OPINION
Lоng after the public spotlight has moved on in search of fresh intrigue, the lawyers remain. And so we find ourselves adjudicating a decade-old dispute between Gennifer Flowers and what she affectionately refers to as the “Clinton smear machine”: James Carville, George Stephano-poulos and Hillary Clinton. Flowers charges that said machine destroyed her reputation by painting her as a fraud and a liar after she disclosed her affair with Bill Clinton. We decide whether Flowers’s claims are timely and, if so, whether they survive a motion to dismiss.
Background and Proceedings Below
In the heat of the 1992 presidential primary campaign, the Star — that ubiquitous supermarket source for celebrity scandal— ran a story claiming that Bill Clinton had carried on an affair with an Arkansas woman named Gennifer Flowers. Clinton and Flowers both denied it at first, but a few days later Flowers (doubtless realizing that honesty is the best policy after all) sold her story to the Star. Clinton continued vigorously denying the allegations and appeared on 60 Minutes with his wife to say they weren’t true. The following day, Flowers responded by holding a press conference where she played recordings of intimate phone calls from Clinton that she’d secretly taped. Later news reports suggested that the tapes may have been selectively edited.
According to Flowers, Hillary Clinton and her two “henchmen,” George Stepha-nopoulos and James Carville, conspired to protect Bill Clinton’s presidential candidacy from Flowers’s damaging revelations. Flowers claims that during the 1992 campaign and in later political memoirs -and interviews, Carville and Stephanopoulos defamed her and painted her in a false light by claiming that she had lied in her story to the Star and “doctored” the tape-recorded phone calls. Hillary Clinton, the alleged mastermind of the conspiracy, not only orchestrated the defamatory exploits, but also exposed private information about Flowers and organized break-ins of her residence. Flowers claims that, as a result of all this schemery, her reputation has wilted and her blossoming career as a Las Vegas lounge singer has been nipped in the bud.
Flowers filed this diversity suit in November 1999 in the United States District Court in Nevada, naming James Carville, George Stephanopoulos and Little, Brown & Co. (Stephanopoulоs’s publisher) as defendants. In January 2000, she added the claims against Hillary Clinton. The defendants moved to dismiss, while Flowers twice again sought to amend her complaint to allege special damages and to claim another instance of defamation by Stepha-nopoulos.
The district court granted all three motions to dismiss and denied Flowers’s requests to amend her complaint.
Flowers v. Carville,
Timeliness
1. We must first determine which state’s statute of limitations applies. It matters because the statute of limitations for defamation in Nevada is two years, Nev.Rev.Stat. 11.190(4)(e), while the statute in other potentially relevant states is only one. Some of Flowers’s claims are only timely under Nevada’s longer limitations period; for example, Stephanopoulos made allegedly defamatory remarks in a Larry King Live interview broadcast more than one year, but less than two years, before Flowers filed suit.
Because this is a diversity case, forum state law determines whiсh state’s statute of limitations governs.
Guaranty Trust Co. v. York,
When a cause of action has arisen in another state, or in a foreign country, and by the laws thereof an action thereon cannot there be maintained against a person by reason of the lаpse of time, an action thereon shall not be maintained against him in this state, except in favor of a citizen thereof who has held the cause of action from the time it accrued.
Nev.Rev.Stat. 11.020 (emphasis added).
The district court held that the borrowing statute applies to Flowers because her claim arose elsewhere and she doesn’t qualify for the statute’s exemption (emphasized above). Flowers held her cause of action from the time it accrued (i.e., the time of defamation),
1
and she was a citizen of Nevada when she sued. But she was not a citizen of Nevada at the time of defamation — she moved there a year before filing suit.
