Gilmore v. Jones
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff Brennan Gilmore was among hundreds of individuals who gathered in *642Charlottesville, Virginia on August 12, 2017 to protest various white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups participating in the "Unite the Right" rally. As Gilmore recorded footage of protestors that afternoon, he captured James Alex Fields, Jr. driving into a crowd, killing Heather Heyer and injuring approximately thirty-six others. Gilmore posted this footage on Twitter, and the video quickly went viral. Gilmore alleges that, in the days after August 12, Defendants published articles and videos falsely portraying him as a "deep state" operative who conspired to orchestrate violence in Charlottesville for political purposes. Gilmore brought suit in this Court against Defendants for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED).
Defendants move to dismiss on multiple grounds. Various defendants move to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), arguing that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction. All defendants move to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(2), asserting that this Court cannot exercise personal jurisdiction over any defendant. All defendants contend under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) that Gilmore fails to state claims against them for either defamation or IIED.
The Court holds that it can exercise diversity jurisdiction over this action pursuant to
PARTIES
Gilmore brings claims for defamation and IIED against eleven defendants. The parties' alleged identities and roles are outlined below.
I. Plaintiff Brennan Gilmore ("Gilmore")
Gilmore is domiciled in Albemarle County, Virginia. (Am. Comp.
II. Defendant Scott Creighton ("Creighton")
Creighton is domiciled in Tampa, Florida, and is the owner and author of the website American Everyman.
III. Defendant James Hoft ("Hoft")
Domiciled in St. Louis, Missouri, Hoft is the owner and author of the website Gateway *643Pundit. (Am. Comp. ¶ 20; dkt. 47-3 at 2). On August 14, 2017, Hoft wrote and published an article entitled "Random Man at Protests Interviewed by MSNBC, NY Times Is Deep State Shill Linked to George Soros " on the Gateway Pundit website. (Id. ).
IV. Defendant Lee Stranahan ("Stranahan")
On August 15, 2017, Stranahan appeared alongside Defendant Lee Ann McAdoo in a video posted on InfoWars.com entitled "Bombshell Connection Between Charlottesville, Soros, CIA. " (Am. Comp. ¶ 17; dkt. 29-6). A former employee of Breitbart News , Stranahan currently operates The Populist , a "political journalism" website. (Am. Comp. ¶ 17). Stranahan is also allegedly an employee of RT , a Russian television network that recently registered with the Department of Justice as a foreign agent. (Id. ). Gilmore alleges that Stranahan is domiciled in Dallas, Texas but temporarily lives and works in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, "conduct[ing] business" from a "shared workspace in Arlington, Virginia." (Id. ). Stranahan is the only defendant who disputes that he is domiciled outside of Virginia. (Dkt. 47 at 8-9).
V. Defendant Lee Ann Fleissner, a.k.a. Lee Ann McAdoo ("McAdoo")
McAdoo is domiciled in Sarasota, Florida, and works as an independent contractor and reporter for Free Speech Systems, LLC, in which capacity she "produce[s] content for Infowars." (Am. Comp. ¶ 18; dkt. 57-3 at 1). On August 15, 2017, McAdoo authored an article posted on the InfoWars website entitled "Bombshell Connection Between Charlottesville, Soros, CIA. " (Am. Comp. ¶ 18; dkt. 29-6). The article included a video "produced" by McAdoo of the same title, featuring McAdoo interviewing Stranahan. (Am. Comp. ¶ 18; dkt. 57-3 at 1).
VI. Defendants Alex Jones ("Jones"), InfoWars, LLC ("InfoWars"), and Free Speech Systems, LLC ("Free Speech Systems")
Domiciled in Austin, Texas, Jones is the owner and publisher of the InfoWars website, as well as the host of associated radio and web-based shows. (Am. Comp. ¶ 14; dkt. 57-1 at 1). InfoWars is a Texas limited liability company (LLC) operating as the website InfoWars.com. (Am. Comp. ¶ 15). InfoWars "presents itself as a news media outlet" and "funds its work by the sale of various dietary supplements on its online store." (Id. ¶¶ 123-24). Free Speech Systems is a related Texas LLC that operates InfoWars.com and The Alex Jones Channel on YouTube.
Gilmore alleges that these defendants published defamatory statements about him in the August 15, 2017 article authored by McAdoo and the accompanying video featuring McAdoo and Stranahan. (Id. ¶¶ 16, 83). Jones allegedly posted the article text and video on his YouTube channel and Twitter account. (Id. ¶¶ 87-88). Gilmore asserts that these defendants also *644published defamatory statements in a video Jones produced entitled "Breaking: State Department/CIA Orchestrated Charlottesville Tragedy. " (Id. ¶ 102; dkt. 57-1). This video was posted on InfoWars.com and The Alex Jones Channel on YouTube. (Am. Comp. ¶ 102).
VII. Defendants Allen B. West ("West"), Derrick Wilburn ("Wilburn"), Michele Hickford ("Hickford"), and Words-N-Ideas, LLC ("Words-N-Ideas")
West, a former congressman and regular contributor to Fox News, is domiciled in Dallas, Texas. (Am. Comp. ¶ 21; dkt. 59-1 at 1). Gilmore alleges that West owns the Allen B. West website,
FACTS AS ALLEGED
Gilmore, in "his personal capacity," was among the many "peaceful counter-protestors" who gathered in Charlottesville, Virginia on August 12, 2017 "in opposition" to the Unite the Right rally. (Am. Comp. ¶ 27). The rally was organized by various white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups as a response to the Charlottesville City Council's decision to remove a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee from a city park and change that park's name from "Lee Park" to "Emancipation Park." (Id. ¶¶ 25-26). Gilmore captured footage of James Alex Fields, Jr. driving into a crowd of protestors, and shared this video on Twitter to show that the attack was "deliberate" and "to help convince the public to stay off the streets." (Id. ¶¶ 29-32).
Soon after sharing this footage, Gilmore received interview requests from local, national, and international media outlets. (Id. ¶ 33). Between August 12 and 13, 2017, Gilmore spoke with multiple outlets "to provide an eyewitness account." (Id. ¶ 34). Gilmore did not solicit these interview requests "or ask media outlets to share his video." (Id. ¶ 35). Defendants published articles and videos containing statements about Gilmore between August 13, 2017 (the publication date of Creighton's article and video) and August 21, 2017 (the publication date of Jones's video). (Id. ¶¶ 37-144). Gilmore alleges that these publications falsely portray him as "a 'Deep State operative' who helped orchestrate the violence in Charlottesville." (Id. ¶ 150).
After Defendants' publications appeared online, Gilmore allegedly "became the subject of a barrage of harassing and threatening messages that made him fear for his personal safety as well as the safety of his family members." (Id. ). Gilmore describes disturbances such as attempted hacks into his online accounts, the posting of his parents' address online, a confrontation with a *645disgruntled stranger on the street, and the mailing of an unknown chemical substance to his parents' home. (Id. ¶¶ 154, 157-63). As a result of stress related to these disturbances, Gilmore has been diagnosed with a medical condition causing a loss of vision in his right eye, and has experienced "exacerbated" symptoms of depression. (Id. ¶¶ 181-83).
Defendants' publications have also allegedly harmed Gilmore professionally. Gilmore claims that his company has lost potential clients and partners, and that he "may need to remove himself altogether from the company's client-facing work" to prevent harm to the business. (Id. ¶ 187). Gilmore asserts that it will be "difficult" for him to serve as a diplomat if he returns to the State Department due to the reputational harm inflicted by Defendants' publications, and claims that "government officials who have endorsed Defendants' lies" would "likely" seek to "oust him from government service entirely." (Id. ¶¶ 188-89).
ANALYSIS
Defendants move to dismiss on three grounds. First, some defendants move to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), arguing this Court cannot exercise diversity jurisdiction under
I. Rule 12(b)(1) - The Court's Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Gilmore invokes this Court's diversity jurisdiction pursuant to
A motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) tests a district court's subject matter jurisdiction. Typically, the Court must accept as true all material factual allegations in the complaint and construe the complaint in the plaintiff's favor. See Warth v. Seldin ,
*646Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac R.R. Co. v. United States ,
A. Complete Diversity
Defendants first contend that the parties are not completely diverse because Stranahan, like Gilmore, is a citizen of Virginia, rather than of Texas as Gilmore asserts. (Dkts. 47; 59). To satisfy § 1332(a)'s complete diversity requirement, "the citizenship of every plaintiff must be different from the citizenship of every defendant." Cent. W. Va. Energy Co., Inc. v. Mountain State Carbon, LLC ,
When a party's citizenship "is questioned, a court must make an individualized inquiry relying on certain factors such as voter registration; current residence; the location of real and personal property; location of bank and brokerage accounts; membership in clubs, churches, or other associations; place of employment or business; driver's license and automobile registration; and the state to which a person pays taxes." Scott v. Cricket Commc'ns, LLC ,
In support of their position that Stranahan was domiciled in Virginia at the time this action was filed,
Gilmore counters with evidence that Stranahan is actively registered to vote in Texas, (dkts. 70-1; 70-7); a "skip tracing" report indicating that Stranahan at one point resided at a Texas address and had a Texas driver's license,
The Court finds that Gilmore has established by a preponderance of the evidence that Stranahan was domiciled in Texas at the time this action was filed. Although Stranahan currently rents an apartment in Virginia, (dkt. 47-1), "residency is not sufficient to establish citizenship." Johnson ,
The most compelling evidence of Stranahan's domicile is his place of voter registration. Records from the Secretary of State of Texas show that, at the time this action was filed, Stranahan was actively registered to vote in Texas.
