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Pennsylvania Trial Court Rejects Pseudonymity in Defamation Suit Over Sexual Assault Allegations
(as well as other allegations).
Allegheny County Judge Chelsa Wagner's decision last week in Doe v. Hardy (Pa. Ct. Com. Pl.), didn't explain its rationale, but here is the argument that the court rejected, which also includes the background factual allegations:
Plaintiff John Doe and Defendant Brian Hardy are both members of the Phi Kappa Tau ("PKT") Fraternity and alumni of the Westminster College chapter. Doe and Hardy maintained their involvement with PKT and the Westminster chapter following their respective graduations. They held various positions with the national fraternity and held advisory board positions with the Westminster chapter.
In 2021, Doe raised concerns regarding a loan received for fraternity house renovations and possible self-dealing and policy violations, which involved Hardy. In retaliation, Hardy took steps to harm Doe's reputation and professional relationships by defaming and disparaging him.
Hardy falsely accused Doe of sexually assaulting a student, being a predator, preying upon vulnerable undergraduate students, victimizing Westminster College students, offering alcohol to underage students, plying underage students with alcohol, regularly visiting the Westminster fraternity house and partying with fraternity brothers, intentionally failing to report fraternity brothers selling drugs and the alleged sexual assault of a student, and having been banned from PKT's headquarters from working in any capacity with undergraduate students.
Hardy made such false accusations to numerous individuals and entities at various times throughout 2022 and 2023, including but not limited to the Westminster College Dean of Students, the Westminster Student Affairs Coordinator, PKT fraternity brothers and officers, Westminster College undergraduate students, investigators and/or officers with the Pennsylvania Bureau of Professional and Occupational Affairs and/or Board of Social Workers, among other entities and individuals….
In a letter dated May 19, 2022, Doe was advised that he was not permitted to enter the PKT fraternity house. In a letter dated February 24, 2023, Doe was informed that he was prohibited from entering the Westminster College campus moving forward….
While Plaintiff's counsel has failed to find a Pennsylvania appellate opinion addressing whether a plaintiff can proceed under a pseudonym in a factually similar case, federal courts often permit plaintiffs to proceed using a pseudonym where the case involves claims that he or she has been falsely accused of sexual assault. See e.g. Doe v. Princeton Univ., 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 225492, *2 n.2 (D. N.J. 2023); Doe v. Citadel, 2022 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 127707, *5-8 (D. S.C. 2022). There, "[t]o satisfy the criteria for anonymity, a plaintiff must show (1) fear of severe harm and (2) that the fear of severe harm is reasonable." Doe v. Triangle Doughnuts, LLC, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 109495, *8 (E.D. Pa. 2020) citing Doe . Megless, 654 F.3d 404, 408 (3d Cir. 2011). Federal courts apply a balancing test and consider six non-exhaustive factors:
(1) the extent to which the identity of the litigant has been kept confidential; (2) the bases upon which disclosure is feared or sought to be avoided, and the substantiality of these bases; (3) the magnitude of the public interest in maintaining the confidentiality of the litigant's identity; (4) whether, because of the purely legal nature of the issues presented or otherwise, there is an atypically weak public interest in knowing the litigants' identities; (5) the undesirability of an outcome adverse to the pseudonymous party and attributable to his refusal to pursue the case at the price of being publicly identified; and (6) whether the party seeking to sue pseudonymously has illegitimate ulterior motives.
Federal courts also consider additional factors that disfavor anonymity:
(1) the universal level of public interest in access to the identities of litigants; (2) whether, because of the subject matter of this litigation, the status of the litigant as a public figure, or otherwise, there is a particularly strong interest in knowing the litigants' identities, beyond the public's interest which is normally obtained; and (3) whether the opposition to pseudonym by counsel, the public, or the press is illegitimately motivated.
The federal court analysis is persuasive, particularly here as the factors weigh strongly in favor of allowing anonymity. Doe has sought to maintain confidentiality, Doe's fear is justifiable given the nature of the false accusations, and the public interest is minimal. Accordingly, Plaintiff respectfully requests that the Court exercise its discretion and permit Plaintiff to pursue this matter under the pseudonym, John Doe.
