Charles J. Bufalino, Jr. appeals from a grant of summary judgment to the Associated Press (AP) in his diversity action for defamation against AP. Judge Werker of the Southern District of New York granted AP summary judgment on both of two independent grounds. First, he held that AP’s published statements about Bufalino were not actionable under the “fair report privilege” recognized by Pennsylvania law. Second, after finding that Bufalino was a public official and that AP had not acted with malice, he held Bufalino’s action barred under the constitutional “malice” standard of
New York Times Co. v. Sulli
van,
Appellant is a member of the Pennsylvania bar who resides and practices law in West Pittston, Pennsylvania, a community of some 7,000 to 8,000 persons in the Scranton-Wilkes-Barre area of northeastern Pennsylvania. In addition to his private practice, appellant is employed by the Borough of West Pittston in the part-time, appointive position of Borough Solicitor. As Borough Solicitor appellant attends meetings of the Borough Council (the legislative body for West Pittston) and, upon request, advises the Council on legal matters. He is compensated from the Borough budget at approximately $3,500 per year. Appellant claims that two reports prepared by AP (a New York corporation) and published in certain Pennsylvania newspapers in December 1978, defamed him with consequent damage to his personal and professional lives. These reports identified appellant as a person “with alleged mob ties.”
Appellant commenced this action with the filing of a complaint on November 30, 1979. AP served its answer on December 24, 1979. Following discovery by both parties, AP moved for summary judgment on June 10,1980. Judge Werker granted AP’s motion in an opinion filed on January 28, 1982.
Judge Werker assumed certain facts to be true in rendering summary judgment for the defendant. While plaintiff disputes some of these facts, we also will assume them to be true for purposes of this appeal so that the correct legal standard may be established prior to trial. At trial plaintiff will be free to put his version of the facts to the trier. We therefore state the facts as follows.
On December 7, 1978 Pennsylvania Governor-elect Richard L. Thornburgh released *268 a list of contributors to his election campaign. Paul Carpenter, then a newsman in the Harrisburg office of AP, reviewed the list that day. Carpenter recognized the name “Bufalino” as a result of previous reporting work in the areas of law enforcement and organized crime. He researched the backgrounds of the individuals whose names he recognized to confirm information about them and to obtain additional information for a news report. He consulted materials released by the Pennsylvania Crime Commission (a public investigatory body without enforcement powers), including its 1970 Report on Organized Crime. He consulted AP files and his own working files. He reviewed newspaper articles which reported that William E. Bufalino, Sr., a Detroit lawyer, was a cousin and criminal associate of Russell Bufalino, a reputed Mafia leader. 1 He next contacted two other reporters believed by him to be reliable and knowledgeable in the area of organized crime. One reporter told him that appellant and Russell Bufalino were related, and the other told him that he was “pretty sure” they were related.
Carpenter also telephoned personnel at the Pennsylvania Crime Commission to verify his information. Two Commission employees, described by Carpenter as “officials,” informed Carpenter that appellant was related to Russell Bufalino. The Commission had previously identified Russell Bufalino as a Mafia leader. A third Commission employee (or “official”) told Carpenter that in his private practice appellant represented individuals suspected of having connections with organized crime. Carpenter agreed with the “officials” not to reveal their identity, and he has not done so. At a pre-trial deposition Carpenter stated that the word “officials,” as he used it, could refer not only to members of the Commission, but also to various officers and agents of the Commission.
After obtaining this information, Carpenter prepared a story on the campaign fund disclosures for transmission to morning newspapers in Pennsylvania. Robert Dvorchak, in charge of AP’s Harrisburg bureau, reviewed the story and asked Carpenter about the sources of his information for each individual named in the story. The story was then transmitted to AP’s Philadelphia Bureau on the evening of December 7, 1978.
As reported in the Scranton Times on December 8, 1978, and in the Wilkes-Barre Times-Leader Evening News on December 9, 1978, the story stated:
Harrisburg (AP) — Governor-elect Richard L. Thornburgh, who rose to fame by battling organized crime, accepted political contributions from several individuals with alleged mob ties, according to his campaign records ...