Here, evidence of Stranahan's active voter registration in Texas is particularly weighty because to remain active on Texas's voter rolls, Texas law requires that voters be capable of receiving a non-forwardable renewal certificate mailed by the registrar to the Texas address listed on the voter's last registration application.
*648See
Four additional factors weigh in favor of finding that Stranahan was domiciled in Texas at the time Gilmore filed this action. First, although Stranahan presents W-2 forms indicating his employer withheld Virginia income taxes in 2017, (dkt. 91-2), his statement that he had not actually "filed a Virginia Income Tax Return" but rather "filed for an extension" diminishes the significance of this evidence. (Dkt. 47-1 at 1). Second, Stranahan does not dispute Gilmore's allegation that he solicited payments "via a Pay-Pal account belonging to Stranahan Strategies," which Texas Comptroller records indicate is an inactive Texas LLC.
Third, Stranahan currently rents an apartment in a "We Live/We Work complex" in Arlington, Virginia.
In sum, the Court finds that Gilmore has established by a preponderance of the evidence that Stranahan was domiciled in Texas at the time this action was filed.
B. Amount in Controversy
Defendants Creighton, Hoft, Stranahan, Wilburn, Hickford, and Words-N-Ideas argue that Gilmore fails to allege an amount in controversy in excess of $ 75,000. (Dkt. 46).
"When a plaintiff invokes federal-court jurisdiction, the plaintiff's amount-in-controversy allegation is accepted if made in good faith." Dart Cherokee Basin Operating Co., LLC v. Owens ,
Here, Gilmore alleges defamation per se against Defendants, and seeks "an amount greater than $ 75,000" from each defendant for "presumed damages, as well as actual, reputational, emotional, and professional injuries" suffered as a "direct and proximate" result of Defendants' publications. (See, e.g. , Am. Comp. ¶¶ 214-15, 232). Gilmore also seeks damages "in an amount greater than $ 75,000" from each defendant for his IIED claims, for the "severe emotional distress," physical ailments, and "irreparable damage to his professional reputation" he has experienced as a "result of Defendants' actions." (Id. ¶¶ 289, 293).
With respect to Gilmore's defamation claims, Defendants assert that Gilmore impermissibly "includes harms caused by the wrongful conduct of third parties" (i.e. , individuals not named as defendants who allegedly harassed Gilmore because of Defendants' publications) in his calculation of damages. (Dkt. 47 at 23, 25). Defendants argue that Virginia law does not permit "the wrongful actions of third parties to be included in the calculation of damages at all." (Id. at 23). With respect to Gilmore's IIED claims, Defendants contend that the essence of the harm Gilmore alleges is the "distress" caused by "third parties who are not named as defendants," but that Gilmore fails to allege Defendants "incited" these third parties to harm him under Brandenburg v. Ohio ,
Defendants fail to shoulder their "heavy burden" of establishing the "legal impossibility" of Gilmore's claimed recovery. JTH Tax ,
In sum, the Court finds that it can exercise diversity jurisdiction over this action. Defendants' motions to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1), (dkts. 46; 58), will be denied.
II. Rule 12(b)(2) - Personal Jurisdiction over Defendants
All Defendants except Stranahan
The standard of review for personal jurisdiction issues "varies according to the posture of the case and the evidence that has been presented to the court." Grayson v. Anderson ,
For a court to "assert personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant, two conditions must be satisfied: (1) the exercise of jurisdiction must be authorized under the state's long-arm statute; and (2) the exercise of jurisdiction must comport with the due process requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment."
*651Carefirst of Md., Inc. v. Carefirst Pregnancy Ctrs., Inc. ,
"A court's exercise of jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant comports with due process if the defendant has 'minimum contacts' with the forum, such that to require the defendant to defend its interests in the state 'does not offend the traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.' " Carefirst ,
A. General Personal Jurisdiction
"To establish general jurisdiction, the defendant's activities in the state must have been 'continuous and systematic.' " Carefirst ,
Second, Gilmore contends that these defendants "engage in significant reporting activities in Virginia," citing coverage of a book banning in a Virginia school, events in Chantilly, Virginia, and the Unite the Right rally. (Am. Comp. ¶ 11; dkt. 70 at 25-26). But such "single or isolated items of activities in a state" are not sufficient to subject a defendant to the state's general jurisdiction.
*652Pharmabiodevice Consulting, LLC v. Evans , No. GJH-14-00732,
B. Specific Personal Jurisdiction
Specific personal jurisdiction is "confined to adjudication of issues deriving from, or connected with, the very controversy that establishes jurisdiction." Goodyear Dunlop Tire Operations, S.A. v. Brown ,
In assessing whether Defendants' contacts with Virginia support specific personal jurisdiction, three decisions are particularly salient. In Calder v. Jones ,
The Fourth Circuit has adapted the Calder "effects" test for cases involving online activity in two important decisions.
*653In ALS Scan, Inc. v. Dig. Serv. Consultants, Inc. ,
In Young v. New Haven Advocate ,
Applying this standard in Young , the Fourth Circuit determined that a Virginia court could not exercise specific personal jurisdiction over Connecticut newspapers that published online articles commenting on conditions at a Virginia prison and allegedly defaming Young, a warden at the prison, in the midst of reporting on the "Connecticut prison transfer policy."
In deciding whether to exercise specific personal jurisdiction over Defendants, the Court must ask whether (1) each defendant "manifested an intent to direct their website content" to a "Virginia audience," Young ,
*654whether each defendant's activity "creates, in a person within the State, a potential cause of action" under Virginia law. ALS Scan ,
1. Creighton's American Everyman Article & Video
On August 13, 2017, Creighton published an article on the American Everyman website entitled "Charlottesville Attack, Brennan Gilmore and ... the STOP KONY 2012 Pysop? What. " (Dkt. 29-1).
Gilmore alleges that Creighton posted a video entitled "Charlottesville Attack - Brennan Gilmore: Witness or Accessory " to his YouTube channel on August 13, 2017. (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 46-50). In the video, Creighton allegedly stated: "This guy happens to be on that fucking corner with his camera rolling, watching that car drive by for five seconds, and he's former State Department, and close to Tom Perriello, who is also former State Department obviously, he's got a fucking ax to grind, that's one hell of a goddamn coincidence, and you got to be a special kind of stupid to buy that." (Id. ¶ 14). Creighton also allegedly stated that he was "suggesting" that "someone had foreknowledge[ ] that this event [i.e. , Fields's attack] was going to happen." (Id. ).
Considering the "general thrust" of Creighton's article and video, Young ,
In sum, since Creighton "manifested an intent to direct his website content" at a Virginia audience,
2. Hoft's Gateway Pundit Article
On August 14, 2017, Hoft published an article on The Gateway Pundit website entitled "Random Man at Protests Interviewed by MSNBC, NY Times Is Deep State Shill Linked to George Soros. " (Am. Comp. ¶ 62, dkt. 29-5). Hoft wrote that the "random Charlottesville observer" (i.e. , Gilmore) is a "deep state shill with links to George Soros," and that "[i]t looks like the State Department was involved in Charlottesville rioting and is trying to cover it up." (Dkt. 29-5 at 2, 4). After noting that Gilmore was "Chief of Staff for liberal Rep. Tom Perriel[l]o," Hoft embedded screenshots of articles about Gilmore and Perriello from Augusta Free Press , a news-site covering Waynesboro, Staunton, and Augusta County, Virginia, and the Richmond Times Dispatch. (Id. at 5-8).
Hoft then quoted the following statement, among others, from a Reddit thread: "So the former Chief of Staff for Tom Perriel[l]o who ran in the Virginia gubernatorial election and whose campaign received a ridiculous amount of 'dark money', including $ 380k from George Soros ... also happened to go viral and was interviewed because he just happened to be close to the Charlottesville event." (Id. at 8). Hoft concluded by writing in his own words: "This weekend Brennan Gilmore happened to be in Charlottesville with the rioters. The media knows exactly who he is yet played it off like a casual observer. This is how the Deep State is working with the liberal media to shape [the] narrative and fool the American people." (Id. ).
