OPINION
Appellants Cox Texas Newspapers, L.P. d/b/a the Smithville Times, Cox Texas Partners, Inc., d/b/a the Smithville Times, and Tyanna Tyler (“Cox Newspapers” and “Tyler” or, collectively, “appellants”) 1 *430 bring this interlocutory appeal challenging the district court’s partial denial of appellants’ motion for summary judgment in a defamation action brought by appellee Charles Penick. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(6) (West Supp. 2006).
District Attorney Penick, a public figure, filed suit claiming that he had been defamed in thirteen publications (including articles, an editorial series, and letters to the editor regarding a murder trial prosecuted in part by Penick) appearing in the Smithville Times between August 2, 2001, and January 3, 2002. The district court granted appellants’ summary judgment motion regarding nine of the publications but denied their motion regarding four of the publications, which appeared on October 18, December 13 and 20, and January 3. 2 On appeal, Cox Newspapers and Tyler assert that the district court erred in concluding that a genuine issue of material fact remained about whether these four publications were of a libelous nature because (1) the October 18 editorial was not “of and concerning” Penick, (2) the December 13 and January 3 articles and the December 20 letter to the editor were substantially true, and (3) Penick failed to present any evidence of actual malice regarding any of these four publications.
Because Penick fails to present any evidence to demonstrate that the October 18 article was “of and concerning” him or that any of the disputed publications were published with actual malice, we will reverse the portion of the district court’s order that denied appellants’ summary judgment motion as to these four publications and render a take-nothing judgment in favor of appellants.
BACKGROUND
This action arises out a series of articles, editorials, and letters to the editor published in late 2001 and early 2002 in the Smithville Times regarding the investigation of Stacey Stites’s murder and the subsequent trial of her accused murderer, Rodney Reed. On April 23, 1996, the body of Stacey Stites, a 19-year-old woman, was discovered partially undressed beside a country road in Bastrop County. Stites had been sexually assaulted and strangled. Initially, the victim’s fiancé, Jimmy Fen-nell, Jr., a Giddings police officer, was a suspect, but DNA evidence from semen found in Stites’s body diverted the focus to Rodney Reed. Reed was arrested, tried, and convicted of capital murder. He was then sentenced to death in 1998. 3 Appel-lee Charles Penick was the Bastrop County District Attorney at the time of Reed’s trial. Penick enlisted the Attorney Gener *431 al’s office to lead the prosecution. Assistant Attorney General Lisa Tanner was assigned to the case and acted as chief prosecutor.
The Smithville Times covered the story of the murder investigation and Reed’s trial from 1996 through 2002. 4 Appellant Tyanna Tyler, a reporter for the Smith-ville Times, was initially assigned in 2001 to cover a writ of habeas corpus proceeding in which Reed’s attorney asserted that DNA evidence from saliva found on beer cans near Stites’s body had been suppressed during the trial by the prosecution. Testing of the DNA evidence ruled out Reed as a donor but could not exclude two police officers who were friends of Fennel, the initial suspect in the murder.
Thereafter, Tyler continued to research Reed’s case. She read the trial record and investigative files and interviewed Reed, his family, friends, and defense counsel. Tyler also asked David Fisher — a local citizen who had previously conducted his own independent investigations of public employees — to look into the “inconsistencies” of the Reed case. Tyler used some of Fisher’s research in her articles.
Tyler authored a series of ten editorial articles highlighting why “reasonable doubt” existed in the Reed case and who may have acted inappropriately in their official capacity. The Smithville Times ran the editorial series from August 2 to October 18, 2001. Eight of the editorials present a detailed review of the evidence and are void of commentary about the prosecution. Only the opening and closing editorials, published on August 2 and October 18, contain Tyler’s criticism of the prosecution. In both, Tyler refers expressly to Assistant Attorney General Lisa Tanner. Penick is never mentioned in the ten-part editorial series by name or by title.
In early December 2001, Fisher filed a complaint with the Travis County District Attorney’s Special Prosecution Public Integrity Unit against Penick, Tanner, Attorney General Greg Abbott, and the Capital Litigation Division of the Attorney General’s office. Fisher’s complaint alleged violations of Reed’s constitutional rights, prosecutorial misconduct, and a “conspiracy to commit fraud.” The Smithville Times reported Fisher’s filing on December 13, 2001, in an article with the headline “Fraud Charges filed on DA in Reed Case.” This article was not part of the ten-part editorial series, which had concluded on October 18. Although the December 13 article accurately reported the substance of Fisher’s complaint, it is undisputed that this article contained three errors — namely, that (1) Fisher’s complaint had been filed with the Attorney General’s office, (2) Tanner had asserted at trial that she had made every effort to deliver a May 13 lab report to the defense, and (3) the chief counsel for the court of criminal appeals had advised Fisher to contact the FBI or Judge Towslee.
