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Virginia Court Reverses $1M Libel Judgment for School Board Chair Called "Sexual Predator/Harasser" by Activist
The speaker's comments, the Virginia Court of Appeals held, "comments constitute non-actionable opinions based on fully disclosed facts."
From Pestrak v. Sawyers, decided last week by the Virginia Court of Appeals (Judge Vernida Chaney, joined by Judges Frank Friedman and Stuart Raphael):
In December 2017, Petrak, who led the "Prince William Committee (PWC) for Quality Education" and had previously pursued recall efforts to oust Sawyers from his Chairman position, publicly responded to a prior 2014 comment made by Sawyers on Facebook. Sawyers had commented on a local librarian's public photograph, referring to her as "[s]uch a LILF." {Sawyers did not dispute that he called the librarian "such a LILF." Petrak maintains the acronym referred to a distasteful innuendo. However, Sawyers testified that LILF meant "Librarian I'd Like to Fund."}
In response, Petrak posted in the public Facebook group, "PWC Education Reform," sharing a series of statements calling Sawyers a "SEXUAL PREDATOR/HARASSER." These statements were accompanied by screenshots of Sawyers's LILF comment, a tweet in which Sawyers thanked Senator Al Franken, and a photograph of Franken engaging in inappropriate conduct.
Petrak's comment reads as follows:
Since our School Board Chairman-at-Large continues to paint false pictures of people with social media, I thought I would share some real disturbing (and truthful) pictures about Ryan Sawyers.
The first picture is of a wom[a]n who posted a professional picture of herself on Facebook. As you can see, her friends made nice comments about the picture. Look closely and see the comment by Ryan Sawyers. It says, "such a LILF[.]" I am told this person is a librarian. So basically, Ryan Sawyers, a married man, is publicly saying on social media that he would like to have sex with this woman. If that isn't the behavior of a SEXUAL PREDATOR or HARASSER, I don't know what is.
The second picture is a tweet from Ryan Sawyers thanking Senator Al Franken, another SEXUAL PREDATOR for campaigning in Virginia.
The third picture is of Al Franken groping a sleeping woman on a military transport plane.
Can you see the connection here? So our School Board Chairman-at-Large, Ryan Sawyers is an open serving SEXUAL PREDATOR/HARASSER. Do you see any problem with this?
Instead of attacking people with false narratives on social media, he should be removing himself from public office and you should be demanding it.
So to recap, we have a SEXUAL PREDATOR/HARASSER chairing our school board.
Let's see if anyone is willing to defend this SEXUAL PREDATOR/HARASSER. I'm sure Mr. Sawyers and his minions will try to turn this around and make this about me … it's how they roll.
Sawyers sued for defamation, and the jury awarded $1M in damages. But the appellate court concluded that the claim should have been thrown out:
Because opinions cannot be "objectively characterized as true or false," they are generally non-actionable…. [T]he First Amendment protects statements of opinion based on disclosed or assumed non-defamatory facts….
First, Petrak's Facebook post fully discloses the factual predicates underlying his opinions: Sawyers's Facebook comment calling the librarian "[s]uch a LILF," his tweet thanking Senator Al Franken, and the photograph of Al Franken groping a sleeping woman. Petrak lays out all the facts that form his opinion, and the record shows that he relied on no unknown or undisclosed facts. {[T]he record establishes that the readers of the Facebook post were aware of an underlying political dispute between the parties. Sawyers attached the entirety of Petrak's post as an exhibit to his complaint. The unredacted post begins with a disclosure that Petrak led an effort to gather signatures to recall Sawyers from his school board position. Petrak's post itself therefore provides the complete factual basis for his conclusion, including the political tension between the parties, eliminating any suggestion of undisclosed support. We note that, unlike Schaecher, the underlying political dispute or situation here is far removed from the content or topic of sexual misconduct or innuendos. However, this difference is not dispositive when there is no indication in the record that Petrak relied on undisclosed facts.