My sense is that courts generally refuse to allow defamation cases to be litigated pseudonymously, partly because pseudonymity generally isn't allowed just to prevent damage to reputation—in a vast range of cases, a party's (either the plaintiff's or defendant's) reputation might suffer from public exposure of the allegations, but our system is generally one of openness, not of pseudonymity.
One notable exception is cases dealing with allegations that a college has wrongly disciplined the plaintiff, often based on allegations of sexual assault; there, courts often do allow pseudonymity to protect the plaintiff's reputation. (The Doe v. Princeton and Doe v. Citadel cases are wrongful discipline cases, not defamation cases.) Doe v. MIT (1st Cir. 2022) explains those cases as being litigated against the background federal principles—see generally the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA)—that call for confidentiality of college disciplinary proceedings; this confidentiality justifies applies the same rules for lawsuits against colleges related to such proceedings.
But courts have not extended this logic to defamation claims brought against accusers, including claims that stem from alleged misconduct at college. The Fourth Circuit's Doe v. Doe (4th Cir. 2023) is the leading precedent on this; an excerpt:
Appellant's central argument on appeal is that his case "center[s] around a confidential Title IX proceeding" so it is different than "the garden variety defamation case" and overcomes any public interest in disclosure of his identity. We disagree.
As the district court explained, Title IX challenges have "considerations … [that] do not apply here." Specifically, in those cases, "those accused of sexual assault" were "su[ing] schools or universities pseudonymously when attacking the findings of a university Title IX investigation." "Unlike those cases, [Appellant] is not challenging his expulsion from Tulane or arguing that Tulane violated Title IX or due process during the sexual assault investigation."
Instead, Appellant is suing only a private individual for defamation, and he seeks only declaratory relief and money damages against Appellee. This case is no different than a garden variety defamation case, and it does not present the exceptional circumstances necessary for Appellant to proceed by pseudonym….
[W]e fail to see how Appellant can clear his name through this lawsuit without identifying himself. If Appellant were successful in proving defamation, his use of a pseudonym would prevent him from having an order that publicly "clears" him.
It is apparent that Appellant wants to have his cake and eat it too. Appellant wants the option to hide behind a shield of anonymity in the event he is unsuccessful in proving his claim, but he would surely identify himself if he were to prove his claims….
For other cases rejecting pseudonymity for defamation plaintiffs, see Levy v. Shuster (D. Colo. 2023); Doe v. Bogan, No. 1:21-mc-00073, 2021 WL 3855686, at *21 (D.D.C. June 8, 2021); Doe v. Wash. Post Co., No. 1:19-cv00477-UNA, 2019 WL 2336597, at *1 (D.D.C. Feb. 26, 2019); P.D. & Assocs. v. Richardson, 64 Misc. 3d 763, 767 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2019); Doe v. Underwood, No. 21STCV46709 (Cal. Super. Ct. L.A. Cty. May 9, 2022). But see Doe v. Predator Catchers, Inc. (M.D. Fla. 2023).
In the Pennsylvania case, defendant is represented by Michael E. Lang (Margolis Edelstein).
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I think your blockquote extended further than you intended. Did you mean to stop just before the paragraph beginning "My sense ...."?
Whoops, thanks, fixed!
I assume that in some cases pseudonymity gets approved. The overwhelming preponderance of cases reported here where it gets rejected perhaps reflects the relative infrequency of that outcome. Are we to take the proportions of approvals or denials which show up in threads featuring this pseudonymity focus as usefully informative about relative frequencies, or instead as expressive of EV's preferences, or as advocacy, or as mere happenstance?
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Ohio case?
Is there an Ohio case, or is this just more Volokh Conspiracy-style scholarship?
If someone wanted to get a decent overview of this topic, what are a few law review articles you'd recommend? (It's an interesting area of law, in that it's easy to see the merits of both sides.)