In the next issue published on December 20, 2001, the Smithville Times printed a letter to the editor written by Fisher titled, “Fisher appologizes [sic] for errors.” 5
*432 The letter thanked the paper for reporting on the charges that he filed against Penick and Tanner and offered corrections to the three errors contained in the December 13 article. Specifically, Fisher’s December 20 letter stated that “the resulting few errors that need to be restated are my fault”:
First, I filed the complaint with the Travis County District Attorney’s Special Prosecution/Public Integrity Unit, not with the Attorney General’s Office.
Second, it was at the hearing that Lisa Tanner asserted that she made every effort to deliver the May 18th lab report to the Defense, not at the trial.
Third, George Wetzel, Counsel of the Court of Criminal Appeals did not advise me to contact the FBI or Judge Towslee. The FBI asked that I notify Judge Towslee and [Reed’s] attorney of my findings.
On January 3, 2002, the Smithville Times published a year-in-review article that highlighted prominent headlines from the year 2001, catalogued by month. Under the “December” heading, one headline read “Fraud charges filed on D.A. in Reed case by citizen in county.” The headline had been altered from its original publication to include “by citizen in county.” Otherwise, there was no further explanation of the content of the article as originally printed.
Penick filed suit against Cox Newspapers and Tyler asserting that he had been defamed by the articles, editorial series, and letters to the editor published in the Smithville Times between August 2, 2001, and January 3, 2002. Appellants sought both a traditional and a no evidence summary judgment on all of Penick’s claims. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c), (i). The district court granted partial summary judgment in appellants’ favor on nine of the thirteen disputed publications but ruled that a genuine issue of material fact remained as to the defamatory character of the four publications on October 18, December 13 and 20, and January 3.
Cox Newspapers and Tyler now bring this interlocutory appeal of the district court’s order, urging that the court erred by not granting summary judgment as to these four publications on the basis that Penick failed to produce any evidence on at least one element of his defamation claims regarding each publication or, alternatively, because appellants conclusively disproved at least one element of each of his claims as a matter of law. Specifically, appellants claim that no genuine issue of fact remains about the defamatory nature of any of the four publications because (1) the October 18 editorial is not “of and concerning” Penick, (2) the December 13 and January 3 articles and the December 20 letter to the editor and are substantially true, and (3) none of these publications was published with actual malice.
ANALYSIS
Standard of Review
When a party seeks both a traditional and a no evidence summary judgment, we first review the trial court’s summary judgment under the no evidence standards of rule 166a(i).
Ford Motor Co. v. Ridgway,
A
no evidence motion for summary judgment must be granted if, after an adequate time for discovery, (1) the moving party asserts that there is no evidence of one or more essential elements of a claim or de
*433
fense on which an adverse party would have the burden of proof at trial, and (2) the nonmovant fails to produce more than a scintilla of summary judgment evidence raising a genuine issue of material fact on those elements. Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(i). In a case where the trial court’s judgment does not specify the grounds relied upon for its ruling, the summary judgment must be affirmed if any of the theories advanced is meritorious.
Carr v. Brasher,
In reviewing a no evidence summary judgment, we “must examine the entire record in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, indulging every reasonable inference and resolving any doubts against the motion” to determine whether more than a scintilla of evidence was presented on the challenged elements of the nonmov-ant’s claim.
City of Keller v. Wilson,
To prevail in a defamation case, a plaintiff who is a public official or figure must prove that the defendant (1) published a false statement about the plaintiff, (2) that was defamatory, (3) while acting with actual malice.
Id.
at 420;
see also Grotti v. Belo Corp.,
“Of and Concerning”
As Penick concedes, to prevail on his defamation claim, he must produce evidence that the disputed publications were “of and concerning” him.