To the extent that Petrak and Sawyers were engaged in a broader political disagreement regarding education reform, that context alone also does not create a topically relevant undisclosed factual predicate. The post appeared in a Facebook group entitled "PWC Education Reform," where members could reasonably be expected to possess some knowledge of an underlying education reform dispute. In any event, Petrak's post discloses the full set of facts he relied on and, in itself, establishes the necessary familiarity with the situation for readers.}
The alleged defamatory dispute involves Petrak's labeling of Sawyers as a sexual predator or harasser. Petrak's conclusion is explicitly based on the three disclosed facts, providing readers with the necessary context to evaluate his claims independently. As in Schaecher, the audience had the requisite information or knowledge of the factual basis for Petrak's conclusions to determine whether the accusations are perceived as pure opinion based on his subjective analysis.
Second, Petrak's opinion, drawn from these disclosed facts, cannot support liability in the absence of falsity in the underlying facts. Sawyers, like the plaintiff in Schaecher, did not allege that the underlying factual statements were false. Therefore, Petrak's post is a non-actionable opinion. Sawyers acknowledges making the LILF comment, that the images depict Al Franken's incident, and that he thanked Al Franken on Twitter. His testimony about the meaning of "LILF" offers an alternative interpretation. However, it does not challenge the factual existence of the comment or tweet. Nor does it claim that the underlying facts are defamatory. The dispute, therefore, lies only in Petrak's interpretation and assessment of the fully disclosed facts, which is non-actionable opinion.
Third, a reader of the Facebook post, like the email recipients in Schaecher, could reasonably conclude that Petrak's comments characterizing Sawyers as a "SEXUAL PREDATOR/HARASSER" constituted his subjective analysis. {The record shows that readers of Petrak's post interpreted his comments and conclusions as his subjective personal opinion rather than literal statements of fact. Several responses to the post illustrate this perception: readers described Petrak's characterization of Sawyers as a sexual predator as a "stretch," cautioned against making light of the term, and noted that the underlying comments or images did not constitute evidence of predatory behavior. These responses suggest that those readers did not believe the language carrying the alleged defamatory sting to be true but instead viewed it as Petrak's subjective assessment drawn from the disclosed facts. This supports our conclusion that a reasonable reader could perceive Petrak's remarks as subjective commentary rather than independently verifiable factual assertions.} Petrak guides the reader sequentially through each disclosed fact. He signals the subjective nature of his reasoning with phrases like, "If that isn't the behavior of a SEXUAL PREDATOR/HARASSER, I don't know what is."
Even the more provocative phrase, "Ryan Sawyers is an open serving SEXUAL PREDATOR/HARASSER," appears within a contextual narrative that ties directly back to the disclosed facts and is introduced by the word "So." Viewed in isolation, that statement might be interpreted as factual. In context, however, it forms part of a larger narrative expressing Petrak's personal assessment or interpretation of the disclosed facts. The language leading into that phrase illustrates the point:
The second picture is a tweet from Ryan Sawyers thanking Senator Al Franken, another SEXUAL PREDATOR for campaigning in Virginia. The third picture is of Al Franken groping a sleeping woman …. Can you see the connection here? So our School Board Chairman-at-Large … is an open serving SEXUAL PREDATOR/HARASSER.
By presenting the two photographs and then using the word "So," Petrak appears to be drawing his opinion or inference directly from his perceived connection between the tweet and the pictures. By layering facts and reasoning in a step-by-step manner, as Petrak does throughout his post, he helps the reader understand the basis for his conclusion and reasonably perceive the post as Petrak's subjective analysis based on the facts he disclosed.
{Nothing in our holding is intended to conclude that the phrase "sexual predator" can never be considered defamation per se. In another context, this phrase may constitute defamation, but that situation is not currently the one before this Court.}
Lee E. Berlik and R. Jackson Martin represent plaintiff.
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The late Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) had a staff that excelled in helping veterans, some of whom probably thanked him.
Pre-Vikki, he was also a drunken lout.
So someone thanking him for help with the VA is a supporter of waitress sandwiches?