Flowers,
The first problem is syntactic. The statute allows a suit to be “maintained ... in favor of a citizen [of Nevada] who has held the cause of action from the time it accrued.” If the statute simply allowed any suit “maintained ... in favor of a citizen [of Nevada],” it could only reasonably mean a citizen at the time the suit is *1124 maintained, that is, when the plaintiff files suit. Adding the relative pronoun clause “who has held the cause of action from the time it accrued” doesn’t change the timing or duration of thе citizenship requirement; it merely imposes an independent limitation on who can take advantage of the exemption.
Even if the district court’s reading were plausible as a matter of syntax, it would still violate the last-antecedent rule.
See Reynolds Elec. & Eng’g Co. v. State,
Our interpretation is reinforced by a comparison of Nevada’s borrowing statute with those of neighboring states. Nevada’s statute exempts suits in favor of “a citizen [of Nevada] who has held the cause of action from the time it accrued.” Statutes in California, Idaho and Utah, in'contrast, exempt suits in favor of “one
who has been a citizen
of this state and who has held the cause of action from the time it accrued.” Cal.Civ.Proc.Code § 361; Idaho Code § 5-239; Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-45 (emphasis added to each; variation in capitalization omitted).
2
In these statutes, the citizenship requirement is set off in a separate clause introduced by “has been.” This makes a difference. “Has been” connotes either a continuing status held over some period of time or one held at some point in the past, not one held merely at the moment of filing. Not surprisingly, then, thеse statutes have been interpreted to require that the plaintiff be a citizen at the time his claim accrued.
Biewend v. Biewend,
*1125
We have one further reason for rejecting the district court’s interpretation: It raises a serious constitutional question. The Supreme Court has.held that states can apply their borrowing statutes to foreigners while exempting their own citizens.
Can. N. Ry. v. Eggen,
The district court reached the opposite result by relying on two unpublished decisions. One was a state trial court decision,
Mikhael v. Steak & Ale of Louisiana, Inc.,
No. CV89-3790 (Nev.2d Dist. Ct., Washoe County, Apr. 10, 1990). But
Mikhael
failed to offer any reasoning to support its construction of the statute,
id.,
slip op. at 2, and we attach no weight to unreasoned conclusions in unpublished state decisions,
see Spinner Corp. v. Princeville Dev. Corp.,
The second was a Nevada federal district court decision, Volz v. DeLorean Manufacturing, No. CV-N-86-102-HDM (D.Nev. Feb. 18, 1987). Volz reasoned that because California, Idaho and Utah require citizenship at the time of accrual, Nevada does too. Id., slip op. at 3-4. But, as noted above, the statutes breach of those other states use different language precisely where it counts. Volz overlooked this difference, and the court below was too hasty in following it.
Finally, we reject the argument that our interpretation conflicts with the borrowing statute’s purpose of avoiding forum shopping. The fact that the statute includes an exemption for Nevada citizens indicates that the Nevada legislature sought to balance the purpose of avoiding forum shopping against that of keeping litigation options open for its citizens. Recognizing one purpose tells us nothing about how the legislature calibrated it against the other. To determine that, we must look to the statute’s text, as we have done.
Flowers held her cause of аction from the time it accrued, and she was a citizen of Nevada when she filed her complaint. The exemption to Nevada’s borrowing statute requires no more. Flowers’s suit is not covered by the borrowing statute, so Nevada’s two-year statute of limitations governs all her defamation claims.
2. Because the statute of limitations is two years rather than one, we reverse dismissal of the claims related to Stepha- *1126 nopoulos’s 1998 Larry King interview and remand for consideration of the merits. 4 Some of Flowers’s other claims, however, are so old that they are barred even under the two-year statute of limitations.
Flowers objects to passages in Carville’s memoirs,
All’s Fair: Love, War, and Running for President,
but that book was published in 1994, five years before she filed suit. Her only argument for resurrecting the claim relies on the continuing tort doctrine: When a tort involves continuing wrongful conduct, the statute of limitations doesn’t begin to run until that conduct ends.
Page v. United States,
3. The claims against Hillary Clinton for allegedly disclosing private information and organizing break-ins are also untimely under the applicable two-year statute of limitations.