Among the 14,000 contributors listed by Thornburgh were:
.... Charles Bufalino Jr., an attorney who is related to Russell Bufalino, described by the Crime Commission as a Mafia boss. He gave $120.
On December 8,1978, Dvorchak prepared a follow-up story incorporating the response of Governor-elect Thornburgh’s press secretary to the original article. This follow-up story was transmitted by AP’s Harrisburg bureau to other AP members on December 8th and 9th. As reported in the Scranton Times on December 9, 1978, and in the Wilkes-Barre Times-Leader Evening News on December 13, 1978, this story stated:
Harrisburg (AP) — Governor-elect Richard L. Thornburgh will return campaign contributions to three individuals who allegedly have ties to organized crime figures. ...
“We are looking into whether Bufalino has documentable links to organized crime, but as of today we have been unable to determine that,” ....
*269 Bufalino, an attorney, is related to Russell Bufalino, identified by state and federal investigative agencies as a Mafia boss now in prison.
But [Thornburgh’s press secretary] said Bufalino’s mere family ties ... do not warrant returning ... Bufalino’s $120 contribution.
Appellant bases his action for defamation upon the two stories quoted above. To establish liability for defamation under Pennsylvania law, the plaintiff must prove both the defamatory character of the defendant’s communication and the recipient’s understanding of its defamatory meaning. 42 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. § 8343(a) (Supp.1981). The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has stated that the court is to determine, in the first instance, whether the communication complained of is capable of a defamatory meaning.
Corabi v. Curtis Publishing Co.,
Defamatory communications are not actionable, however, if protected by privilege. Among the privileges recognized by Pennsylvania is a privilege for the “fair and accurate” reporting of official records and proceedings. The scope of this privilege in Pennsylvania is open to debate. Although in several decisions the Pennsylvania Supreme Court adopted as the law of the state the fair report privilege set forth in § 611 of the original Restatement of Torts,
see Binder v. Triangle Publications, Inc.,
The publication of defamatory matter concerning another in a report of an official action or proceeding or of a meeting open to the public that deals with a matter of public concern is privileged if the report is accurate and complete or a fair abridgement of the occurrence reported.
AP claims that its stories are protected by this privilege. Judge Werker agreed, and granted AP summary judgment under § 611. The judge granted summary judgment because he concluded that AP’s statements about appellant constituted “fair and accurate” reports of information contained in official records. We reverse the grant of summary judgment because the record does not show that AP actually relied upon the official records which it now claims it accurately summarized in its stories.
In relevant part, Judge Werker read appellant’s complaint to complain of two statements in the stories: 1) that appellant is related to Russell Bufalino; and 2) that appellant allegedly has ties to organized crime. 3 In Judge Werker’s view both of these statements are privileged because each is supported by official records.
AP’s first statement, said Judge Werker, was adequately supported by (a) an FBI memorandum of July 20, 1956 that identified appellant as a cousin of Russell Bufalino; (b) the statement by Crime Commission “officials” to Carpenter that appellant is related to Russell Bufalino; and (c) by several other documents, including a U.S. Senate Report and testimony in deportation proceedings which establish a family relationship between appellant’s father (Charles J. Bufalino, Sr.) and uncle (William Bufalino) and Russell Bufalino, and hence inferentially between appellant and Russell Bufalino. AP makes no claim that it relied on any of these sources other than source (b) at the time it circulated its stories in December, 1978.
Judge Werker found that AP’s second statement was adequately supported by the documents establishing a family relationship between Russell Bufalino and appellant, and by the statement of the Crime Commission “official” to Carpenter that appellant represented underworld figures in his law practice. Judge Werker ruled that the statement that appellant had “alleged mob ties” was a fair and accurate summary of all of this official information. AP additionally cites to this "Court a number of other official records which, it argues, further establish financial, family, and social ties between appellant and persons identified by state and federal officials as participants in organized crime. Not relied upon by Judge Werker, .these “records” include depositions in the present trial, land filings, and records of other judicial proceedings. They suggest that appellant knows and considers himself friendly to a number of suspected mobsters, and that, as an attorney, he has represented their interests in both civil and criminal proceedings. Even were we to accept the accuracy of these additional records, it is apparent that AP did not rely upon them in preparing its reports, but instead discovered them in preparation for the present litigation.