And it isn't libel to sat he is?!?
You can't libel a dead guy, or so people around here say.
Hollywood loves biographies...after the person passed away.
This is nuts.
"Librarian I'd Like to Fund."
The internet disagrees - - - - - - - -
The opinion versus defamation distinction outlined in many EV posts over the years usually seems to boil down to the subjective opinions of the judges involved.
I propose an originalist re-appraisal: If a comment would have gotten you challenged to a duel in 1789, its defamation.
In my view, the distinction here is whether it can be proven true or false that someone is a "sexual predator." That term is squishy enough and filled with enough opinion and shades of grey that it really cannot be an actionable libel.
Isn't "thief" usually classified as an opinion? That can be verified.
It is closer but still contextual. Thief mostly is an objective term but it can be baked with opinion at times:
Customer: I would like a drink.
Bartender: That will be $19.
Customer: You are a thief!
In context, the customer isn't actually accusing the bartender of theft, but is commenting on the drink prices.
Bringing back dueling would certainly solve a lot of issues.
Or at least put the question to the jury whether a "reasonable person" would consider this a statement of fact or an opinion.
I think it is the right decision but I don't like it. This allegation is a bombshell in today's world and couching it as an opinion rings hollow to me, but that seems to be the state of the law.
The ironic part is that nobody would have heard of this but for a verdict and an appeal. What would have likely died quietly will now forever be in a published case.
Stating you'd, truthfully, LTF someone, cannot be a sexual predator thing. Whether it is sexual harrassment as a position of power over someone is a separate issue.
But sex is a core importance to existence, as is pursuing it. You say predator. In response, no, you're a towel! I mean, you're a species extinction-bound nihilist.
He didn't ask her to go have a coffee and see where it leads. He posted a reference to an obscenity about a school librarian where others could read it.
I agree that he is not literally a "sexual predator." But words in many cases have meanings far beyond their dictionary definitions.
It was a coarse locker-room joke, to say she was pretty. He obviously knew how "ILF" would be read. I don't see that it would do her any harm, but it did create an opening for political opponents to say nasty things about him.
While I wouldn't hyperbolate "LILF" up using those words, you prove my point. Harrassment it may be, but predatory behavior it is not. It is core human behavior, pursuing sex and letting the object of your thoughts know.
It is modern lawyers who have built this whole framework, whatever its origin in repeated harrassment, up to simple mention of natural activities is synonymous with psychological damage, of which compensation of one third goes to their pockets, the damaging-er, the better.
If mentioning someone is sexy and you want sex with them is damaging, then I say let it happen and let evolution re-correct that abberation of the hearing party out of existence.
Feminists, old school ones anyway, spent well over a century arguing women are not fragile souls, and rather of agency, capable of handling anything a man can, and making decisions for themselves.
I don’t like this decision. It seems to me that the statements go well beyond the disclosed facts and cannot reasonably be interpreted as mere opinions about them. The Al Frankin statements in particular strongly suggest that the thank-you has some sort of connection to or involvement with Frankin’s misconduct, and is not just a perfunctory arms-length thank-you made as a public official with no connection to it. “Sexual predator” etc. is so implausible an opinion as a mere interpretation of the disclosed facts that it tends to suggest the speaker is privy to undisclosed facts.
I also agree the librarian comment, however vulgar, does not make him a sexual predator. However, this time it’s at least plausible someone could perceive it this way.
It doesn't matter. An opinion based on disclosed facts is not defamation regardless of how ridiculous the opinion is. The classic example from the Restatement is "He moved in six months ago. He works downtown, and I have seen him during that time only twice, in his backyard around 5:30 seated in a deck chair with a portable radio listening to a news broadcast, and with a drink in his hand. I think he must be an alcoholic.” As absurd a conclusion as that is based on those facts, it is by definition not defamation.
An opinion based on disclosed facts is not defamation regardless of how ridiculous the opinion is.
Yikes! Shouldn't that be an opinion on the basis of disclosed facts proved truthful with regard to the party allegedly libeled? This case seems to verge over into reliance on disclosed facts truthful about the accuser.