See Turner v. County of Washoe,
Defamation
1. The district court reached the merits of three defamation claims. The first concerned Carville’s 1998 appearance on Larry King Live. Flowers accuses Car-ville of uttering the following (moderately incomprehensible) remark: '
“One of the things is to remember, we’ll go back to the Gennifer Flowers statement; I think the[y] found that tape was doctored and CNN [even] found our, like 19 or 12 different places.”
Flowers,
The second involved Stephanopoulos’s memoirs, All Too Human: A Political Education (1999)., Flowers, who seems to have read them more closely than most, complains about a number of passages. The book recounts how, after learning of the original story in the Star, Stephanopoulos planned his response to the media: “I came up with a no-comment denial: ‘I’m not going to comment on that tabloid trash.’ ” Id. at 57. Shortly thereafter, the book describеs how Stephanopoulos called a news reporter at the Associated Press and told him not to run the story: “ ‘You can’t put this crap on the wire,’ I said.” Id. He next recalls his dismay the following week when the Star ran the second. *1127 story, in which Flowers conceded the affair: “[A]ny fun I was having faded fast a week later, when Gennifer Flowers flipped. Another Thursday, another Star story, another garbage day. But this one was more serious.” Id. at 59. Finally, he describes his reaction to her press conference tapes: “The conversation did sound stilted; her questions were leading — maybe the tapes were doctored? It’s a setup. Later investigations by CNN and KCBS would show that the tapes were ‘selectively edited,’ but there was no getting around the fact that by talking to her on the phone, Clinton had put everything we worked for at risk.” Id. at 68.
The final claim involves a CNBC interview with Tim Russert in 2000, where Ste-phanopoulos, discussing the tapes, said, “Oh, it was absolutely his voice, but they were selectively edited in a way to — to сreate some — some impression.”
Flowers,
We agree with the district court that the trio of colorful waste metaphors — the references to the
Star
stories as “trash,” “crap” and “garbage” — are not defamatory under Nevada law. “[M]ere rhetorical hyperbole” is not actionable.
Wellman v. Fox,
We reach a different conclusion as to the statements that the tapes were “doctored” or “selectively edited.” The district court held these to be nondefama-tory “opinion[s]” based on news reports. Of Carville’s statement that “[CNN] found that tape was doctored,” it said:
[This allegation] is clearly an expression of opinion[,] not a factual assertion. [It] accurately refers to a CNN investigation and news report that taped conversations between President Clinton and Flowers were at least edited. He relies on such reports as the basis for his opinion and Flowers does not dispute that both CNN and KCBS made such reports. Carville’s statement is thus not capable of a defamatory meaning.
Flowers,
An unadorned claim that “Flowers doctored the tapes” would surely be defamatory. To “doctor” is to “conceal the real state or actual quality of by deceptive alteration.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 666 (Philip Babcock Gove et al. eds., 1981). The claim would imply that Flowers fraudulently altered the tapes to make her allegations more plausible.
Defendants argue that “doctor” can also be used in а neutral sense;
Webster’s
does define it alternatively as “to adapt or modify for a desired end by alteration or special treatment,” as in “[doc
*1128
tored] the play by tightening its whole structure and abridging the last act.”
Id.
We doubt, though, that anyone would understand the statement in this sense — -just as we doubt that anyone would assume Flowers “doctored” the tapes by nursing them back to health. At the very least, it isn’t the
only
reasonable construction; if a statement is “ ‘susceptible of different constructions, one of which is defamatory, resolution of the ambiguity is a question of fact for the jury.’ ”
Posadas v. City of Reno,
A statement that Flowers “selectively edited” the tapes could also be defamatory. While somewhat more neutral, it still insinuates deception. A jury could find that it implies Flowers altered the tapes to make them more corroborative of her claims.