See New York Times v. Sullivan,
Here, Penick does not deny that he was never mentioned by name or office in the October 18 article, nor in any of the other nine editorials authored by Tyler from August 2 to October 18. In relevant part, the October 18 article reads:
Reasonable doubt exists in this case. In fact, I am of the opinion that the whole case is flawed from the word go, and that the U.S. Justice Department needs to launch an investigation. I am aware that the Attorney General’s Office has launched a criminal investigation into this ease. I have heard rumors of jury rigging, evidence tampering, witness intimidation, document fraud, and illegal magistration [sic] charges, which could prove to be true. I have overheard Judges and Attorneys make statements like, they “wouldn’t touch this case with a ten-foot pole because it had Towslee’s fingerprints all over it,” and “it was not something that they even wanted to think about.”
⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
The entire prosecution’s case was based on a false premise. A dead body found in a partial state of undress does not constitute aggravated sexual assault resulting in murder. Minimal semen cells logically don’t support recent or ‘fresh’ semen nor do they prove sexual assault. Anytime there is prosecutorial and defensive evidence sealed during the pre-trial phase obviously there are some problems evident. Anytime you have one law enforcement agency keeping evidence from another one, which supersedes it, you have problems with evidence and the investigation.
The article then details several actions by various police officers that Tyler felt demonstrated why the “case is flawed from the word go.” For example, the article discusses that the original suspect’s vehicle was not properly inventoried, that crime scene photos went undeveloped for fifteen months, that DNA testing was never conducted on available samples, and that multiple police reports were flawed or inconsistent with other evidence. In so doing, the article specifically names four officers, refers multiple times to “the DPS,” and references the medical examiner by title. The article then discusses the actual evidence presented in the case, with Tyler’s commentary about various inconsistencies. The article specifically names Judge Tow-slee, noting problems with the orders he had entered in the case, and names the “State’s Appointed Special Prosecutor, Lisa Tanner,” stating that she “had been brought before the State Bar for prosecu-torial misconduct and allegations about the evidence suppression in this case.” The article concludes by characterizing the Rodney Reed case as one that could become the “case in point” to “fix the problems of the indigent defense practices in the State of Texas.” Although the article criticizes the manner in which the prosecution was conducted, only the Attorney General’s office and Tanner are named in this critique. Nowhere in the October 18 article is Penick mentioned, either by name, title, or implication.
At best, a connection could be drawn between Penick and the October 18 article on the basis that, as the District Attorney, he was responsible for supervising prosecutions in Bastrop County. Penick cites
Sellards v. Express-News Corporation
for support.
See
However, the United States Supreme Court has set a separate standard for public officials who supervise government agencies.
Sullivan,
to the extent that some of the witnesses thought the [plaintiff] to have been charged with ordering or approving the conduct or otherwise being personally involved in it, they have based this notion not on any statements in the [publication], and not on any evidence that he had in fact been so involved, but solely on the unsupported assumption that, because of his official position, he must have been.
Id.
at 289 n. 28,
The Supreme Court reaffirmed its
Sullivan
holding in
Rosenblatt v. Baer,
stating that a public figure plaintiff may not prevail in a defamation claim based on an article criticizing “a small group acting for an organ of government, only some of whom were implicated, but all of whom were tinged with suspicion.”
See
The holdings of Sullivan and Rosenblatt were succinctly summarized by the Supreme Court of Virginia, as follows:
[T]he use of the “small group theory” alone as the basis for satisfying the “of and concerning” element of a common law defamation action against a governmental actor does not survive constitutional scrutiny.... A member of a governmental group against which an allegedly defamatory statement is made can sustain a common law action for defamation only if that member can show the statement specifically implicated that member or each member of the group. Such implication can be shown by extrinsic evidence, but evidence that others “understood” the im *436 plication based solely upon a plaintiffs membership in the referenced group mil not satisfy the “of and concerning” requirement.
Dean v. Dearing,
Although Penick was involved in the prosecution, there is no evidence to show that readers would associate the article’s criticism with him individually.
Newspapers,
at 289-290,
Acknowledging that the October 18 article never mentions him, Penick urges this Court to look outside the four corners of the article and consider whether a reader would have associated the article with him based on other publications in the
Smith-ville Times
that were not included in the ten-part editorial series — namely, an August 23 letter to the editor written by Fisher and a September 20 article written by editor Metta Johnson.
6
Penick cites
Buck v. Savage,
Penick has cited no authority for this theory. Examining all related publications is an accepted practice when evaluating the issue of actual malice because it can illuminate a personal vendetta of the defendant, which demonstrates the defendant’s state of mind at the time of publication.