[I'll also note that it's been about a week for me since the Edit function worked. The button is "grayed out" on both Firefox and Chrome. Are other people able to edit their own posts? If yes; which browser(s) are you using? ]
Just edited mine to be a mensch and help you out, my edit works fine, although editing any of my posts would be like editing "The Godfather" (OK, more like editing "Caligula")
Browser? The guy from Sha Na Na? I think it was "Bowzer" just kidding, I'm up on the Tec-no,
It's the one with the little Blue Hurricane thing-y
Frank
Safri
Nope, Safari
Still works
If you mean the law of pseudonymous litigation, I'd recommend The Law of Pseudonymous Litigation. I appreciate that I'm biased, and that the article is long, but I think I can accurately say that it's the one recent comprehensive piece on the subject. It also cites some earlier pieces, such as Joan Steinman, Public Trial, Pseudonymous Parties: When Should Litigants Be Permitted to Keep Their Identities Confidential?, 37 Hastings L.J. 1, 19 (1985), and Jayne S. Ressler, Privacy, Plaintiffs, and Pseudonyms: The Anonymous Doe Plaintiff in the Information Age, 53 U. Kan. L. Rev. 195, 197 (2004), but there's been a good deal of water under the bridge since then.
Had to look up this College, some 1,200 screw-dents, Co-Ed, 4 Fraternities, 5 Sororities, Paying $52,000 Year Tuition/Room (do they prorate if you live in a Fraternity House?) Jeez, Auburns only 23,000/year (I paid umm, nothing, thanks Mom/ROTC)
Trivia nugget, Westminster has as many Alumni in the College Foo-bawl Hall of Fame (4) as Oklahoma State, Houston and Kansas State.
They did have Wes Craven as a professor which is pretty cool.
Frank “and with your Westminster Degree you get a free bowl of soup!”
“Preying upon vulnerable undergraduate students, victimizing Westminster College students, offering alcohol to underage students, plying underage students with alcohol”
Jeez, those are the only reasons I’d consider joining a Fraternity, and I wasn’t one of those losers who needed a Sister Sorority to get me dates, I had my own sister (to get me dates with her friends, no, not with her)
All joking aside, I was one of those weirdos who only went to College because you had to to get in Med School, hated sitting in class listening to some Iranian dipshit talk about melting points, went 12 straight quarters because Summer classes were easier, sold programs at the Foo-bawl games/Plasma (not at the games) and chose Auburn because it was closest to home (and I like Orange/Blue). Took the Greyhound to my Med School Interviews because I didn’t trust my 72′ Ford LTD. “Back Up Plan” was my Navy ROTC scholarship, was already selected for NFO training (I’d tell you but….OK, that’s what “Goose” was in “Top Gun” and I wanted to do it 6 years before Topgun came out) Was almost disappointed when Med School let me in…
Frank "Let us Prey"
I think the 4th Circuit’s reasoning is persuasive. The principle thing people sue for defamation over is to vindicate, and end damage to, their reputation. But that can’t happen unless people know who they are. So defamation plaintiffs can be expected to reveal their identity if they win. They can be expected not to want to remain anonymous. Indeed, if people remain unaware that statements about them are defamatory, they can’t avoid damages continuing. Plaintiffs are obligated to mitigate their damages.
Given that they will reveal their identity if they win, they aren’t entitled to only conceal their identity if they lose.
ReaderY, not sure I see the symmetry you posit. Before the case is decided, no one knows who will win or lose.
Someone—think Alex Jones, for instance—who operates a defamation-for-profit business model, inflicts damage on purpose, to encourage donations from like-minded haters. Those are then free to pile on, and multiply whatever libels Jones sets in motion, with their own anonymous attacks on the victim.
Jones does not care if he loses, because he has found a method to make libel damages a cost of doing business—or at least he hopes that is how it works out. That method may include an intention to use legal evasions, or bankruptcies, to evade paying adjudicated damages.
Your view seems to be that the targeted libel victims must agree to let the Streisand effect multiply their damages, and afterwards give Jones opportunity to stiff them? How is that symmetrically fair?
Also, typically, the party targeted for libel will normally not be in position to publicize victory, if it happens. The publisher who commits the libel is demonstrably in position either to trumpet its own victory, or to suppress the news that it lost, at least among the audience most likely to have read the original libel.
Prior to Section 230, with its protections for internet publishers, this was barely an issue worth considering. Now, with Section 230 in place, and private editing prior to publication no longer a factor, that former legal regime seems inadequate as a basis for reasoning about what ought to happen today. Today, the nation needs some means to suppress judgement-proof libels, poised for anonymous mass attack, on whomever some hate-filled social leader chooses to target (think Trump, for instance). To demand that those attacked increase their public profile as a pre-condition to defend themselves does not seem either practical or wise.