The state of Kansas incarcerated Thomas P. Lamb, pro se plaintiff in this libel action, over thirty years ago. He is serving three consecutive life sentences for two counts of first degree kidnapping and one count of first degree murder. In July 2001, defendant, newspaper reporter Tony Rizzo, wrote two articles about Mr. Lamb’s convictions and upcoming parole hearing. When Mr. Lamb’s request for parole was subsequently denied, he sued Mr. Rizzo in *1135 Kansas state court asserting, among other things, that Mr. Rizzo’s articles contained “lies and false information” which caused Mr. Lamb to be denied parole, R. Vol. I, Doc. 1, Ex. A at 1.
Mr. Rizzo removed the case'to federal district court based upon diversity of citizenship. He also filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, attaching to it numerous newspaper articles chronicling Mr. Lamb’s criminal history. In the motion, Mr. Rizzo contended that Mr. Lamb was libel-proof as a matter of law; in other words, his public reputation at the time the articles were published was so diminished with respect to a specific subject (his kidnapping and murder convictions), that he could not be further injured by allegedly false statements on that subject. Because damage to one’s reputation is the heart of a defamation action in Kansas, argued Mr. Rizzo, Mr. Lamb’s claims must be dismissed.
Mr. Lamb countered that, by the time the articles were published, his reputation had been rehabilitated and that he was no longer libel-proof. To substantiate this contention, Mr. Lamb attached many exhibits to his response, including letters from various individuals who had recommended he be paroled.
On January 31, 2003, the district court dismissed Mr. Lamb’s complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. While acknowledging that Mr. Rizzo did not cite any Kansas ease law adopting the libel-proof plaintiff doctrine,'the district court predicted that the Kansas Supreme Court, if presented with the issue, would adopt the doctrine.
Lamb v. Rizzo,
Our jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Because we agree with the district court’s prediction that the Kansas Supreme Court would adopt the libel-proof plaintiff doctrine and hold that it is a bar to Mr. Lamb’s claims, and because ’ the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Mr. Lamb’s motion to alter or amend the judgment, we affirm. 2
I. Background
Although the district court included a detailed factual summary, our disposition requires only an abbreviated description of the facts pertinent to this appeal. The following facts are largely undisputed.
In December, 1969, Lamb kidnapped and murdered Karen Sue Kemmerly, who was then 24 years old. Kemmerly’s nude body was found ... on December 7, 1969. In January, 1970, he kidnapped Patricia Ann Childs, who was then 18 years old. Lamb demanded ransom from Childs’ parents, which they agreed to pay. Law enforcement officers *1136 staked out the scene of the ransom payment, and were able to apprehend him after a high speed car chase.
Lamb,
[Mr. Lamb] obtained a 38 caliber pistol. He and [a jail] trustee then took three dispatchers and a jailer captive and escaped from the jail after locking the four sheriffs officers in a jail cell. [Mr. Lamb] and [the trustee] then proceeded ■ across the street from the courthouse to a small cafe where they took a patron, Loyd Midyett, hostage. The pair then commandeered Midyett’s car ... with Midyett in their custody .... [and] they were eventually apprehended at a roadblock. ...
Id.
at 1037 (quoting
State v. Lamb,
Mr. Lamb has now been imprisoned for more than a quarter of a century. But “even that isolation has not prevented him from periodically attempting his violent reentry into society at large.”
Id.
at 1038,
As set forth above, Mr. Lamb was denied parole in 2001 and shortly thereafter sued Mr. Rizzo. Mr. Lamb asserted that Mr. Rizzo’s articles were defamatory (and that publishing them constituted a negligent tort, R. Vol. I, Doc. 1, Ex. A at 2, 4) because he inaccurately reported that Mr. Lamb: (1) was convicted of raping both Ms. Kemmerly and Ms. Childs; (2) was arrested “after a chase and shootout that left one police officer seriously injured;” (3) “fooled prison officials in 1969, when he was serving time for burglary” into recommending him for parole; and (4) pursued his victims by “prowl[ing] area shopping centers, dressed as a woman.”
Id.
at 2-3,
(1) he was never charged with rape as to either of his victims and that his second victim told several different stories; (2) while an officer may have been shot [as] officers were pursuing him, the shot came from another officer and was in any event not life threatening; (3) there is no indication that he fooled anyone into recommending him for parole; and (4) while Lamb did abduct Ms[.] Childes [sic] from a shopping center, [he] was fully dressed as a male at that time.
Lamb,
II. Discussion
A. Dismissal of Plaintiffs Complaint Based Upon the Libel-Proof Plaintiff Doctrine
In concluding that the libel-proof plaintiff doctrine barred Mr. Lamb’s claims, the district court resolved Mr. Rizzo’s motion to dismiss under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Notwithstanding, the court clearly relied upon and incorporated into its order granting the motion material derived from documents outside the four corners of Mr. Lamb’s complaint. In so doing, “the court converted the motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment.”