Freedom Newspapers of Tex. v. Cantu,
Although we recognize that defamation claims should be reviewed in context, our concern is where the inquiry would stop under Penick’s analysis. Pen-ick is a public figure who is likely to be mentioned frequently by the media. The rule cannot be that a newspaper’s individual reference to a public figure in an article published months earlier could be used to transform a subsequent article, which never mentions the public figure, into one that
*437
is “of and concerning” him.
7
Rather, the test requires us to determine whether a person would understand the individual publication at issue to implicate Penick.
See Newspapers,
at 289-290,
Here, the October 18 article does not make even an oblique reference to Penick, either as an individual or in his capacity as the District Attorney.
See Sullivan,
With regard to the remaining publications — the December 13 and January 3 articles and the December 20 letter to the editor — we turn to appellants’ third issue because the lack of evidence of actual malice is dispositive.
Actual Malice
The Texas Supreme Court has articulated standards for analyzing the existence of actual malice in public figure defamation cases against media defendants.
See, e.g., Cantu,
At the summary judgment stage, the media defendant can negate that it acted with actual malice, as a matter of law, by proving that it did not publish the articles at issue with knowledge of falsity or a reckless disregard for the truth.
Cantu,
The defendant can establish such proof through the submission of affidavits,
*438
so long as they are “clear, positive, and direct, otherwise credible and free from contradictions and inconsistencies, and could have been readily controverted.” Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
Isaacks,
Once the defendant produces some evidence that it did not act with actual malice, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to produce evidence of the contrary.
Cantu,
Here, the appellants supported their motions for summary judgment with affidavits from Tyler, the author of the articles in question, and from Metta Johnson, the managing editor of the Smithville Times at the time of the disputed publications. Tyler averred that, in preparation for the series, she researched the police reports, medical examiner’s report, trial transcripts, appeals, investigative reports of the Texas Rangers, and press articles from other publications. She also interviewed Reed’s family, friends, attorneys, and private investigators. Tyler acknowledged that she solicited Fisher’s viewpoint on the Reed case and stated that she trusted him based on his prior success investigating public officials. Tyler further averred that she had no contempt for Penick and, in fact, never mentioned Pen-ick’s name in her editorial series. Tyler stated in her affidavit that she believed all the facts represented in her articles to be true at the time of publication and, with the exception of the few non-material facts that Fisher corrected in his December 20 letter to the editor, she still believes them to be true.
Johnson’s affidavit expresses that she believed the Reed case was an important news event in Bastrop County. According to her affidavit, Johnson assigned Tyler to report on a habeas corpus hearing in March 2001, but Tyler continued researching the Reed case on her own initiative. After Tyler explained to Johnson many of the inconsistencies that Tyler saw in the case and the reasons for her opinions, Johnson agreed that an editorial series would be appropriate because these inconsistencies “had not gotten much coverage during the Reed trial.” Johnson averred that she did not have any animosity toward Penick and that, in her opinion, Penick was excluded from the editorial series because he was not relevant to the inconsistencies discovered by Tyler. Johnson further *439 averred that, as editor, she published letters to the editor on both sides of the issue. 9 Additionally, Johnson’s affidavit noted that the errors contained in Tyler’s December 18 article were corrected by publishing Fisher’s December 20 letter to the editor. Johnson believes that the editorial series expressed “honest opinions” about the Reed case and that the December 13 article “accurately recounted]” Fisher’s allegations concerning Penick.
In their respective affidavits, both Tyler and Johnson aver that they believed the reports to be accurate at the time of publication, explain what their state of mind was at the time, and provide descriptions of why they had a reasonable belief in the truth of the articles.
Isaacks,
Penick raises seven points that he believes support his assertion of actual malice: the appellants (1) failed to tell the reader that Travis County was not investigating Fisher’s letter, (2) printed dubious information from a biased source, (3) hid from the reader the relationship between the Smithville Times and Fisher, (4) omitted complimentary statements about Pen-ick from a candidate’s campaign announcement published in the Smithville Times, (5) predicted future publications and events, (6) failed to talk to Penick, Tanner, or other members of the prosecution team, and (7) omitted and juxtaposed facts to create an overall false impression. We will address each in turn.