If I understand your question correctly, if one makes up the underlying facts one can be liable for defamation, yes. If one says, "I think Bob must be a child molester because I saw him go into Susie's bedroom late at night and close the door and not come out for an hour," and one did not in fact see that, one couldn't shield oneself with the disclosed facts doctrine. On the other hand, if one says, "I think Bob must be a child molester because I read a story in the paper about him going into Susie's bedroom late at night and closing the door and not coming out for an hour," and that was indeed reported in the paper, one need not prove that the report was true.
My understanding is that if you say something like, I think John Smith is a bank robber because he was born on a Thursday, and everyone born on a Thursday is a bank robber, that's not defamatory because you're not implying any knowledge about John Smith robbing banks that you haven't divulged.
Frankly, I am really wondering whether classifying a statement as fact or opinion is best classified as a question of law in cases like these. We are dealing with the social meaning of innuendo, something judges know no more about than the average person. I think there are such disagreements about innuendos and meaning that whether what was said here is merely an opinion or not might best be decided by a jury.
A much easier summary is "Three Democrat Party judges rule that obvious defamation against a Republican official is an opinion."
I'm sure these three judges would be falling over themselves to find for the two fat water buffalos Giuliani was found liable for defaming.
I'm sorry...what are you whining about here?
The conclusion of the court seems gratuitous that all the facts pertaining to the allegation had been disclosed. Why is the appellate court the right party to judge that seemingly factual question?
This is an appellate court deciding, and not the initial trier of fact, That makes it seem another in a long line of recent cases where appellate courts decide against libel allegations based on bias against the notion of libel itself—a bias which of course the internet has made commonplace. How does the fact that a bias against libel has become commonplace affect the question whether a published allegation of fact is false and damaging?
I think we seeing an appellate court insist that because cranks on the internet are common, the law of libel must be constrained to narrow its former import, to accommodate and encourage cranks. If so, that gives a questionable look to assertions that Section 230 does not license libel, but rightly assigns it to the contributor instead of to the publisher. When created by Section 230, that was a novel legal doctrine which not only uprooted for political-popularity reasons a centuries-old legal expectation that publishers and contributors were jointly liable, but also abolished another legal custom that libel was a matter for state law.
Hypothetically, change the facts of this case to make the publisher the New York Times, and the allegation one to state that the political figure in question a pedophile, and you get an outcome that I think more people would criticize. How can it be right to have two standards for libel, with a more stringent standard applied if the party accused is better-regarded as a source of factual information? How can it be right to have two standards for libel, one of which will inevitably inflect factual determinations about the content of published utterances on the basis of an appellate court's opinion about the social status of the author of an utterance?
bias against the notion of libel itself
Yes, that's my sense too. The range of situations where someone can successfully sue for defamation is gradually defined out of existence. (See also how NY Times v. Sullivan has gotten completely out of hand.)
The relevant Restatement was published in 1977.
It was not, but mainly because you insist on saying "publisher" rather than "distributor."
Nieporent, give it up. Distributors do not curate their audiences, nor do they typically fund content creation activities by selling messaging access to the people they distribute materials to. The fact that a publisher also does content distribution, does not make a publisher alike with a distributor.
Other publishing-related activities which distributors do not perform are what define a publisher. Audience creation, audience curation by means of content selection choices, creating content, paying for it, or simply accepting content on an item-by-item basis, are all typical publishing activities. Monetizing those activities by sale of advertising is a characteristic publishing activity, although not indispensable to define a publisher. Using some of that money to pay the expenses of news gathering activity is another. Businesses which focus their activities within that general range are indisputably publishers within the meaning of the press freedom clause of the 1A.
Your own personal utterly made up notion of what a publisher is and is not will continue to have nothing to do with this discussion. And your complete failure to understand the business model of the "Internet giants" continues to astonish. They act almost entirely as distributors. Twitter is analogous to a bookstore or newsstand, not to a newspaper.