delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs, Maple Lanes, Incorporated, and Kenneth George, Sr., appeal the circuit court’s order granting summary judgment to defendant News Media Corporation, the publisher of the Rochelle News Leader (News Media). Plaintiffs alleged that an article published in defendant’s newspaper defamed them. The trial court ruled that the allegedly defamatory statement was an accurate summary of a statement mаde by defendant Mel Messer, the sheriff of Ogle County, and was therefore protected by the governmental report privilege. Plaintiff appeals, contending that the newspaper’s report changed the “gist or sting” of the statement and was therefore not privileged. We revеrse and remand.
On May 9, 1996, the Rochelle News Leader ran a front-page story about the arrest of a local restauranteur on drug charges. The story included the following quote attributed to Messer, set in large, italic type: “We are targeting businesses that supplement their incomе with cocaine and drug sales, just like we did with Frankies in Rochelle.”
Plaintiffs sued Messer, the Ogle County sheriffs department, and News Media. Maple Lanes оwns Frankies, a restaurant in Rochelle. George is the president and principal shareholder of Maple Lanes. Plaintiffs claimed that Messer’s statement, as quoted by the newspaper, was false and defamatory.
During lengthy pretrial proceedings, Messer filed an affidavit in which hе stated that his actual statement was “We are targeting businesses whose employees are supplementing their income with cocаine and drug sales, just like we did with Frankies in Rochelle.” (Emphasis added.) News Media responded with the affidavit of Laurie Weissmann Sodaro, the repоrter who wrote the story, in which she averred that she accurately quoted Messer.
The trial court dismissed Messer and the sheriffs department because they were immune from suit and plaintiffs do not appeal that decision. The court also granted summary judgment to News Media on the ground that the allegedly defamatory statement was covered by the governmental report privilege, also known as the “fair report” privilеge. The court held that, assuming the newspaper story abridged Messer’s statement by eliminating the reference to “employees,” it did not chаnge the “gist or sting” of the statement. Plaintiffs filed a timely notice of appeal.
Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in holding that the fair report privilege immunized News Media for the allegedly defamatory article. Plaintiffs argue that by deleting the words “employees of’ from Messer’s stаtement, defendant changed the gist of the statement by implying that the business as a whole and George in particular participated in or сondoned drug sales by its employees.
The trial court granted News Media’s motion for summary judgment. Summary judgment is proper when the pleadings, depоsitions, and affidavits demonstrate that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 735 ILCS 5/2 — 1005(c) (West 1998). The court must construe the evidence strictly against the movant and liberally in favor of the nonmoving party. In re Estate of Hoover,
The governmental report privilege protects news accounts based on statements of governmental agencies and officials in their official capacities. Tepper v. Copley Press, Inc.,
Here, there is an obvious factual dispute about what Sheriff Messer actually said. Messer claimed he said that “employees of” Frankies were selling drugs, while Sodaro averred that he referred to “businesses” such as Frankies that sell drugs. Because we are reviewing the grant of summary judgment for defendant, we construe the evidence strictly against the moving party. Therefore, we will assume that Messer said that “employees of’ Frankies were selling drugs.
With that in mind, we cannot say that as a matter of law the story contained an accurate summary of Messer’s statement. A fair reading of the sheriffs comment was that individual employees of Frankies were supplementing their incomes through drug sales. The statement аs reported can be read as implying that the business itself was receiving the profits from drug sales and that George, as the president and prinсipal shareholder of the corporation, knew of and condoned the sales. A jury could find that defendant changed the gist of the statеment by referring to the business as a whole and to George rather than to individual employees.
This case is similar to Berkos v. National Broadcasting Co.,
Here, as in Berkos and Lowe, the statement reported did not accuse George or Maple Lanes of criminal activity. The only connection between plaintiffs and drug sales came from the quotation in thе story. Therefore, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on the ground that the statement is privileged.
The judgment of the circuit court of Ogle County is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
GEIGER and BOWMAN, JJ., concur.