We do not understand the district court to disagree with the foregoing analysis. Instead, it seems to have found dispositive that Carville and Stephanopoulos did not say outright that the tapes were doctored, but only reported that earlier news reports had said so. This argument has some intuitive appeal. After all, the statement “An expert on KCBS said that the tapes had been edited to enhance Flowers’s credibility” may be literally true, even if the KCBS expert is wrong.
Unfortunately, the district court overlooked the venerable principle that a person who repeats a defamatory statement is generally as liable as the one whо first utters it:
On the quaint homespun logic that “[talebearers are as bad as talemakers,” each repetition of a defamatory statement by a new person constitutes a new publication, rendering the repeater liable for that new publication.... The law deems the repeater to “adopt as his own” the defamatory statement. Liability for repetition of a libel may not be avoided by the mere expedient of adding the truthful caveat that one heard the statement from somebody else.
1 R. Smolla,
Law of Defamation
§ 4:87, at 4-136.3 to -136.4 (2d ed.2001) (footnotes omitted). “Every repetition of the defamation is a publication in itself, even though the repeater states the source, or resorts to the customary newspaper evasion ‘it is аlleged’.... ”
Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts
§ 113, at 799 (5th ed.1984) (footnotes omitted);
see, e.g., Liberty Lobby, Inc. v. Dow Jones & Co.,
The republication rule applies here. Carville said that CNN “found that tape was doctored,” and Stephanopoulos stated that KCBS and CNN reported that the tapes were “selectively edited.” The fact that Carville and Stephanopoulos may have “accurately referred]” to the news reports,
Flowers,
*1129
We have held that “when a speaker outlines the factual basis for his conclusion, his statement is protеcted.”
Partington v. Bugliosi,
This doesn’t necessarily mean that - Flowers can maintain her suit. As we explain below, unless defendants knew the news reports were probably false or had some obvious reason to doubt their accuracy, them reliance is protected by the First Amendment. But if it turns out that defendants knew the news reports were wrong — or acted with reckless indifference in the face of some clear warning sign— then they weren’t entitled to repeat them publicly and later claim that they were merely expressing nondefamatory opinions.
2. The prospect of liability for defamation has the obvious potential of chilling public debate. First Amendment concerns are particularly acute when the plaintiff is a public figure — someone who, for example, “voluntarily injеcts himself or is drawn into a particular public controversy.”
Gertz v. Robeyt Welch, Inc.,
Flowers is a public figure, at least with respect to the controversy here. Her affair with the governor of a state made the headlines in a national tabloid. To corroborate her story, she held a press conference where she played tape recordings of his phone calls — -all during a presidential nomination campaign. 6 If all this doesn’t make her a public figure, it’s hard to imagine what would. 7
A public figure plaintiff must show that the defendant acted with “actual malice” — that is, “knowledge that [a statement] was false” or “reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.”
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
One who repeats what he hears from a reputable news source, with no individualized reason external to the news report to doubt its accuracy, has not acted recklessly.
See Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton,
Defendants argue that “reliance on reports of reputable news organizations cannot constitute actual malice as a matter of law.” Appеllees’ Br. at 57. We agree with their statement of the rule, but find it inapplicable to them at this early stage in the proceedings. Defendants were not uninvolved third parties who clearly lacked access to the facts behind the published reports. If they knew that the news reports were false or had information from other sources that raised obvious doubts, then they didn’t “rely” on the news stories; they simply hid behind them. What defendants actually want is a rule that purported reliance on reputable news sources cannot constitute actual malice — but that is not the law.
This case is before us on a motion to dismiss. We ask only whether the pleadings are sufficient, not whether the plaintiff could find evidence to support them.
See, e.g., In re GlenFed, Inc. Sec. Litig.,
The Court in New York Times required “convincing clarity” of the proof presented to show actual malice[;] however, this requirement extends only to the proof required to meet the constitutional demands. As to the complaint, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require only that “[mjalice, intent, knowledge, and other condition of mind of a person ... be averred generally.” Rule 9(b).