Nichols v. United States,
On appeal, Mr. Lamb argues that the district court “knew that Kansas did not have a libel-proof plaintiff doctrine” and knowingly violated his rights by applying “that federal doctrine to his case.” Aplt. Br. at 6. In the alternative, he apparently argues that even if the libel-proof plaintiff doctrine is applicable, it cannot be used to bar his claims thirty-one years after “the only crime that could have labeled [him] ... libel-proof.” Id. at 7. Mr. Lamb’s arguments, however, are misplaced.
As a preliminary, matter, although Mr. Lamb concedes that the substantive law of the forum state applies,
see Erie R.R. v. Tompkins,
that when a plaintiffs reputation is so diminished at the time of publication of the allegedly defamatory material that only nominal damages at most could be awarded because the person’s reputation was not capable of sustaining further harm, the plaintiff is deemed to be libel-proof as a matter of law and is not permitted to burden a defendant with a trial.
Eliot J. Katz, Annotation,
Defamation: Who is “Libelr-Proof”
When ... an individual engages in conspicuously anti-social or even criminal behavior, which is widely reported to the public, his reputation diminishes proportionately. Depending upon the nature of the conduct, the number of offenses, and the degree and range of publicity received, there comes a time when the individual’s reputation for specific conduct, or his general reputation for honesty and fair dealing is sufficiently low in the public’s estimation that he can *1138 recover only nominal damages for subsequent defamatory statements.
First Amendment considerations of free press and speech, promoting society’s interest in uninhibited, robust, and wide-open discussion, must prevail over an individual’s interest in his reputation in such cases. An individual who engages in certain anti-social or criminal behavior and suffers a diminished reputation may be “libel proof’ as a matter of law, as it relates to that specific behavior.
Wynberg,
The libel-proof plaintiff doctrine was first enunciated in
Cardillo v. Doubleday & Co.,
where a prisoner, Cardillo, brought a libel suit asserting that the authors and publishers of
My Life in the Mafia
incorrectly reported that he had participated in certain specific crimes.
Having set forth a description of the libel-proof plaintiff doctrine and where it first took hold, we now turn to the district court’s prediction that the Kansas Supreme Court would, on these facts, adopt the doctrine and hold that it is a bar to Mr. Lamb’s claims.
[A] federal court’s prediction of state law looks to (1) lower state court decisions and state Supreme Court dicta; ... (3) the general rule on the issue; (4) the rule in other states looked to by [Kansas] courts when they formulate their own substantive law, and (5) other available legal sources, such as treatises and law review commentaries.
DP-Tek, Inc. v. AT & T Global Info. Solutions Co.,
Libel is governed by state law. In Kansas,
damage to one’s reputation is the essence and gravamen of an action for defamation. Unless injury to reputation is shown, plaintiff has not established a valid claim for defamation, by either libel or slander.... It is reputation which is defamed, reputation which is injured, reputation which is protected by the laws of libel and slander.
Gobin v. Globe Pub. Co.,
Since the libel-proof plaintiff doctrine’s inception, it has been said that “[t]he cases that most compellingly invite [the doctrine’s] application are those cases, like
Cardillo,
in which criminal convictions for behavior similar to that alleged in the challenged communication are urged as a bar to the claim.”
Finklea,
“This is not a case,” resolved the district court,
in which the substance of the plaintiffs reputation-destroying actions are in any doubt. Given the utter heinousness of the offenses which led to the plaintiffs three consecutive sentences of life imprisonment, the uncontroverted nature of those offenses, and the widespread notoriety attached to the convictions of the plaintiff as well as his periodic escapes from custody, the plaintiff has not and cannot present an actionable case of libel based upon the purported misstatements contained in Rizzo’s articles.
Lamb,
In considering whether the Kansas Supreme Court would adopt this doctrine, we have looked to the required sources: Kansas Supreme Court dicta, the general rule on the issue, treatises, and law review commentaries.
DP-Tek, Inc.,
B. Denial of Plaintiffs Post-Judgment Motion to Alter or Amend
Mr. Lamb also challenges the district court’s denial of his Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) motion to alter or amend the judgment, arguing that the court erred by holding his negligence claim subsumed by his libel claim, and denying him his “right to discovery,” Aplt. Br. at 10. Having reviewed the district court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion and concluded that the court did not make “a clear error of judgment or exceed[ ] the bounds of permissible choice in the circumstances,” we leave the district court’s ruling undisturbed.
Phelps v. Hamilton,
The judgment of the district court and its order denying Mr. Lamb’s motion to alter or amend are AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We liberally construe Mr. Lamb’s pro se pleadings.
Haines v. Kerner,
. After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of this appeal. See Fed. R.App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
. The district court did not give notice of its intent to convert Mr. Rizzo's Rule 12(b)(6) motion, but Mr. Lamb does not and cannot claim that the absence of notice prejudiced him.
See Nichols,
.
Guccione v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
. We decided
Menne
before the Supreme Court’s decision in
Salve Regina Coll. v. Russell,
