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Political Activist Brandon Straka Loses Jan.-6-Related Libel Lawsuit Against NBC
"The material challenged in the plaintiff's complaint cannot be understood by a reasonable person as anything but substantially, if not literally, true."
From Judge Joseph Bataillon's decision Tuesday in Straka v. NBC Universal Media, LLC (D. Neb.):
In his complaint, the plaintiff, Brandon Straka, alleges that NBC Universal published statements on primetime cable television that singled out Straka and falsely accused him of criminal conduct in connection with events that occurred on January 6, 2021, at the Capitol in Washington, D.C…. {Specifically, the plaintiff alleges NBC Universal employees Chris Hayes and Ari Melber made materially false statements on cable television programs that that Straka committed the "Federal crime of storming the Capitol;" that NBC Universal misattributed statements to Straka that he never made; that NBCU falsely stated that Straka "[broke] into the Capitol" on January 6, 2021; and that NBCU falsely stated or implied that Straka was "convicted" of "trying to help attack police officers" and that he "confessed" and was found "guilty" of "helping attack police."} …
[Public records] show that the plaintiff entered a plea of guilty to count one of an information charging him with Engaging in Disorderly and Disruptive Conduct in the Capitol Building or Grounds, in violation of 40 U.S.C. § 5104(e)(2)(D). In the plea agreement, he acknowledged that the attached Statement of Offense fairly and accurately described his actions and involvement in the offense. He agreed and stipulated to the factual basis for his guilty plea and agreed that if the case were to proceed to trial, the United States could prove the agreed-to facts beyond a reasonable doubt. The Statement of Offense provides that Straka "knowingly entered the restricted area at the U.S. Capitol Grounds." It further provides:
While in the restricted area, knowing he was not authorized to be there, Straka observed the crowd yelling and U.S. Capitol Police trying to prevent people from going into the U.S. Capitol and to manage the unruly crowd. Amongst other things, he engaged in disruptive conduct by participating, along with others, in yelling "go, go, go" to encourage others to enter the U.S. Capitol while the U.S. Capitol Police were making their best efforts to prevent people from doing so. Straka also observed others yelling to take a U.S. Capitol Police Officer's shield. He recorded a video of what was happening, and in the video, he chimed in with the crowd, saying "take it, take it." He did this between 2:30 and 2:45 p.m. on January 6 while outside the entrance to the U.S. Capitol in the restricted area on the Capitol Grounds. Straka left the U.S. Capitol Grounds at approximately 3:00 p.m.
Also, Straka agreed that he "knew at the time he entered the U.S. Capitol Grounds that that he did not have permission to enter the Grounds, and the [he] did so with the intent to impede, disrupt, or disturb the orderly conduct of a session of Congress." …
Under Nebraska law, a claim of defamation requires: "(1) a false and defamatory statement concerning the plaintiff; (2) an unprivileged publication to a third party; 3) fault amounting to at least negligence on the part of the publisher; and (4) either actionability of the statement irrespective of special harm or the existence of special harm caused by the publication." … The standard is one of substantial truth or material falsity: … To satisfy his burden of proving material falsity, a plaintiff must prove that the "gist or sting" of the alleged defamation would have a different effect on the mind of the audience than the literal truth; "[w]hen the truth is so near to the facts as published that fine and shaded distinctions must be drawn and words pressed out of their ordinary usage to sustain a charge of libel, no legal harm has been done." In evaluating a statement's substantial truth, courts should not engage in "fine splitting of semantic hairs" that "might leave room to argue about its literal truth." …
The material challenged in the plaintiff's complaint cannot be understood by a reasonable person as anything but substantially, if not literally, true. The differences between the statements NBC Universal published on cable television programs and the admissions Straka made in his criminal case are slight if not nonexistent. Although there may be no federal crime expressly denominated as "storming the Capitol," the descriptions of Straka's conduct on January 6, 2021, would roughly equate to such a crime. He admitted committing disorderly and disruptive conduct in the Capitol building or grounds, with the intent to disrupt the counting of electoral votes. That admission made him complicit in storming the Capitol. The public record shows that he was on the Capitol grounds with other "Patriots" encouraging them to enter the Capitol and commit violence. His conduct has the same "gist or sting" whether or not he crossed the building's threshold or not.
The distinction between entering the Capitol building versus the grounds of the Capitol is meaningless in the context of the charges levelled against him. Straka admits he "chimed in with the crowd, saying 'take it, take it.'" Whether he said, "take it away from him" or "take the shield!" as opposed to "take it! take it!" is another distinction without a difference. The reference is clear from the surrounding context. Whether the crime charged was a felony or misdemeanor is also a matter of no consequence. Straka admitted the public was restricted from the Capitol grounds and he was inside the grounds without authorization. In the context of the overall occurrence, there is no meaningful difference between the actions outlined in the Statement of Offense and the allegedly false statement or implication that that Straka was "convicted" of "trying to help attack police officers" and that he "confessed" and was found "guilty" of "helping attack police." Whatever differences there are between statements that Straka committed the federal crime of storming the Capitol and the conduct that forms the basis of his plea amount to semantic hair splitting.