Failure to tell readers that Travis County was not investigating Fisher’s letter
Penick claims that, by not clarifying in the December 13 article, which was headlined “Fraud charges filed on DA in Reed case,” that the Travis County District Attorney’s office had not opened an “active investigation,” the appellants published the article with actual malice. In support of this argument, Penick relies on the fact that Mary Farrington from the Public Integrity Unit of the Travis County District Attorney’s office had informed the Smithville Times on November 14 or 15 that complaints similar to Fisher’s were received frequently and that, at that time, no active investigation had been opened on the allegations filed by Fisher against Pen-ick. Penick asserts that the truth of the December 13 article was grossly distorted by the omission of Farrington’s November statement that no active investigation had been opened. We disagree.
A media defendant’s “omission of facts may be actionable if it so distorts the [readers’] perception that they receive a substantially false impression of the event.”
Huckabee,
*440 Penick presented no evidence that appellants were or should have been aware that the omission of Farrington’s November comment from the December 18 article would create a substantially false impression of the relevant events. After Far-rington spoke with the newspaper in November, Fisher amended his complaint on December 7, and the newspaper never received an updated report from Farrington about the status of the investigation following Fisher’s amended filing. In the December 13 article, appellants reported that Fisher had filed the allegations (both the original and amended ones), without discussion as to whether the Public Integrity Unit was actively investigating them or not. Penick does not dispute the truth of the article’s report that Fisher “filed a formal complaint” charging Penick and others with “conspiracy to commit fraud ... in connection with the Rodney Reed case,” and Penick acknowledges that, at the time of publication, these charges were still pending.
Moreover, Farrington swore in her deposition that she informed the newspaper only that “we [do] not have an open investigation at this time and [ ] we receive[ ] complaints all the time from lots of different people.” 10 She did not tell the newspaper that the complaint was baseless or frivolous, nor did she say that an investigation would never be opened. Indeed, in her deposition Farrington clarified that, “[the office] receives complaints from lots of different people, and we take those complaints, and we, of course, review them.” Thus, appellants could have reasonably inferred at the time of publication that Fisher’s complaint was still in some preliminary review stage, especially taking into account that Fisher had recently amended the complaint. The presumption that the investigation was still open at some level was substantially true because Farrington did not consider the matter closed until December 18 when she sent a letter stating such to Fisher.
The truth of the December 13 report (that Fisher had filed allegations against Penick) was not grossly distorted by appellants’ omission of the fact that the pending complaint had not yet been actively investigated by the Travis County Public Integrity Unit. The omission of Farrington’s November statement is not evidence of actual malice.
See Huckabee,
Publication of dubious information from a biased source
Next, Penick claims that actual malice is demonstrated by the fact that appellants printed “dubious information” obtained from a “biased
source”
— i.e., Fisher. Yet, Penick offers no evidence to support this claim. Evidence that a media defendant’s “report was mistaken, even if negligently so, is no evidence of actual malice” unless the plaintiff presents evidence that the defendant purposefully published mistaken facts or that the circumstances were “so improbable that only a reckless publisher would have made the mistake.”
Cantu,
Penick fails to present evidence that appellants acted recklessly or purposefully avoided the truth in relying on Fisher as a source. Penick relies primarily on a statement by Davis McAuley, editor of
The Bastrop Advertiser,
that he believed Fisher was untrustworthy. Even assuming that someone else regarded Fisher as an outlandish conspiracy theorist, evidence of another person’s opinion, who has no connection to the instant case, is not evidence (1) that Fisher was so untrustworthy that it would be reckless for anyone to believe him or (2) that appellants were aware of Fisher’s lack of trustworthiness and chose to ignore it or purposefully avoided the truth. Thus, it is not evidence of actual malice on behalf of appellants.
See St. Amant v. Thompson,
Similarly, even assuming the publications were authored from a hard-hitting conspiracy theorist’s perspective, this too provides no evidence of actual malice.
See Huckabee,
Finally, it is not disputed that Tyler did not blindly rely on Fisher’s investigation. According to Tyler’s and Johnson’s deposition testimony, they concluded that, based on their review of the trial evidence, reasonable doubt existed about Reed’s guilt. Fisher’s deposition reflects that he formed the same conclusion from his independent investigation. While Tyler and Johnson could have done more investigating, there is no evidence that they “purposefully avoided the truth” and no evidence that only a reckless publisher would have published the information they reported.