Belli v. Orlando Daily Newspapers, Inc.,
The First Amendment is not irrelevant at the pleading stage. We have held that “where a plaintiff seeks damagеs ... for conduct which is prima facie protected by the First Amendment, the danger that the mere pendency of the action will chill the exercise of First Amendment rights requires more specific allegations than would otherwise be required.”
Franchise
*1131
Realty Interstate Corp. v. S.F. Local Joint Executive Bd. of Culinary Workers,
Actual malice is a subjective standard that turns on the defendant’s state of mind; it is typically proven by evidence beyond the defamatory publication itself. For that reason, “the issue of ‘actual malice’ ... cannot be properly disposed of by a motion to dismiss,” where the plaintiff has had no opportunity to present evidence in support of his allegations.
Metabolife Int'l, Inc. v. Wornick,
Flowers no doubt faces an uphill battle on remand. To survive summary judgment, she will have to marshal clear and convincing evidence that defendants knew the news reports were probably false or disregarded obvious warning signs from other sources. 11 The difficulty of her task ahead, however, is no reason to deny her the opportunity to make the attempt. 12
*1132 False Light
Flowers brought a parallel false light claim with each defamation claim. The district court dismissed them all as duplicative.
Flowers,
The false light invasion of privacy tort is an odd hybrid of defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress, a jurisprudential offspring that recalls George Bernard Shaw’s witty rebuff of Isadora Duncan.
13
Judges and legal scholars have puzzled over its existence.
See
1 J.T. McCarthy,
The Rights of Publicity and Privacy
§ 5:105, at 5-241 to -244 (2d ed.2000) (noting that “courts have yet to draw a clear and distinct line between [defamation and false light]”);
see also Cain v. Hearst Corp.,
False light, like defamation, requires at least an implicit false statement of objective fact.
See Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 652E(b) (1977);
e.g., Solano v. Playgirl, Inc.,
In Nevada, however, false light extends beyond defamation in one respect: A plaintiff need not show injury to reputation. “ ‘The false light privacy action differs from a defamation action in that the injury in privacy actions is mental distress from having been exposed to public view, while the injury in defamation actions is damage to reputation.’ ”
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals v. Bobby Berosini, Ltd.,
The district court relied on California case law.
See Flowers,
Flowers has alleged emotional harm separate from injury to her reputation. See Am. Compl. ¶ 35. A jury could award her damages for false light but not for defamation if it found that she suffered subjective distress but not reputational injury. Because of this theoretical possibility, we must reverse the district court’s ruling as to the false light claims. 14
Conclusion
Just as Bill Clinton’s critics are free to attack his scruples and sincerity in the public media, his supporters are free to defend him; the law will rarely hold any of them responsible for their words. This freedom, however, is not absolute. Even among public figures, defamation — that tort “[wjhose sting is sharper than the sword’s” 15 — can leave scars that in ■ the most egregious circumstances demand redress.
Gennifer Flowers claims that defendants knew she was telling the truth, knew the tapes weren’t doctored, knew the news reports they claimed to rely on were wrong, but accused her of being a liar and a fraud anyway. If Flowers’s claims are true, her suit does not offend the First Amendment. She has produced no evidence yet to support them, but under our system of civil procedure, she must be given at least some chance to seek it before her lawsuit is thrown out of court.
We AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of all claims based on Carville’s book, the disclosure and intrusion claims against Clinton, and all claims based on Stephanopoulos’s book other than those related to the tape-doctoring passage. We REVERSE dismissal of the dеfamation and false light claims based on Carville’s Larry King interview, Stephanopoulos’s Larry King interview, and the tape-doctoring passage in Stephanopoulos’s book. We VACATE the denial of leave to file a second and third amended complaint and the dismissal of the conspiracy claims. We remand for further proceedings in accordance with our instructions. Each party shall bear its own costs in this appeal.