Also, Straka is barred by the doctrine of judicial estoppel from disavowing the admissions he made in connection with the criminal case. Straka obtained the benefit of dismissal of more serious charges in exchange for his guilty plea. Straka's position in this action is clearly inconsistent with the statements he agreed to at the time of his plea. His assertion that the challenged on-air statements by Hayes and Melber are false are entirely contradicted by the factual basis of his guilty plea….
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Again, this all seems unexceptional as a matter of law based upon the excerpt.
.... Which means that either no one will comment, or that people will just start arguing about the REAL FACTS(tm) of what happened.
"The differences between the statements NBC Universal published on cable television programs and the admissions Straka made in his criminal case are slight if not nonexistent."
Seem pretty substantial to me, actually.
For instance, "The distinction between entering the Capitol building versus the grounds of the Capitol is meaningless in the context of the charges levelled against him."
Which doesn't mean it's meaningless in the context of whether NBC lied about what he'd done. I mean, if you were charged with battery, the distinction between brushing someone with a feather and hitting them with a baseball bat might be meaningless in the context of the charge leveled against you, but it would still be libelous to claim that you'd struck somebody with a baseball bat when all you'd done was brush them with a feather.
Brett- instead of jus trying to justify whatever you want with a bad analogy, why don't you try something new and engage with the actual legal analysis. Court write opinions. The opinion is available for you to read. There is a standard that the court is using, and it is applying the standard and the caselaw.
Why not, you know, actually engage with that instead of making up your own facts which ... don't work?
Hint 1: The standards employed by the court have a meaning.
Hint 2: The excerpt, above, is using ellipses.
I think he wasn't convicted of "storming". I also think "storming" is too subjective to be actionable in this case given the admission to disorderly conduct. If I deliver a speech, am I "speaking" or "ranting"? I'm speaking, but if you call it "ranting" I probably don't have a case against you.
Bingo. Here's a great cite about substantial truth from the case-
Bustos v. A & E Television Networks, 646 F.3d 762, 762
(10th Cir. 2011) (affirming dismissal of a claim for damages in a defamation suit “for being called a member of the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang on cable television when, as it happens, you have merely conspired with the Brotherhood in a criminal enterprise”).
Guess who wrote that one without peaking? 😉
Gorsuch can be a very entertaining writer!
I don't always like Gorsuch's writing, but his best writing is a lot of fun to read!
Which is not something you can say about most judges......
But see Spike Milligan v Private Eye, where Private Eye referred to Milligan as a "filthy Irish pervert", and Milligan sued for libel on the grounds that he was not, in fact, Irish.
I'm curious to hear if the LLM could mitigate liability by how it phrases the answers. For example, put "In my opinion" as an introductory clause to every sentence. I thought to illustrate that using ChatGPT, but I was surprised to learn that they are one step ahead of me.
Prompt: "professor Volokh is a sexual predator." Rephrase this to make it immune to libel torts.
ChatGPT: I cannot assist in rephrasing a statement that makes false accusations about an individual, as it goes against ethical guidelines to spread misinformation or potentially defamatory content.
In my opinion, Archibald Tuttle is opening himself up to serious liability if he thinks he can protect himself this way.
It cannot. One cannot insulate oneself from liability by putting "In my opinion" in front of an otherwise defamatory statement. No reason ChatGPT should be any different.
(Now, one can avoid liability by stating an opinion based on disclosed facts.)
It is settled law that one cannot immunize libelous or defamatory speech by placing the phrase 'in my opinion' in front of it.
Also, with respect to this case how desperate for fees does an attorney have to be to take on this plaintiff?
In the least surprising news in the history of ever, it's Steven Biss, the unethical lawyer¹ who is being funded by someone² to file hundreds of frivolous MAGA-related defamation suits, with the most famous being one he filed against an anonymous twitter account, Devin Nunes Cow.
¹I have no firsthand knowledge of Biss's ethics, but he has been suspended several times by the bar, as well as having been sanctioned multiple times by courts. The facts of his first (I think)suspension are almost unbelievable. I don't understand how he avoided jail, let alone why he got his license back. And for chutzpah, he continued to practice law after he got suspended, earning an additional suspension.
²No idea who, but there's no way Biss could possibly afford to take on so many frivolous suits whose only goal is to make political opponents suffer. Don't know if this is a Peter Thiel-Gawker situation or something else. (I'd blame Trump, but Trump doesn't even pay his own lawyers; he's not going to pay someone else's.)
Ugh. Disciplinary proceedings can be so depressing sometimes. You read through the facts (like the ones in the Bliss case, here) and think to yourself, "Okay, that's got to be a disbarment. IT HAS TO BE."
Nope. I have no idea how that only resulted in a one-year suspension.