See Skeen,
Failure to disclose relationship between the Smithville Times and Fisher
In support of his claim of actual malice, Penick argues that the
Smithville Times
hid the fact that Tyler asked Fisher to investigate the case in order to use Fisher’s independent assessment as corroboration for Tyler’s own theories. This argument is without merit for two reasons. First, Penick has failed to demonstrate that appellants “hid” this relationship from the readers. To the contrary, the newspaper published Fisher’s August 23 letter to
*442
the editor stating that he had been asked by a reporter to investigate the Reed case.
11
Second, even taking as true Pen-ick’s claim that appellants “hid” the fact that Fisher aided in the investigation, this is no evidence of actual malice because journalists are not required to reveal every source of information upon which they have relied.
Turner v. KTRK Television, Inc.,
These facts are akin to the ones found in Turner. Id. There, the media defendant failed to reveal that one of its sources for a news story, which implicated a mayoral candidate in a possible insurance fraud scandal, was a member of the opposing campaign. There was evidence that the defendant knew of the source’s affiliation. Id. However, the court ruled that the defendant’s failure to reveal its source was not clear and convincing evidence of actual malice because (1) the plaintiff failed to produce sufficient evidence that the media defendant intended to endorse the opposing candidate, and (2) the defendant may have believed in the truth of the story. Id. Similarly, Penick’s claim that appellants “hid” the fact that Fisher was a source provides no evidence that appellants had serious concerns about the veracity of the publication. 12
Omission of complimentary statements about Penick
Penick argues that actual malice is demonstrated by the fact that, on September 13, 2001, when the Smithville Times reported that Bryan Goertz had announced his candidacy for District Attorney, appellants failed to include complimentary statements made in Goertz’s campaign announcement about Penick. We disagree.
The September 13 story is solely about Goertz’s candidacy: his background, qualifications, and reasons for seeking office. The only mention of Penick in the article is that “[t]he position is currently being held by veteran prosecutor Charles Penick, who previously announced that after 25 years in office, he will not be seeking re-election.” Penick does not allege that any information in this statement is false and/or that it was damaging to his character or reputation. The newspaper had discretion to edit its story to cover only the relevant facts about the current candidate and to omit the candidate’s favorable statements about the incumbent. Such an omission by appellants provides no evidence of actual malice toward Penick.
See Turner,
Moreover, appellants had previously published favorable statements about Pen-ick. On August 16, Johnson authored a report about Penick’s decision to not seek *443 re-election, which included Penick’s quote that, “I have enjoyed the 24 years I have spent representing the people of Bastrop County; however, it is now time to move on to new endeavors. I am proud of the work my professional staff has accomplished. I want to thank all of the voters and friends that have supported me in past elections and wish only the best to my successor.”
A news organization cannot be required to print or air the viewpoint of everyone who might speak on a public figure’s behalf.
Turner,
Prediction of future publications and events
Penick’s fifth argument for actual malice is based on his claim that the Smithville Times had predetermined to publish the December 13 article headlined “Fraud charges filed on DA” article, regardless of whether the story turned out to be true or false, because Tyler had previously stated in an October 18 editorial that the Attorney General’s office had launched an investigation. Like Penick’s first actual malice argument, this claim hinges on whether the allegations filed by Fisher were being “actively investigated.” In other words, Penick asserts that actual malice is demonstrated because Tyler reported that an investigation had been launched before actually finding out whether Fisher’s allegations of fraud would be investigated.
Penick cites
Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton
as support.
However, Penick cannot show that the primary contents of the December 13 article were false. Other than the three misstated errors, which were minor and were corrected by Fisher’s December 20 letter to the editor, the December 13 article accurately reported that the allegations had been filed by Fisher and were pending. Thus, this provides no evidence of actual malice.
See Grotti
Failure to talk to Penick, Tanner, or other prosecutorial members
Penick argues that the
Smith-ville Times
and Tyler acted with actual malice because they intentionally avoided the truth by failing to interview Penick and others on the prosecution side of the Reed case. Although the failure of a
*444
newspaper to folly investigate allegations before publishing them will not alone support a finding of actual malice, purposeful avoidance of the truth will.
Harte-Hanks,
As support for his position, Penick cites
Bentley v. Bunton,
In the case at hand, Tyler expressed no such doubt about the veracity of her accusations. Tyler interviewed defense attorneys and investigators to determine what practices or procedures in the Reed case were inconsistent with a proper investigation. She researched the public record on the Reed case. She viewed crime scene reports, pictures, and videotapes reflecting the views of the law enforcement officers involved in the original investigation. She read the trial and hearing transcripts displaying the arguments and theories of the prosecution. Although Tyler did not seek the comments of those she accused of prosecuting a flawed case against an innocent man, she was not required to do so.