The Court finds that the "general thrust and content" of Hoft's article was sufficiently targeted at a Virginia audience to warrant the exercise of specific personal jurisdiction over Hoft. Young ,
3. McAdoo & Stranahan's InfoWars Article & Video
On August 15, 2017, InfoWars published an article by McAdoo with an accompanying video on InfoWars.com., both entitled "Bombshell Connection Between Charlottesville, Soros, CIA. " (Am. Comp. ¶ 83; dkt. 29-6). The three-sentence article authored by McAdoo reads as follows: "As demonstrated this weekend, a civil war is brewing in this country, laying the foundation for a violent coup to take out Trump. Soros-funded NGO's have been able to achieve regime change in other countries *657by quite literally teaming up with Neo-nazis and 'moderate' terrorists. Now, investigative reporter Lee Stranahan reveals the same players involved in the Ukraine overthrow are working behind the scenes to oust President Trump." (Dkt. 29-6 at 3).
In the accompanying video, McAdoo interviewed Stranahan about a "deep state coup underway to oust Trump." (Dkt. 122 at 3). Stranahan asserted that "the US sponsored a coup" in the Ukraine "that was funded by [George] Soros" and "set up by the Obama administration." (Id. at 7). Stranahan made several comparisons between this alleged Ukrainian coup and the Unite the Right rally, describing the rally as "an agitation situation like we saw in Ukraine in 2013 and 2014." (Id. at 7, 8, 10). McAdoo made similar comparisons, stating that "these white nationalists in Charlottesville were chanting" the "exact same slogan, the blood and soil" and "had the same tiki torches" as "paid protestors" in the Ukraine, asserting that "we are also seeing those same protestors" in the United States. (Id. at 12). McAdoo later stated that "the media" is "using what's going on in Charlottesville" to "label[ ]" "everyone on the right that doesn't disavow" white nationalists as a "Nazi or a Russian agent." (Id. at 24-25).
Stranahan also discussed Gilmore, describing him as "with the U.S. State Department" and having "worked for a Democratic representative." (Id. at 19). Stranahan and McAdoo then displayed screenshots of Gilmore's Twitter page where Gilmore had posted "a picture of the young woman who was murdered" with the caption "martyr." (Id. at 19-22). Stranahan noted that protestors in Ukraine's Maidan Square also "needed martyrs" or "someone dead," and later stated that "someone really needs to investigate." (Id. at 19). Gilmore alleges that Jones posted this video and the text of McAdoo's article on The Alex Jones Channel on YouTube on August 15, 2017, and shared a link to both on Twitter the same day. (Am. Comp. ¶ 87).
Although this article and video present a closer question than Creighton or Hoft's publications, the Court finds that Gilmore has satisfied his burden of "making a prima facie showing in support of [his] assertion of jurisdiction" over McAdoo, Stranahan, InfoWars, Free Speech Systems, and Jones on the basis of these publications. Universal Leather ,
Thus, the Court concludes that these defendants "manifested an intent" to target a Virginia audience by publishing an article and video focused on the political forces supposedly underlying a Virginia event and a Virginia citizen's role in *658that event.
4. Jones's InfoWars /Alex Jones Channel Video
On August 21, 2017, Jones posted a video entitled "Breaking: State Department/CIA Orchestrated Charlottesville Tragedy " on both his YouTube channel and the InfoWars website.
Jones's video allegedly included commentary about Gilmore, spoken by a narrator while various images of Gilmore were successively displayed, including side-by-side photographs of Gilmore and George Soros. (Id. ). After noting Gilmore's experience with the State Department and Perriello, the narrator framed as "fishy" that "the first man on the scene whose tweet went viral and who was later interviewed on mainstream news as a witness just happened to be a State Department insider with a long history of involvement in psy-ops." (Id. ). The narrator then asserted that Gilmore's "information was suddenly removed from the State Department websites" following his tweet and media appearances, citing this as evidence that the "elites know we're on to them and are trying to cover their tracks." (Id. ).
Here again, the Court finds that this video was sufficiently aimed at a Virginia audience to warrant the exercise of *659specific personal jurisdiction over Jones, InfoWars, and Free Speech Systems. Although neither InfoWars.com nor The Alex Jones Channel has a Virginia-specific focus, Jones's video was exclusively focused on a Virginia event, and a significant portion of the video discussed particular Virginia citizens' alleged roles in that event. The video's title makes clear that the "Charlottesville [t]ragedy" is the focal point of the video. (Dkt. 29-7). As with Hoft and Creighton's publications, Jones's discussion of Perriello further reinforces the video's Virginia-specific focus. And, here again, there are significant distinctions between this video and the facts of ALS Scan and Young. Unlike in Young , Jones's video is exclusively, not tangentially, focused on Virginia residents and a Virginia event. And, unlike the ISP-defendant in ALS Scan , Defendants' involvement with the video here was not passive: Jones produced the video, (dkt. 57-1), and posted it on his YouTube channel and InfoWars.com, which is operated by Free Speech Systems, a company Jones allegedly owns. (Am. Comp. ¶ 16; dkt. 57-2). Accordingly, because Jones, InfoWars, and Free Speech Systems "manifested an intent to direct" this video at a Virginia audience, the Court finds that it can exercise specific personal jurisdiction over these defendants. Young ,
5. Wilburn's Allen B. West Article
On August 19, 2017, Wilburn, Hickford, Words-N-Ideas, and West allegedly published an article authored by Wilburn on the Allen B. West website, entitled "BOMBSHELL: New evidence suggests Charlottesville was a complete SET-UP. " (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 125-26; dkt. 29-8). The article stated that a Charlottesville police officer had "come forward" to "reveal the truth" that "what went down in the city was not only condoned by city governance but was intentional, orchestrated and may have been planned as long ago as May." (Dkt. 29-8 at 2). Wilburn's article quoted material from a YourNewsWire.com article where this officer allegedly said that police "were specifically instructed to bring the radical left and right wing groups together to instigate violence and then told to 'stand down' once violence ensued in a deliberate effort to ignite a race riot." (Id. ). Wilburn wrote that, "if true," this "revelation ... may implicate Mayor Signer [of Charlottesville] and possibly other city officials in the death of a citizen." (Id. at 3).
Wilburn also quoted material from the YourNewsWire.com article about Gilmore, the substance of which appears identical to the commentary about Gilmore in Jones's video, including statements suggesting that Gilmore was one of the "actors in this enormous set-up event," that Gilmore's presence in Charlottesville during the rally was "fishy," that Gilmore is a "State Department insider with a long history of involvement in psy-ops," and that Gilmore was "presented as an accidental witness." (Id. at 6).
The Court finds that Wilburn's article was sufficiently targeted at a Virginia audience to permit the exercise of specific personal jurisdiction over Wilburn, Hickford, and Words-N-Ideas. As with the previously discussed publications, the "general thrust and content" of Wilburn's article is focused on a Virginia event and, in part, on a Virginia citizen's role in that event. Young ,
The Court finds, however, that it cannot exercise specific personal jurisdiction over West. Gilmore does not allege that West authored the article or played any direct role in developing the article's content. Setting aside conclusory allegations that West "published" and "ratified" Wilburn's article, (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 271, 280), Gilmore simply alleges that West owned AllenBWest.com, (id. ¶ 21), and "shared a link to the article" on Twitter.
Gilmore fails to make a prima facie showing that this Court can exercise specific personal jurisdiction over West. Unlike with the other defendants and publications discussed above, Gilmore makes no concrete factual allegation that West played any direct role in writing, editing, or developing Wilburn's article, or that West generally exerted editorial control over AllenBWest.com. Moreover, Gilmore's allegation that West owned the Allen B. West website, (Am. Comp. ¶ 21), is not plausibly pled because the amended complaint includes conflicting and overlapping allegations that Words-N-Ideas was the "purported owner" of the Allen B. West website, and that Hickford was the "managing member and registered agent" of Words-N-Ideas and served as the "editor-in-chief" of the website. (Id. ¶¶ 22-23; dkt. 70 at 61). Because Gilmore's allegation that West owned AllenBWest.com is not plausibly pled, neither are his allegations that Wilburn acted as West's agent or employee in writing the allegedly tortious article. (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 278-81).
Without any plausible, concrete factual allegations that West played a direct role *661in creating, editing, or publishing the article in question, the Court cannot say that West "intentionally direct[ed] Internet activity to Virginia." Young ,
*
In sum, the Court finds that it can exercise diversity jurisdiction over this action, and can exercise specific personal jurisdiction over all defendants except West.
III. Communications Decency Act Immunity
Defendants Hoft, Wilburn, Hickford, and Words-N-Ideas argue that they are immune from suit under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA). (Dkt. 47 at 28-33).
The CDA states that "[n]o provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be" held liable "as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider."
