncritical assertion of equivalence between men and women.)
There's no need for factual inaccuracy anyway, as Maddow herself demonstrates. She's the left's version of a conspiracy theorist, weaving truths together with innuendo to provide a comfy partisan blanket. Very much like your standard tin-foil-hat libertarian, actually. I think you'd all dig her style if only she were more of a laissez-faire type.
...going with the Alex Jones precedent, shouldn't she and MSNBC be on the hook for over a billion dollars now?
You think Alex Jones was just "weaving truths together with innuendo?" Hint: no.
Who rushes to Alex Jones's defense anyway? You're in a very warped place, I hope you recover soon.
Quoting the decision:
[The complaint] states that Maddow “provided no source for the defamatory Statements about Plaintiff because, in truth, Maddow fabricated the Statements, including the story that Plaintiff ‘refused’ to turn over the package to the FBI.”
Re-read the Breitbart excerpt, esp. the last bolded sentence:
Here's the thing: it's standard practice that if you get a package from unknown source in a foreign country, it's probably a good idea to call the FBI and let them handle it and not handle those packages and don't open them and go, 'Hey I wonder what this is? I guess it's Christmas came early this year.' No, you follow the protocol, which is you turn that over to the FBI. That's what happened.
Right up until the literal last sentence it sounds like he's saying that Nunes didn't turn the package over to the FBI, I wouldn't blame someone for misreading it. Coupled with the politico article I'm guessing someone on Maddow's staff saw the Breitbart article and thought it said Nunes didn't turn over the package.
I suspect this is simple a mistake and not an actual fabrication. The one thing that confuses me a bit is I don't see any mention of a retraction on Maddow's part. Perhaps it happened and wasn't mentioned but once she knew the report was wrong it seems she should have corrected the record for her viewers.
I see no problem with the case proceeding. But I have to admit that I'm not really understanding his claim for damages. Doesn't harm to his reputation form the general basis for damages here? I presume (but maybe I'm wrong...I don't know civil lit at all) that a defense is allowed to argue, "Hey, we did nothing wrong. But even if we did, the defendant was harmed a total of $1, since Nunes has a well-deserved reputation for being unethical, awful, etc etc...so even falsely saying that he didn't give a package to the FBI--when there was no legal obligation for him to do so--actually harms him not at all." (And before that argument, presumably, the defense would be allowed to/required to put on actual evidence of Devin's lack of ethics and of his dreadful reputation long before the alleged tort.)
I'll be following the trial closely, when it does come to court. Could be interesting testimony. (If the allegations as plead by the plaintiff are true, the Maddow show does not come off looking good, and I'll be interested as well in learning about that aspect.)
My understanding is that, when the media is caught publishing a false report about a public figure, they’re more likely to avoid liability through the actual malice doctrine than through the short-skirt doctrine.
Maybe they could fold the short-skirt doctrine into the actual malice doctrine – “if plaintiff wanted us to do more detailed fact-checking about that report (which turned out to be technically untrue), he shouldn’t have been such a bad guy. He was so bad, he was basically asking for us to air this false report.”
" a defense is allowed to argue"
You also have to present evidence to support said argument.
Even a $1 judgement on a single, thin point in favor of Nunes would be a big deal on the Conservative news/opinion sphere.
IANAL, but I doubt arguing that "Nunes is a dirtbag already so nothing we say could harm his reputation" is going to win the day. He is a dirtbag, true. Even his cow thinks so. But he does have a macho-ish reputation and being taken down by a female, liberal, lesbian reporter would tarnish his particular version of dirtbagism. If she did defame him, he deserves his win.
The interesting question will be if the FBI admits to having received it -- AND what happened to it, AND what was in it.
There are what -- fourteen different FBI whistleblowers going to the GOP House committee -- I wonder if one or more is about this?
Ah the FBI whistleblowers who haven't said anything earthshaking yet are surely waiting their chance.
I don't often make predictions, but these Republican investigations will absolutely turn out to be stuff only the MAGA folks thinks is significant, though for them it'll be bombshell after bombshell I'm sure.
It's Durham 2: Even More Weak Sauce.
So like the NYT, Maddow's defense is that she had no idea that her smear was false, unlike the rest of the media?
The MSM sure loves that actual malice doctrine.
It’s the Telephone defense: they heard from Politico who heard from an anonymous source who heard from ??? that Nunes is a meanie-head. Outrageously distorted claims based on corruption of a message passed along in whispers are a key part of the game’s design.
It's not Maddow's defense. Her employer is being sued over her on the job statements.
I think your non-MSM loves it even more.
ahh, Rachel Mad-cow's just a ditzy blonde, seriously, check out her highschool photos, quite the babe before she started eating at the Y...
She started her career in Northampton, Massachusetts.
If you know what Northampton is, that explains her....
(This is what passes for crosswalks in the City of NoHope....
https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-fAzL6Jk7osY/U7RyxmPkLuI/AAAAAAAABp0/PdMHeSz8yRw/s1600/bumper2crop.jpg)
Won’t they have recourse to the Maddow defense, “no one believes her anyway”?
Or, people who watch her show are already beyond hope of salvation. If her viewers already hate and disrespect Nunes as much as is humanly possible, which may be true, no harm has been done except to the extent that the lie spreads beyond her listeners.
And you don't think what she says spreads beyond her listeners?
No more so than Tucker, who I believe used a pretty similar defense.
Which is hilarious given that it means she has a lower standard of reliability than Alex Jones.
"Maddow also said that Nunes refused to hand the package to the FBI."
"A reasonable viewer could plausibly understand the speaker to assert that Nunes "refused" turn over the Derkach package to the FBI."
Since the speaker literally said that, I would think so.
You know, I'm not so sure that I WOULD hand it over to the FBI.
Maybe open it in their presence and insist on a properly-documented inventory of what was in it, but I'm not so sure that I would blindly trust them.
Oh, I hope Nunes uses that in court.
You get an suspicious, unexpected, and unrecognized package. Law enforcement is curious. You do not want to claim ownership or any interest in the contents. You do not want to take possession. You let them have it as soon as possible and if it's contraband your hands are as clean as possible.
No, seriously, he's a politician. Unexpected boxes from who knows who go to be opened by somebody who's being paid to take the risk of it being a bomb, or dusted with mycotoxins, or whatever.
It's just not worth the risk.
I'll always remember Maddoe holding back tears as the Mueller report was released and she had to report that there was no evidence of collusion after 2 years reporting exactly the opposite on her show.
You obviously read a different Mueller report than everyone else read.
We also have the source of many of the rumors admitting he made the entire thing up.