See El Paso Times v. Trexler,
Tyler’s actions are also unlike the defendant’s actions in
Harte-Hanks,
which the Supreme Court deemed to involve actual malice.
See
Penick produced no evidence showing that Tyler doubted the veracity of her claims, as did the defendant in
Bentley,
Modification of facts to create a false impression
In his final actual malice argument, Penick alleges that the “gist” of the defamatory articles as a whole conveyed a false impression to the readers, which he argues was “so glaring as to serve as proof of malice.”
See Turner,
Penick cites
Huckabee v. Time Warner Entertainment
as support for the idea that “glaring” falsehoods are stand-alone evidence of actual malice.
Id. Huckabee
provided a single example of a case where the omission of facts may be stand-alone evidence of actual malice.
Id.
at 426 (citing
Schiavone Constr. Co. v. Time, Inc.,
Although the court in
Huckabee
acknowledged that in some cases an omission of fact could be proof of actual malice, it did not go so far as to say that all omissions of fact would serve as evidence of actual malice.
Huckabee,
In his seven arguments, Penick fails as a matter of law to raise a genuine issue of material fact regarding actual malice.
CONCLUSION
The district court erred by denying the appellants’ motion for summary judgment regarding the October 18 article because the article was not “of and concerning” Penick. Furthermore, the district court erred by denying the appellants’ motion regarding the October 18, December 13 and 20, and January 3 articles because Penick failed to present a scintilla of evidence to demonstrate that any of these articles was published with actual malice.
Accordingly, we reverse the portion of the district court’s order that denied summary judgment for the appellants regarding these four articles, and we render a take-nothing judgment in favor of appellants on Penick’s claims related to these four articles.
Notes
. The Smithville Times is owned by Cox Texas Newspapers, L.P.
. Summary judgment was granted as to one article published on August 2 because Penick failed to file suit on this article within the one-year statute of limitations.
See
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 16.002 (West 2002). Summary judgment was granted on eight of the remaining editorials and letters to the editor because there was not sufficient evidence to raise a genuine issue of material fact on any of the elements essential to maintain a defamation action by a public figure.
See Huckabee v. Time Warner Entm’t Co.,
Interlocutory appeal of the portion of the order granting appellants’ summary judgment motion is not permitted by section 51.014(a)(6). Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(6) (West Supp.2006). Our review is therefore limited to whether summary judgment was appropriately denied on Penick’s claims related to the October 18 editorial, the December 13 and January 3 articles, and the December 20 letter to the editor.
. Reed continues to appeal the verdict. His application for writ of habeas corpus is currently pending before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. Ex parte Reed, Cause No. WR-50, 961-03.
. Many other local and state publications reported the story, including the developing allegations of official misconduct. These included the Bastrop Advertiser, the Austin American-Statesman, the Austin Chronicle, Texas Monthly, and others.
. Fisher had first written a letter to the editor published on August 23, 2001, in which he acknowledged that "a reporter” had requested that he look into the Reed case and presented the readers with some of his findings about inconsistencies in the evidence presented at Reed’s trial. In this letter, Fisher also commented on Penick’s decision not to seek reelection. The letter was titled "Reader asks DA Penick, ‘Which is it?”’
. As support for the "of and concerning” element, Penick also points to the subsequently-published December 13 and January 3 "Fraud Charges Filed on D.A.” article and headline. Even if we were to consider other publications in determining whether the October 18 article was "of and concerning” Pen-ick, we could not include the December and January articles in such a review because they had not been published at the time of the October 18 article.
. Although not controlling, we find
Early v. Toledo Blade,
. Although the United States Supreme Court has ruled that the clear and convincing standard of proof is required for actual malice in summary judgment cases under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56,
see Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
. This is confirmed by the record, which includes letters to the editor appearing in the Smithville Times on September 20 and October 25 criticizing Tyler’s editorial series and espousing views that Reed is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
. The wording of Farrington’s phone call is not disputed. Both parties rely upon Farring-ton’s recollection of her words in her deposition.
. See supra footnote 5.
. We recognize that Turner involved a clear and convincing standard that is higher than the level of evidence required in the case at hand, but we find the analysis persuasive.