The CDA does not define "what makes a party responsible for the 'development' of content" but courts examine "the totality of the circumstances" to determine whether a party "engage[d] in an act beyond the normal [editorial] functions *662of a publisher (such as deciding to publish, withdraw or modify third party content) that changes the meaning and purpose of the content." Russell ,
Here, Hoft, Wilburn, Hickford, and Words-N-Ideas are either providers or users of "interactive computer services," since each of these defendants either used or provided access to a website with respect to the publications at issue. See Russell ,
Gilmore adequately alleges that Hoft, Wilburn, Hickford, and Words-N-Ideas are "information content providers." Gilmore alleges that both Hoft and Wilburn authored their respective articles, (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 63-64, 126, 134), and both defendants concede this point in sworn declarations. (Dkts. 47-3 at 2; 46-5 at 2). Although Hoft included screenshots from a Reddit thread in his Gateway Pundit article, he contributed significant original content, including a headline, statements about Gilmore, and an assertion that "the State Department was involved in [the] Charlottesville rioting and is trying to cover it up." (Dkt. 29-5 at 1-5, 8). Similarly, although Wilburn quoted a YourNewsWire.com article, Wilburn added an original headline and statements, asserting that the "depth of this conspiracy runs deeper" before quoting material about Signer and Gilmore, and stating that, "if true," the information his article imparts "points directly to the reality of the 'deep state' " and the "lengths that the Soros/Clinton/Obama one-world government cabal will go." (Dkt. 29-8 at 2, 6). Thus, Gilmore adequately alleges that Hoft and Wilburn did more than allow "others' content to be posted or re-posted" but rather "created [at least] some of the defamatory statements" in the articles. Ascend Health Corp. v. Wells , No. 4:12-cv-00083,
With respect to Hickford and Words-N-Ideas, these defendants concede that one theory under which they could be *663held liable for Wilburn's Allen B. West article is that "WNI or Ms. Hickford was Mr. Wilburn's employer." (Dkt. 47 at 40). Gilmore alleges liability under this exact theory. (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 278-79, 281). If either Hickford or Words-N-Ideas was "the creator or developer, in whole or in part, of the content at issue," neither is "entitled to immunity under § 230(c)(1) as to that content." Hare ,
IV. Rule 12(b)(6) - Whether Gilmore States Claims for Defamation and IIED
Defendants move to dismiss Gilmore's claims pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), arguing that Gilmore fails to adequately plead defamation and IIED. (Dkts. 46; 56; 58). A motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) tests the legal sufficiency of a complaint to determine whether a plaintiff has properly stated a claim; it "does not resolve contests surrounding the facts, the merits of a claim, or the applicability of defenses." Republican Party of N.C. v. Martin ,
The Court finds that Gilmore has plausibly alleged sufficient facts to state a claim for defamation against each defendant. However, Gilmore has not adequately pled IIED, and those claims will be dismissed. Before analyzing the adequacy of Gilmore's factual allegations, the Court must first address which state's law applies.
A. Choice of Law - Virginia Law Applies to All Defendants
Defendants Jones, McAdoo, InfoWars, and Free Speech Systems argue that Texas law should apply to Gilmore's claims against them because, they contend, the articles and videos associated with them were published in Texas. (Dkt. 57 at 12). The remaining defendants did not raise any choice of law issue and cited only Virginia law in briefing and at oral argument.
Since this is a diversity action, the Court applies the choice of law principles of Virginia. See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co. ,
The Supreme Court of Virginia has yet to address how the "place of the wrong" should be defined in "situations where the defamatory content is 'published' in multiple jurisdictions," such as on a "website that can be accessed worldwide," or in Internet tort cases involving, as here, multiple defendants and multiple allegedly tortious publications. Kylin Network (Beijing) Movie & Culture Media Co. Ltd. v. Fidlow , No. 3:16-cv-999,
The Court concludes that the Supreme Court of Virginia, if applying lex loci delicti in a multi-defendant, multi-state Internet tort case, would define "the place of the wrong" as the state where the plaintiff is injured as a result of the allegedly tortious content, as opposed to the *665state where publication occurs.
Second, defining the "place of the wrong" as the place of publication in a case like this raises thorny questions about the nature of online publication, a process that does not necessarily occur at one readily identifiable geographic point. The traditional lex loci delicti rule "presumes that the defamatory statement is published (i.e. , communicated to third parties) in one geographic location," but publication via the Internet results in instantaneous "multistate (if not[ ] worldwide) publication." Ascend Health Corp. ,
*666Given the underlying values animating the Supreme Court of Virginia's approach to lex loci delicti and the complexity of online publication, the Court finds that the Supreme Court of Virginia, in extending lex loci delicti to multi-defendant, multi-state Internet tort cases, would define the "place of the wrong" as the state where the plaintiff is primarily injured as a result of the allegedly tortious online content. Here, Gilmore alleges that the brunt of the personal and professional injury he suffered as a result of Defendants' publications occurred in Virginia, where he lives and works. (See, e.g. , Am. Comp. ¶¶ 1-6). Accordingly, the Court will apply Virginia law with respect to all of Gilmore's claims against Defendants.
B. Gilmore's Defamation Claims
Defendants contend under Rule 12(b)(6) that Gilmore fails to state claims for defamation against them. Under Virginia law, the elements of defamation are "(1) publication of (2) an actionable statement with (3) the requisite intent." Choi v. Kyu Chul Lee ,
1. Gilmore Qualifies as a Limited-Purpose Public Figure.
"The requisite intent a plaintiff must prove in a defamation action depends upon the plaintiff's status as a public or private figure." Reynolds v. Pionear , LLC , No. 3:15-cv-209,
Gilmore is presumed to have been a "private individual at the time of publication, subject to defendants' burden of proving" that he was a "public official or a limited-purpose public figure."
In deciding whether a plaintiff qualifies as a limited-purpose public figure, the Court must ask "whether a public controversy gave rise to the defamatory statement[s]" and "whether the plaintiff's participation in that controversy sufficed to establish him as a public figure within the context of that public controversy."
Before assessing whether Defendants satisfy this test, the Court must make the "threshold determination" whether a public controversy gave rise to the alleged defamation and, if so, decide "the scope of the controversy."
Although Gilmore argues that "there was no public controversy" giving rise to Defendants' publications, (dkt. 70 at 50), he effectively concedes that such a controversy existed, stating that "the controversial aspects of the Charlottesville events were the broader questions of white supremacy and the meaning behind the rally and counter-protests." (Id. at 50-51). Given this statement, and having reviewed Defendants' publications, the Court concludes that a public controversy about the meaning underlying the Unite the Right rally and associated counter-protests gave rise to Defendants' publications. Although Defendants' statements regarding a "deep state" conspiracy to orchestrate violence in Charlottesville were not themselves the subject of a genuine public controversy, "it would be inappropriate to shrink all controversies to the specific statements of which a plaintiff complains." Eramo ,
The Court next asks whether Gilmore's "participation" in this controversy "sufficed to establish him as a public figure within the context of that public controversy." Carr ,
First, Gilmore plainly "had access to channels of effective communication."
With respect to the second and third factors, Defendants have established that Gilmore "voluntarily assumed a role of special prominence in the public controversy" and "sought to influence the resolution" of the controversy. Foretich ,
*669Hatfill v. The New York Times Co. ,
The fourth and fifth factors are also satisfied here. The controversy about the rally's underlying meaning "existed prior to the publication" of Defendants' articles and videos.
In sum, the Court finds that Gilmore qualifies as a limited public figure and must therefore allege that Defendants published their allegedly defamatory articles and videos with actual malice. The Court now turns to whether Gilmore adequately alleges that Defendants' publications were actionable and published with the requisite intent.
*6702. Gilmore Adequately Alleges that Defendants' Publications are Actionable and were Published with Actual Malice.
To survive Defendants' motion to dismiss, Gilmore must plausibly allege that Defendants published "actionable statement[s]" with actual malice. Choi ,
The First Amendment "provides protection for statements that cannot 'reasonably [be] interpreted as stating actual facts' about an individual." CACI Premier Tech., Inc. v. Rhodes ,
However, "a defamatory charge need not be made in direct terms; it may be made by inference, implication, or insinuation." Perk v. Vector Res. Grp., Ltd. ,
Statements of opinion-defined as statements that are "relative in nature and depend largely upon the speaker's viewpoint"-are "generally not actionable because such statements cannot be objectively characterized as true or false[.]" Jordan ,
"Whether a statement is an actionable statement of fact or non-actionable opinion is a matter of law to be determined by the court." Jordan ,
As a limited-purpose public figure, Gilmore must also allege that Defendants published their statements with actual malice. A statement is published with actual malice where a defendant has "knowledge that it was false" or acts with "reckless disregard of whether it was false or not." New York Times Co. ,
"[C]onclusory allegation[s]" and "mere recitation[s]" of the actual malice standard are insufficient. Mayfield v. Nat'l Ass'n for Stock Car Auto Racing, Inc. ,
i. Creighton's American Everyman Article & Video
Gilmore alleges that Creighton's August 13, 2017 American Everyman article "falsely implies his knowledge of and participation in Fields'[s] attack" by asserting "as a fact" that "Gilmore's presence during the car attack was due to his foreknowledge that the attack would happen." (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 39-43). Creighton allegedly wrote the following:
Not only did [Gilmore] HAPPEN to be at the right place at the right time, but he was ALREADY recording with his camera and it was focused on that car, *672for SOME REASON as it drove by the corner at a reasonable rate.... But Brennan wasn't filming [other cars in front of Fields's car] was he? No. But he did film the Charger heading all the way down the street into the crowd of protestors ... almost as if he knew it would run into them rather than simply brake and sit and wait like the other cars in front of it. Again, not a smoking gun in and of itself, but when combined with all the other coincidences surrounding his video PLUS the fact that he was ready to go with the divide and conquer establishment version of events for CNN while people were still lying on the hot pavement, it kind of makes you wonder, doesn't it? [...]