Notes
. The requirement that the plaintiff have held the cause of action since it accrued prevents foreigners from evading the citizenship requirement by assigning their claims to Nevada citizens.
Cf., e.g., Lewis v. Hyams,
. California's version includes a comma after the word "state,” as did Idaho's at one time.
See Miller v. Stauffer Chem. Co.,
. Nevada’s statute is atypical in this regard. Professor Ester identified twelve borrowing statutes with specific exemptions for citizen or resident plaintiffs.
See
Ester,
supra,
at 80. Of these, nine (including the statutes in California, Idaho and Utah) refer to status at some time other than the moment of filing suit. In addition to the three statutes quoted above, see Del.Code Ann. tit. 10, § 8121 ("[w]here the cause of action originally accrued in favor of a person who at the time of such accrual was a resident”); N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 202 ("where the cause of action accrued in favor of a resident of the state”); N.C. Gen. Slat. § 1-21 ("where the cause of action originally accrued in favor of a resident”); 7 Guam Code Ann. § 11413 ("one who has been a citizen”); 32 P.R. Laws Ann. § 263 ("one who has been a citizen”); C.Z.Code tit. 4, § 111 (1934),
quoted in
Ester,
supra,
at 83 ("one who has been a resident”). In contrast, only three statutes (including Nevada's) leave the requirement in the present tense.
See
Haw.Rev.Stat. § 657-9 ("except in favor of a domiciled resident thereof, who has held the cause of action from the time it accrued”); Minn.Stat. § 541.14 (repealed 1977),
quoted in Sautter v. Interstate Power Co.,
. The district court didn’t consider the merits of this claim, and Stephanopoulos didn't argue them apart from a vague assertion that the statements were pretty much the same as the ones he had made elsewhere. We decline to address the matter in the first instance.
. Neither privilege applies to the tape-doctoring remarks here. The common law fair report privilegе is inapplicable because the statements are not related to an official proceeding.
Sahara Gaming,
. These facts are conceded in the complaint, Am. Compl. ¶ 11, so we may consider them on a motion to dismiss.
. By tape recording Clinton’s phone calls and holding a press conference to play them, Flowers voluntarily injected herself into the fray, or at least threw kerosene on the flames once the conflagration was underway. We can therefore stay clear of thе intercircuit conflict over purely involuntary public figures.
Compare Dameron v. Wash. Magazine, Inc.,
. Despite the apparent breadth of its holding, we have yet to apply
Franchise Realty
outside the
Noerr-Pennington
context. We also note some tension between
Franchise Realty
and
Colder v. Jones,
. Complaints we have dismissed under
Franchise Realty
are not analogous to Flowers's.
See, e.g., Kottle v. Northwest Kidney Ctrs.,
. Defendants point out that these assertions weren't made in the complaint. We don't rely on the assertions to show the sufficiency of Flowers's pleadings. We mention them to illustrate the kind of evidence Flowers could find that might bear on whether defendants acted knowingly or recklessly.
. She could also survive summary judgment by offering clear and convincing evidence that any defamatory, material discrepancies between the news reports and the statements were intentional or reckless.
. The district court denied Flowers’s requests to amend her complaint a second and third time because the former was moot and the latter would be futile.
Flowers,
112
*1132
F.Supp.2d at 1214. These rationales are no longer valid, but because the district court has discretion whether to allow amendment,
Solomon v. N. Am. Life & Cas. Ins. Co.,
. See, e.g., Mardy Grothe, Never Let a Fool Kiss You or a Kiss Fool You 112 (1999), quoted at Masters of Chiasmus: George Bernard Shaw (2002), at http://www.chiasmus.com/mastersofchiasmus/shaw.shtml.
. The false light tort does not allow recovery for rhetorical hyperbole,
see Partington,
. Bill Shakespeare, The Winter's Tale, act 2, sc. 3.