We believe that the lack of reliance is dispositive of the issue of privilege. Judge Werker held that actual reliance upon official records or documents is not a pre-requisite to application of the fair report privilege. Instead, he ruled, an accurate summary oi official reports is privileged even if the reports were not relied upon and the accuracy of the summary is mere coinci
*271
dence. As authority for this ruling the Judge cited
Medico v. Time, Inc.,
We believe that
Medico
reads
Binder
for much more than it’s worth. In
Binder,
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held the privilege available where the defendant’s reporter, who did not attend a judicial proceeding, based his report of the proceeding on statements given him by a third party who did attend. Said the Pennsylvania Court: “[H]ow a reporter gathers his information concerning a judicial proceeding is immaterial provided his story is a fair and substantially accurate portrayal of the events in question.”
AP claims that it did actually rely upon certain official statements, namely the statements made to Carpenter by the Crime Commission “officials.” In the present state of the record, however, AP cannot rely upon those statements as a basis for application of the § 611 privilege. Carpenter has honored his agreement not to identify the persons with whom he spoke, whom he describes as “officials.” We have absolutely no quarrel with AP’s contention that under Pennsylvania law AP cannot be com
*272
pelled to reveal the identities of Carpenter’s interlocutors. Pennsylvania’s “Shield Law,” 42 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. § 5942(a) (1982) protects reporters from compelled disclosure of their sources in any legal proceeding or trial. This statute has been broadly construed by the Pennsylvania courts, see
In re Taylor,
We therefore reverse the grant of summary judgment to AP on the basis of the § 611 privilege.
Judge Werker also based his.grant of summary judgment to AP on the constitutional “malice” standard of
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
Appellant does not challenge Judge Werker’s finding that AP did not act with malice. Instead, relying upon
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
Neither of AP’s stories identified appellant as the Borough Solicitor of West Pittston or as the holder of any public office. The stories described appellant merely as “an attorney.” A reader without prior knowledge of appellant’s status as Borough Solicitor would most likely, and correctly, assume from the description that appellant is engaged in the private practice of law. The description would not directly or impliedly inform the reader that appellant holds any public office. We conclude that the public official doctrine is not available where the defendant’s statements do not directly or impliedly identify the plaintiff as a public official, and there is no showing that the plaintiff’s name is otherwise immediately recognized in the community as that of a public official.
In
Rosenblatt v. Baer,
Of course, in some cases an individual’s status as a public official may be so widely known throughout the community that a direct or indirect identification of the individual as a public official will be unnecessary to application of the doctrine. A defamatory statement which identifies the President of the United States, or a state governor, by name only, would still fall under the doctrine because the status of such persons as public officials is common knowledge. Similarly, the doctrine would apply to statements about an official of far lesser stature if the statements are broad *274 cast in the area within the official’s jurisdiction and a significant portion of the population in that area would recognize the official’s public status from his name alone. It suffices that in the present case AP has made no showing of the degree to which West Pittston residents recognize appellant, by name, as the holder of a public office. We therefore hold that as the record presently stands the public official doctrine does not apply to this .case.
The Supreme Court has not yet ruled upon the significance of a news report’s failure to identify a public officeholder as such.
See Ocala Star-Banner Co. v. Damron,
Finally, AP asks us to hold that Pennsylvania law requires appellant to prove malice. AP relies upon
Matus v. Triangle Publications, Inc.,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Russell Bufalino and this court have not been strangers to each other.
See United States v. Bufalino,
. Section 559 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts makes no amendments to § 559 of the original Restatement.
. Judge Werker also read appellant’s complaint to complain of the statement that Russell Bufalino has been identified by state and federal officials as a Mafia boss. We need not decide the application of the fair report privilege to this statement because it is obvious that a statement identifying Russell Bufalino as a mobster does not defame appellant.
. Moreover, even where the reporter has actually relied on official records, the privilege can be lost through failure to make proper attribution. See
Hughes v. Washington Daily News Co.,
. Some cases have held that city, village, and municipal attorneys, even those retained part-time or only in connection with specific matters, are public officials. See,
e.g., Finkel v. Sun Tattler Co.,