[I]s it possible this man with links to Special Ops and CIA and various other black ops kinds of actors just HAPPENED to be there at a particular moment in history? Yeah, I guess that's possible, if you're into coincidence theories I suppose. But I'm not into such things. Clearly the State Department has a lot of disgruntled former employees who would delight in destabilizing Trump's tenure even more than they already have. And Gilmore, like Tom [Perriello], seem[s] particularly invested in undermining the 'alt-right' in the lead-up to the next round of elections. Waaaaaay too much coincidence for me folks. Waaaaaay too much.
(Id. ¶ 38; dkt. 29-1 at 4, 9).
Creighton allegedly made similar statements about Gilmore in his August 13, 2017 American Everyman video, stating the following:
[Gilmore] just happened to be there, at the specific place, where he could film the whole thing ... He just happened to have his camera running, he just happened for some reason to record this car driving for five seconds, before it did anything out of the ordinary, and just happened to have the right message, just the right establishment message for CNN.... [Gilmore] has ties to special operations, special forces, CIA, State Department, Hillary Clinton, and Tom Perriello, who has a long career of doing this kind of thing. People will call me a conspiracy theorist because what I am suggesting here is that someone had foreknowledge, that this event was going to happen.... This man has every reason to want to see the support, the base for Donald Trump again mischaracterized as Nazis.... This guy just happens to be on that fucking corner with his camera rolling, watching that car drive by for five seconds, and he's former State Department, and close to Tom Perriello, who is also former State Department obviously, he's got a fucking ax to grind, that's one hell of a goddamn coincidence, and you got to be a special kind of stupid to buy that."
(Am. Comp. ¶ 46).
Gilmore plausibly alleges that Creighton's statements about him were false, defamatory, and published with actual malice. Creighton's statements in both the article and video are "reasonably capable of conveying the defamatory innuendo" that Gilmore filmed Fields's attack because he had foreknowledge of the attack and as part of an effort to use the rally to undermine President Trump and the "alt-right." Pendleton v. Newsome ,
Moreover, Gilmore plausibly alleges that Creighton's statements were defamatory. Creighton's insinuation that Gilmore had foreknowledge of a violent attack and filmed it for clandestine political purposes is precisely the sort of factual assertion that would tend to "harm the reputation of another as to lower him in the estimation of the community," "deter third persons from associating" with him, and make him "appear odious" or "infamous." Choi ,
Finally, Gilmore's allegations are sufficient at this stage to create a "plausible inference" that Creighton published his statements with actual malice.
In sum, the Court finds that Gilmore plausibly alleges that Creighton's statements in the American Everyman article and video are actionable and were published with actual malice. Accordingly, Creighton's *674motion to dismiss Gilmore's defamation claim will be denied.
ii. Hoft's Gateway Pundit Article
Gilmore alleges that Hoft's August 14, 2017 Gateway Pundit article "asserts unequivocally" that he is a " 'deep state shill' who is part of the State Department's attempt to cover up its involvement in instigating the attack in Charlottesville." (Am. Comp. ¶ 63). Under the headline "Random Man at Protests Interviewed by MSNBC, NY Times is Deep State Shill Linked to George Soros ," Hoft allegedly wrote: "The random Charlottesville observer who was interviewed by MSNBC and liberal outlets turns out to be a deep state shill with links to George Soros. It looks like the State Department was involved in Charlottesville rioting and is trying to cover it up. But after Deep State got caught they are trying to erase this guy from their records." (Dkt. 29-5 at 2). "[R]epublishing screenshots" from a Reddit thread "to bolster his claims," (Am. Comp. ¶ 63), Hoft asserted that the State Department "later removed any reference of Brennan" from its websites. (Dkt. 29-5 at 4-5). After noting that Gilmore worked for Tom Perriello and that Perriello was "given $ 385,000" from George Soros, Hoft wrote: "This weekend Brennan Gilmore happened to be in Charlottesville with the rioters. The media knows exactly who he is yet played it off like a casual observer. This is how the Deep State is working with the liberal media to shape [the] narrative and fool the American people." (Id. at 8).
Gilmore plausibly alleges that Hoft's statements were false, defamatory, and published with actual malice. The headline, lede, and original content of Hoft's article "contain a provably false factual connotation" that the State Department was "involved in" orchestrating violence in Charlottesville, that Gilmore was not a "casual observer" but rather a "deep state shill"
Moreover, Gilmore adequately alleges that Hoft's statements about him were defamatory. (Am. Comp. ¶ 71). Hoft's insinuation that Gilmore's presence at the rally was part of a nefarious "deep state" effort to orchestrate rioting and mislead the public would naturally "tend to harm" Gilmore's reputation and "deter third persons from associating" with him. Eramo ,
Lastly, Gilmore adequately alleges that Hoft published these statements with actual *675malice. Gilmore alleges that Hoft "did not reach out" to him "for comment" and "relied entirely on screenshots from an anonymous, disreputable Reddit post as his 'research'." (Am Comp. ¶¶ 72-74). Citing examples of previous articles by Hoft "similarly claiming that the 'Deep State' is attempting to plan a coup to oust President Trump" and that "State Department employees have worked together to overthrow governments," Gilmore alleges that Hoft "invent[ed] a nefarious role and identity" for him "to promote this preconceived narrative." (Id. ¶¶ 79-80, n.44). Taken together, these factual allegations are sufficiently concrete to create a "plausible inference" that Hoft published his statements with actual malice. Spirito ,
In sum, Gilmore adequately alleges that Hoft's statements are actionable and were published with actual malice. Hoft's motion to dismiss Gilmore's defamation claim against him will be denied.
iii. McAdoo's InfoWars Article & Video with Stranahan
Gilmore alleges that the August 15, 2017 InfoWars article authored by McAdoo and accompanying video featuring McAdoo and Stranahan falsely "imply an assertion of fact" that his presence in Charlottesville "was not coincidental" but was due to his "participation in Soros-and government-staged violence in Charlottesville." (Am. Comp. ¶ 85). In her brief article introducing the video, McAdoo wrote: "As demonstrated this weekend, a civil war is brewing in this country, laying the foundation for a violent coup to take out Trump. Soros-funded NGO's have been able to achieve regime change in other countries.... Now, investigative reporter Lee Stranahan reveals the same players involved in the Ukraine overthrow are working behind the scenes to oust President Trump." (Dkt. 29-6). In the video, McAdoo stated that there is a "deep state coup underway to oust Trump," and Stranahan asserted that George Soros and the Obama administration "sponsored a coup" in Ukraine. (Dkt. 122 at 3, 6). McAdoo and Stranahan connected this supposed Ukrainian coup to the Unite the Right rally, stating that the "white nationalists in Charlottesville" chanted the "exact same slogan" as "paid protestors" in the Ukraine and used "the same tiki torches." (Id. at 12).
After describing Gilmore as a State Department employee and "the guy who happened to catch that shot" of Fields's attack, Stranahan spoke about Gilmore while "scenes of violent riots ... from Oliver Stone's 'Ukraine On Fire ' film play[ed]" and McAdoo "scrolled through Gilmore's Twitter page." (Id. at 19; Am. Comp. ¶ 84). Stranahan and McAdoo stated:
STRANAHAN: [I]n the Maidan [in Ukraine], they needed martyrs. See, they need someone dead.... If you go to Brennan Gilmore's page, his Twitter page, you'll see he has a picture of the young woman who was murdered [in Charlottesville], and you know what it says? 'Martyr.'
McADOO: Wow.
STRANAHAN: Literally it says, 'martyr.' You can't be more explicit than this.... I'm a fact-based journalist. The facts are enough. However, the Democrats have investigated Trump for a lot less.... I think someone really needs to investigate. Again, I don't like to jump to conclusions, I'd like to ask some questions about who this kid was, where he came from, what do we know, get it all out in the open.... [I]f you look at this guy's bio, it says that he was with the State Department. And the fact that he called her a martyr, again, I don't *676know49 .... This is clearly the way she's being used, is she is a martyr to the cause.
McADOO: Right.
(Am. Comp. ¶ 84; dkt. 122 at 19-22).
Gilmore adequately alleges that Stranahan and McAdoo's statements about him were false, defamatory, and published with actual malice. Stranahan and McAdoo's statements in the article and video are "reasonably capable of conveying the defamatory innuendo" that Gilmore was one of the "players" involved in a Ukrainian coup now using the Unite the Right rally to frame Heather Heyer as a "martyr" and "oust President Trump." Pendleton ,
Furthermore, Gilmore adequately alleges that McAdoo and Stranahan's statements are defamatory. The innuendo about Gilmore described above would "tend to harm" his reputation and deter others from "dealing with him." Eramo ,
Finally, Gilmore alleges actual malice in sufficient factual detail to withstand a motion to dismiss. Gilmore plausibly alleges that neither McAdoo, Stranahan, nor any representative of InfoWars or Free Speech Systems ever "reach[ed] out" for comment or confirmation. (Am. Comp. ¶ 94). Moreover, Gilmore plausibly alleges that Defendants attempted to "fit [him] into [a] preexisting narrative." (Id. ¶ 99). Citing specific examples, Gilmore alleges that Jones, InfoWars, and Free Speech Systems have published similar content "claiming that previous national tragedies were 'false flags' and 'inside jobs' created by the government to push a leftist agenda." (Id. ¶¶ 98, n.56; 164-167). Similarly, Gilmore cites a video Stranahan posted on Twitter two days before the InfoWars video was published, in which Stranahan allegedly asserted that "the Charlottesville tragedy was a part of a coordinated plan by the CIA and the left to undermine the Trump administration through violent protests." (Id. ¶ 98, n.57). These allegations are adequate at this stage to create at *677least a "plausible inference" of actual malice. Spirito ,
In sum, Gilmore states claims for defamation against McAdoo, Stranahan, Jones,
iv. Jones's InfoWars Video
Gilmore alleges that Jones's August 21, 2017 InfoWars video falsely states "an assertion of fact" that Gilmore "participated in a State Department/CIA operation to stage the violence and Fields'[s] car attack in Charlottesville." (Am. Comp. ¶ 109). Jones allegedly stated:
I did research, and I confirmed it all. They had known CIA and State Department officials in Charlottesville, first tweeting, first being out on MSNBC, CNN, NBC. The mayor is involved. Everybody is a cut-out.... They got State Department and high-level CIA. One guy is paid $ 320,000 a year on the payroll of [George] Soros. He doesn't just get money from Soros, he personally is paid 320 a year, ... [A]nd he is on the news. And when people pointed out who he was, they took his name of[f] the State Department website ... I mean it's like WOW, WOW-CIA? Your senior guys? And you're so stupid on TV, 'oh I saw 'm run over, I saw the racists, I saw the white supremacists attack, oh I'm the guy being interviewed first putting out the talking points'.... He worked for Podesta too, John Podesta. I'll give you his name and stuff, we're gonna play a video of him on the news. They had him first on every news cast ... I'm just [a] witness standing here ... formerly worked for Obama, Podesta, Hillary, the CIA ...
(Id. ¶ 104).
Gilmore alleges that the video "then cuts to a narration of the alleged testimony" of an anonymous Charlottesville police officer who claims that "the violent clashes [at the rally] were 'set up to further the agenda of the elites.' " (Id. ). Telling viewers to "wait 'til you hear about the other actors in this enormous set-up event," the narrator allegedly said the following as images of Gilmore alone and alongside pictures of George Soros were displayed:
[T]he first man in the scene whose tweet went viral and who was later interviewed on mainstream news as a witness just happened to be a State Department insider with a long history of involvement in psy-ops? If you think that isn't fishy, how about this? Since the Charlottesville protest, and his appearance in the media, his information was suddenly removed from the State Department websites. The elites know we're on to them and are trying to cover their tracks.
(Id. ¶¶ 104-05).
Here again, Gilmore adequately alleges that the above statements-some uttered by Jones, some by a "narrator" in a video Jones produced and published-were false, defamatory, and published with actual malice. Jones's video conveys the "provably false factual connotation" that, as the title states, "the State Department/CIA [o]rchestrated" the "Charlottesville [t]ragedy," and that Gilmore was an "actor" or "cut-out" in this "set-up event." Eramo ,
Gilmore also adequately alleges that the statements about him in Jones's video were defamatory. (Am. Comp. ¶ 71). Jones's insinuation that Gilmore was a "cut out" helping to "orchestrate" violence would tend to "lower him in the estimation of the community" and deter others from "dealing with him." Eramo ,
Finally, Gilmore plausibly alleges that Jones, InfoWars, and Free Speech Systems published this video with actual malice. Gilmore asserts that neither Jones nor any other representative of InfoWars or Free Speech Systems "reach[ed] out to" him for comment or confirmation. (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 115-16). Moreover, Gilmore alleges that Defendants "twisted" elements of his personal and professional history to fit a pre-conceived narrative that "Charlottesville was a Soros-funded false-flag operation." (Id. ¶ 121). In support of this allegation, Gilmore provides links to four InfoWars publications
In sum, Gilmore plausibly alleges that statements about him in Jones's video were false, defamatory, and published with actual malice. His defamation claims against Jones, InfoWars, and Free Speech Systems will therefore survive.
v. Wilburn's Allen B. West Article
Gilmore alleges that Wilburn's August 19, 2017 article "impl[ies] a clear assertion *679of fact" that Gilmore "participated in a 'deep state'-Soros conspiracy to stage the violence in Charlottesville." (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 130, 134). Wilburn wrote that a Charlottesville police officer "reveal[ed] the truth-or at least his version of it-that what went down in the city was not only condoned by city governance but was intentional, orchestrated, and may have been planned as long ago as May." (Dkt. 29-8 at 2). Noting in his own words that the "depth of this conspiracy runs deeper," Wilburn then quoted this officer's statements as they appeared in a "YourNewsWire.com" article. This quoted material mirrors the language attributed to the officer in Jones's video, including statements that Gilmore was an "actor" in a "set-up event" and that "his information was suddenly removed from State Department websites." (Id. at 6). Following this quoted material, Wilburn wrote: "We need to clarify that these are early accounts and as yet unverified, but if true this is very, very serious stuff. It points directly to the reality of the 'deep state' and ... to the lengths that the Soros/Clinton/Obama one-world government cabal will go in order to realize their desires for 'fundamental transformation.' " (Id. ).
Gilmore adequately alleges that Wilburn's article contains false and defamatory innuendo about him and was published with actual malice. "[L]ibel-by-implication claims are fraught with subtle complexities, requiring courts to be vigilant not to allow an implied defamatory meaning be manufactured from words not reasonably capable of sustaining such a meaning." Jenkins v. Snyder , No. 00-cv-2150,
The article's title implies that it contains "evidence suggest[ing]" that the events in Charlottesville were a "complete set-up," priming readers to expect truthful reporting on nefarious dynamics underlying the rally. (Dkt. 29-8 at 2; Am. Comp. ¶ 125). Additionally, Wilburn introduced the alleged officer's statements about Gilmore by stating that "the depth of this conspiracy runs deeper," implying that Gilmore was part of a "conspiracy" surrounding the rally and that the officer had some factual basis for referring to Gilmore as an "actor" in a "set-up event." (Dkt. 29-8 at 5-6). Considered in their full context, these statements are "reasonably capable of conveying the defamatory innuendo" Gilmore alleges. Pendleton , 772 S.E.2d at 765.
For several reasons, the Court's conclusion is not altered by Wilburn's statements that the alleged officer's comments were "his version" of "the truth," that the officer's "account[ ]" was "as yet unverified," and that it would be "serious stuff" "if true." (Dkt. 29-8 at 2, 6). First, Wilburn contradicted these disclaimers by introducing the officer's statements about Gilmore as evidence of a "conspiracy" of considerable "depth," (id. at 5), and by stating that the officer's account "points directly to the reality of the 'deep state' " and the lengths "the Soros/Clinton/Obama one-world government cabal" will go to achieve "fundamental transformation." (Id. at 6). Second, Wilburn's "careful choice of words" does not immunize him from defamation claims stemming from an article otherwise containing "defamatory innuendo." Pendleton , 772 S.E.2d at 764-65. Virginia law imposes no requirement that a "defendant's words must, by themselves, suggest that the author *680intends or endorses the allegedly defamatory inference." Id. The Supreme Court of Virginia has rejected such a requirement because to embrace it would "immunize one who intentionally defames another by a careful choice of words to ensure that they state no falsehoods if read out of context but convey a defamatory innuendo in the circumstances in which they were uttered." Id. See also Carwile ,
For the same reasons discussed above with respect to Defendants' other publications, Gilmore also adequately alleges that this false innuendo "is reasonably capable of the defamatory meaning [he] ascribes to it." Webb ,
Lastly, Gilmore plausibly alleges that Wilburn, Hickford, and Words-N-Ideas published statements about him with actual malice. Gilmore asserts that these defendants never "reach[ed] out to" him for comment or confirmation, and never "verified" the "veracity" of the alleged police officer's account. (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 128, 131, 137). These factual allegations are concrete: Gilmore can speak directly to whether these defendants ever contacted him, and the article states that the officer is "as-yet unidentified" and that the officer's remarks were "unverified." (Dkt. 28-9 at 2, 6). These statements support a plausible inference that Defendants failed to follow "journalistic standards" and repeated "another's words" they knew to be either "false or inherently improbable." Eramo ,
In sum, Gilmore states claims for defamation against Wilburn, Hickford, and Words-N-Ideas. Defendants' motion to dismiss Gilmore's defamation claims will be denied.
C. Gilmore's IIED Claims
Defendants next argue under Rule 12(b)(6) that Gilmore fails to state claims for IIED against them. (Dkts. 46; 56). To state a claim for IIED under Virginia law, a plaintiff must allege that (1) "the wrongdoer's conduct is intentional or reckless"; (2) "the conduct is outrageous and intolerable"; (3) "the alleged wrongful conduct and emotional distress are causally connected"; and (4) "the distress is severe." Russo v. White ,
To satisfy the second prong, a plaintiff must show that the defendant's "conduct has been so outrageous, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community." Russo ,
Similarly, Gilmore sufficiently alleges that Defendants' conduct "proximately caused" his emotional distress. Almy v. Grisham ,
Nevertheless, the Court finds that Gilmore has not alleged distress of sufficient severity to sustain IIED claims against Defendants. Under Virginia law, liability for IIED "arises only when the emotional distress is extreme, and only where the distress inflicted is so severe that no reasonable person could be expected to endure it." Russo ,
Third, a significant portion of the distress Gilmore alleges is of a speculative nature. For instance, Gilmore alleges that he "may need to remove himself altogether" from his company's client-facing work but does not allege that he has actually been forced to do so. (Id. ¶ 187 (emphasis added) ). Likewise, Gilmore claims that if he returns to the State Department, it will be "exceedingly difficult" for him to work as a diplomat abroad, but Gilmore does not allege that he has actually attempted to *682return to the State Department as a diplomat and been denied a role serving in this capacity. (Id. ¶ 88). Additionally, Gilmore alleges that "[i]f [he] is able to return to the State Department, it is likely that government officials" who have "suggested that the government needs to be purged of so-called 'Deep State' actors" will "work to harm [his] career or oust him from government service entirely." (Id. ¶¶ 188-189 (emphasis added) ). But, here again, Gilmore alleges speculative future harm.
In sum, the Court finds that Gilmore fails to allege distress of sufficient severity to support IIED claims against Defendants under Virginia law. These claims will be dismissed.
V. Defendants' Motions for Immunity & Attorneys' Fees under § 8.01-223.2
Defendants move for immunity and attorneys' fees under Va. Code § 8.01-223.2. (Dkts. 46; 56; 58). Section 8.01-223.2 provides that "[a] person shall be immune from civil liability" for a "claim of defamation based solely on statements ... regarding matters of public concern that would be protected under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution made by that person that are communicated to a third party." However, immunity does not apply "to any statements made with actual or constructive knowledge that they are false or with reckless disregard for whether they are false."
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that it has subject matter jurisdiction over this action pursuant to
An appropriate order will issue.
"Am. Comp." denotes Gilmore's amended complaint. (Dkt. 29).
The link to the American Everyman website Gilmore provides is no longer functional due to the website's suspension for "a violation of [WordPress.com's] Terms of Service." (Am. Comp. ¶ 19, n.13).
Since the events giving rise to this lawsuit, The Alex Jones Channel has been suspended by YouTube and is no longer accessible.
The link Gilmore provides to the Allen B. West website is not functional due to website "construction." (Am. Comp. ¶ 21, n.19).
West also moves to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1), arguing that the parties are not completely diverse. (Dkt. 59 at 5-6).
Gilmore filed suit on March 13, 2018. (Dkt. 1). The amended complaint was filed on April 24, 2018. (Dkt. 29). Gilmore has established by a preponderance of the evidence that Stranahan was domiciled in Texas on both of these dates.
Stranahan also presents affidavits from individuals who registered to vote in one state, moved to another state, and never took steps to remove themselves from the voter rolls of the state in which they formerly resided. (Dkt. 47-7-14). These affidavits have no bearing on Stranahan's domicile. A majority of the affidavits are not from individuals who were previously registered to vote in the state of Texas. The two affidavits from individuals who were once registered to vote in Texas and never took affirmative steps to remove themselves from Texas's voter rolls do not state whether their voter registration status remained active in Texas following their inaction. (Dkts. 47-7; 47-13). Thus, these affidavits are of no value to the Court.
According to Gilmore, "skip tracing" is the "act of discovering the current location ... of an individual who has 'skipped' town." (Dkt. 70 at 8, n.4). "[S]kip tracers consult public records databases and other information to determine an individual's current and past addresses and contact information." (Id. ). The Court finds it unnecessary to consider or rely on this report.
Defendants argue that the Court cannot consider these records because they are not properly authenticated and thus not admissible evidence. (Dkt. 91 at 10). This argument fails, as these records are admissible under Federal Rule of Evidence (FRE) 902(1) as a self-authenticating domestic public document and under FRE 803(8) as a public record.
District courts in this circuit consistently treat voter registration and voting as particularly important in deciding a party's domicile. See, e.g., Welles v. Aamodt , No. 5:15-cv-613,
Specifically, "[o]n or after November 15 but before December 6 of each odd-numbered year," Texas county voting registrars mail a renewal certificate "to the mailing address on the voter's registration application."
These records are admissible under FRE 803(8) as a public record.
Stranahan provided his address, (dkt. 33-1), and Gilmore provided a link to the We Live/We Work website showing a We Live/We Work complex at this address. (Dkt. 70 at 21). The Court takes judicial notice of this fact pursuant to FRE 201(b)(2).
Both of Stranahan's declarations indicate they were signed in 2017, a year before this action and the declarations themselves were filed. (Dkts. 47-1; 91-1). Although this appears to be a typographical error, it is not an insignificant one, and it further compounds confusion on the subject of Stranahan's domicile when this action was filed in 2018.
Stranahan's counsel stated during oral argument that Stranahan had no family in Texas. But when pressed about where Stranahan's wife resided at the time this action was filed, counsel stated he did not know because he had never asked his client, calling into question how counsel could state so unequivocally just moments earlier that Stranahan had no family in Texas.
In finding that Stranahan was domiciled in Texas, the Court finds it unnecessary to consider or rely on the "skip tracing" report, (dkt. 70-2), the screenshot of Stranahan's Facebook page stating that he lives in Dallas, Texas, (dkt. 70-3), or records indicating that Stranahan's wife is registered to vote in Texas, (dkt. 70-4).
To support their arguments regarding Gilmore's defamation claims, Defendants rely on an overruled Virginia Supreme Court opinion and a district court opinion interpreting Arizona law. (Dkt. 47 at 24-25). To support their contention regarding Gilmore's IIED claims, Defendants rely on a single out-of-circuit district court decision. See Wilson v. Midway Games, Inc. ,
Stranahan did not move to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(2), and thus has waived that defense. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(h)(1). Nonetheless, analysis of whether the Court can exercise personal jurisdiction over other defendants, namely McAdoo and Words-N-Ideas, necessarily yields analysis of whether the Court can exercise personal jurisdiction over Stranahan. The Court concludes that, although Stranahan has waived the defense, it can properly exercise specific personal jurisdiction over him.
The Court need not parse whether Stranahan's residence in Virginia is sufficient to support general personal jurisdiction because Stranahan has waived any personal jurisdiction defense and because the Court can exercise specific personal jurisdiction over Stranahan.
Gilmore also avers that Jones's radio show airs on the "Virginia affiliate stations" of the "Genesis Communication Network," which "publishes content to Virginians." (Am. Comp. ¶ 10). Although the Court doubts these contacts are "so continuous and systematic as to render" Jones "essentially at home" in Virginia, the Court need not decide this question because it can exercise specific personal jurisdiction over Jones. Daimler AG ,
Defendants' characterization of Calder as merely a "34-year-old, pre-Internet ruling" is off-base. (Dkt. 90 at 7). Calder -although adapted for cases involving online activity-remains binding Supreme Court precedent. Both ALS Scan and Young cite Calder as a viable precedent. See ALS Scan, Inc. v. Dig. Serv. Consultants, Inc. ,
Defendants suggest that the dispositive factor in Young was that the websites did not "contain[ ] advertisements aimed at a Virginia audience." (Dkt. 57 at 11). No single factor was determinative in Young , and the reasoning in that decision leaves open the possibility that where Virginia "is the focal point of the articles," specific personal jurisdiction may be appropriate in Virginia, even if the websites in question do not contain advertisements explicitly aimed at Virginians. Young ,
Gilmore alleges that Creighton subsequently published this same article on other websites, including BeforeItsNews.com, (dkt. 29-2), and Sott.net, (dkt. 29-3).
Except where noted otherwise, emphasis in any quotation from the publications at issue in this case should be assumed to have appeared in the original.
The websites at issue in this case typically focus on national, rather than Virginia-specific, events. But websites with a national focus are still capable of publishing content that, although perhaps of interest to many readers, is of special concern for citizens of a particular state. Indeed, Calder establishes this point, since the National Enquirer 's nationwide circulation did not preclude a holding that personal jurisdiction was proper in California. See Calder ,
Defendants argue that their publications were not "aimed at a Virginia audience" because the Unite the Right rally was a subject of "national and even international interest." (Dkt. 57 at 11). This argument fails. Events-even those that garner widespread attention-are most intensely felt in the states and communities where they occur. Online publications focused on the Unite the Right rally, and a Virginia citizen who protested the rally, would be of particular interest to a Virginia audience. Calder establishes that an article with broad national appeal can nonetheless be aimed at an audience in a particular state. Moreover, other courts addressing online content of national and international importance have found specific personal jurisdiction in the state where the plaintiff is a citizen and experienced harm. See, e.g., Gubarev v. Buzzfeed, Inc. ,
Gilmore similarly alleges that the harm he suffered because of Defendants' other publications occurred in Virginia. (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 6, 145-63; 178-203). The Court will not repeat this allegation, or its analysis of this allegation, for each publication.
Gilmore's claims against the remaining defendants similarly arise from those defendants' publications, thereby satisfying the last prong of the ALS Scan test. The Court will not repeat its analysis of this prong for each publication or defendant.
Defendants rely on three decisions where district courts found that online publications were not aimed at an audience of the forum state. (Dkt. 90 at 9). But these cases involved publications that made only glancing references to the forum state. See FireClean, LLC v. Tuohy , No. 1:16-cv-0294,
With respect to Jones's alleged republication of the article and video on YouTube, "[u]nder the republication rule, one who repeats a defamatory statement is as liable as the original defamer." Reuber v. Food Chemical News, Inc. ,
This video is no longer accessible on YouTube following the suspension of The Alex Jones Channel , and no party has presented the Court with a transcript. At this stage, the Court must assume the accuracy of Gilmore's allegations about the video's contents. See Universal Leather ,
Gilmore does not explicitly assert that West's alleged sharing of a link on Twitter constitutes publication or republication of Wilburn's article, or that such conduct is sufficient to subject West to specific personal jurisdiction in Virginia. The Court concludes that this allegation is not alone enough to make a prima facie showing that West "manifested an intent to direct" the article at a Virginia audience. Young ,
Since West's motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(2) will be granted, his motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) will be dismissed as moot. (Dkt. 58).
Having concluded that it can exercise specific personal jurisdiction against all defendants except West, the Court assesses whether the exercise of jurisdiction over the remaining defendants is "constitutionally reasonable." CFA Inst. v. Inst. of Chartered Fin. Analysts of India ,
To support this allegation, Gilmore includes links to an article containing a quote from, and a screenshot of, a Facebook post where Hickford describes herself as the editor-in-chief of the Allen B. West website, (Am. Comp. ¶ 23, n.21), as well as to a video where West describes Hickford as the editor-in-chief of the Allen B. West website. (Id. ¶ 23, n.23).
The Court construes these defendants' silence and consistent citation of Virginia law as consent to apply Virginia law to Gilmore's claims against them. See Vanderhoof-Forschner v. McSweegan ,
The Court does not hold that the Supreme Court of Virginia would apply the Second Restatement's "most significant relationship" test, which provides that defamation cases should be decided under the law of the state with "the most significant relationship to the occurrence and the parties," which will "usually" be the state of the plaintiff's domicile. Wells v. Liddy ,
See A. Benjamin Spencer, Jurisdiction and the Internet: Returning to Traditional Principles to Analyze Network-Mediated Contacts , 2006 U. ILL. L. REV. 71, 91-93 (2005) (outlining methods Internet publishers can use to "restrict the global availability" of online "content to a more limited geographical area than otherwise results from simply posting information on the Internet").
Compare ABLV Bank ,
Defendants aver that Gilmore is also a public official, since he is currently on leave from his role as a Foreign Service Officer with the U.S. State Department. (Dkts. 57 at 20, n.14; 90 at 17-18, n.11; Am. Comp. ¶ 13). The Court has serious doubts about the merits of this claim. See Horne v. WTVR, LLC ,
Defendants provide links to the CNN transcript and Politico article. (Dkt. 90 at 17-21). In ruling on motions to dismiss, "courts are permitted to consider facts and documents subject to judicial notice [under FRE 201 ] without converting the motion to dismiss into one for summary judgment." Zak v. Chelsea Therapeutics Intern., Ltd. ,
For instance, Gilmore stated on CNN that the rally's organizers were motivated by a desire to "deny certain classes of citizens their right to exist," and that President Trump's response to the rally was "a failure in leadership." (Dkt. 90 at 17 (citing 2017 WLNR 25021156) ). Similarly, in the Politico editorial, Gilmore wrote that the violence in Charlottesville was a "logical outcome of our escalating, toxic politics of hate," that "we now have a president who has emboldened white supremacists," and that "the president's refusal to specifically denounce the groups responsible for the violence ... is the kind of enabling that I have seen turn other countries into bloody war zones." (Id. at 19, n.15 (linking to editorial) ).
Gilmore's media contacts are analogous to the activities of other individuals courts have deemed limited-purpose public figures. See, e.g., Carr v. Forbes ,
Gilmore alleges that his media appearances began as early as August 12, 2017. (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 33-35). Questions remain at this stage about the exact timing of these initial media appearances. However, as discussed below, Gilmore has plausibly alleged actual malice-a more stringent pleading standard than he would have to meet as a private figure-against Creighton. Thus, even were he not a limited public figure at the time of Creighton's publication, Gilmore has satisfactorily stated a claim for defamation against Creighton.
Defendants cite the transcripts of Gilmore's appearances on PBS Newshour on August 23, 2017, and NPR's All Things Considered on August 24, 2017. (Dkt. 90 at 20, n.17). In both appearances, Gilmore commented on the rally's underlying meaning and broader political significance. For the purpose of evaluating the temporal span of Gilmore's media appearances, the Court takes judicial notice of these transcripts, the authenticity and accuracy of which Gilmore has not disputed. See Zak ,
Gilmore makes similar allegations with respect to all of Defendants' publications. (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 71, 92, 113, 134).
As noted above, because Gilmore has satisfied the more stringent pleading standard required of limited public figures, he has also satisfied the lower pleading standard for private figures. See Gazette ,
Citing an Oxford Dictionary definition, Gilmore alleges that Hoft used the word "shill" to mean "[a]n accomplice of a confidence trickster or swindler who poses as a genuine customer to entice or encourage others." (Am. Comp. ¶ 64, n.40). Although Hoft suggests alternative definitions, (dkt. 47 at 60), the Court must draw all inferences in Gilmore's favor at this stage.
Gilmore alleges that Stranahan "looks knowingly at the camera, eyebrows raised, arm raised" at this point, while McAdoo "nods comprehendingly, [and] laughs." (Am. Comp. ¶ 84).
Jones allegedly republished the article text and video on his YouTube channel. (Am. Comp. ¶ 87). 'Under the republication rule, one who repeats a defamatory statement is as liable as the original defamer." Reuber ,
Defendants contend that viewers would have understood Jones's statements about Gilmore as opinions delivered in Jones's characteristic "passionate, hyperbolic, over-the-top style." (Dkt. 57 at 19). This argument strains credulity. To be sure, "loose, figurative, or hyperbolic language" generally is not actionable. Biospherics, Inc. v. Forbes, Inc ,
These articles' titles alone strongly suggest that Defendants had already developed a fixed narrative of the Unite the Right rally prior to publishing the video in question: "George Soros Needs to be Charged and Arrested for Sedition and Causing Charlottesville " (August 14, 2017); "Breaking: Charlottesville Confirmed Agitprop Staged Event " (August 16, 2017); "Deep State Caught Red-Handed Causing Charlottesville Violence " (August 17, 2017); and "Breathtaking: Democrats Accused of Hiring Actors Prior to Charlottesville " (August 17, 2017).
Gilmore also cites other examples where Jones, InfoWars, and Free Speech Systems pursued a similar narrative that various national tragedies-most notably the massacre of schoolchildren at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut-were "hoaxes created by the government to push a leftist agenda." (Am. Comp. ¶¶ 120, 167).
Immunity under § 8.01-223.2 does not extend to IIED claims, so the Court cannot grant immunity or attorneys' fees or costs under § 8.01-223.2 on the basis that Gilmore's IIED claims will be dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Brennan M. GILMORE v. Alexander (\Alex\") JONES"
- Cited By
- 27 cases
- Status
- Published