I. Background
Oliver “Buck” Revell brought suit in federal district court against the defendants, David Hoffman, Alexander B. Magnus, and Americans for Responsible Media (“ARM”), seeking damages for defamation and civil conspiracy under Oklahoma law. Revell also included two other individuals, Gene Wheaton and Paul Hudson, and a foreign corporation, Feral House. Whea-ton and Feral House were dismissed, and Hudson declared bankruptcy. On September 5, 2002, this court received the appel-lee’s suggestion of death of Alexander B. Magnus. Thus, only David Hoffman and ARM remain as defendants on appeal.
Plaintiff-Appellant, Oliver “Buck” Revell served in the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) for thirty years, rising to the position of Associate Deputy Director. Revell also served on the Vice-President’s Task Force on Terrorism, the National Foreign Intelligence Board, and the Terrorist Crisis Management and Deputies Committee of the National Security Council. In addition, he served as Vice-Chair of the Interagency Group for Counterintelligence and the President’s Commission on Civil Aviation Security and Terrorism. Revell has testified before committees in both the House and Senate and has previously appeared on various national news programs, including 60 Minutes, Face the Nation, and Nightline.
David Hoffman is the author of two books, The Oklahoma City Bombing and the Politics of Terror (hereinafter “Oklahoma City Bombing ”) and the unfinished book Murdergate. Alexander B. Magnus, through the not-for-profit organization Americans for Responsible Media (hereinafter “ARM”), funded Hoffman’s work on both books. Oklahoma City Bombing and Murdergate both contain statements concerning Revell’s. activities during his tenure at the FBI. The following passages are from Oklahoma City Bombing:
1. In 1985, Wheaton was approached by security consultants to Vice President Bush’s “Task Force on Combating Terrorism” who were working for USMC Lt. Colonel Oliver North and Associate Deputy FBI Director Oliver “Buck” Revell. “They wanted me to help create a ‘death squad’ that would have White House deniability to assassinate people they would identify as terrorists,” said Wheaton.... Wheaton claims the program continues to the present day. (p. 63).
2. On December 5, 1998, a Palestinian named Samra Mahayoun warned authorities in Helsinki that a Pan Am 747 leaving Frankfurt was to bombed [sic] within two weeks, (p. 170).
What is interesting is that Oliver “Buck” Revell, former Counter-Terrorism chief of the FBI, pulled his son and daughter-in-law off Pan Am 103 minutes before the flight. Did Revell know something the rest of us did not? (p. 170, n. * *).
*1231 3. Several minutes before flight 103 took off from London’s Heathrow airport, FBI Assistant Director Oliver “Buck” Revell rushed out to the tarmac and pulled his son and daughter-in-law off the plane, (p. 313).
4. “A number of VIPs were pulled off that plane. A number of intelligence operatives were pulled off that plane.”
South African president Peter Botha and several high-ranking officials were advised by state security forces to change their reservations at the last hour. The South African State Security forces have a close relationship with the CIA.
As in Oklahoma City, this would become the catch-all phrase that would set everything right and prove the government had no involvement. Of course, this would be somewhat difficult in Revell’s case, since he pulled his son and daughter-in-law off the plane minutes before it took off.... Interestingly, Revell was the FBI’s lead investigator in the crash of an Arrow Air DC-8 which exploded on December 12, 1985 in Gander, Newfoundland, with the loss of all 248 personnel, (p. 317).
5. It was also an act that the U.S. shadow government, responsible for precipitating, was anxious to cover up. Had the true cause of the crash — [Oliver] North’s double-dealing with the Iranians — been revealed, the Iran-Contra scandal would have surfaced two years before it had.... “Buck” Revell would be on hand to make sure it didn’t, (p. 318).
6. Oliver North and “Buck” Revell helped develop the policy of militarizing our law-enforcement. One example is the FBI, which is now being given sniper training in the military. That training helped the Bureau massacre 86 people at Waco, the first time in recent history that the government violated the Posse Comitatus Act by using federal troops on American citizens, (p. 382).
According to Revell, Murdergate contains similar allegations.
Defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that Revell is a “public figure” and the First Amendment therefore limits Revell’s right to recover for defamation under Oklahoma state law.
See New York Times v. Sullivan,
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Comm. for the First Amendment v. Campbell,
In considering whether a fact is material, we must look to the applicable substantive law.
Liberty Lobby,
B. Liability for Defamation
Revell seeks to recover damages for defamation under Oklahoma law. The First Amendment, however, “prohibits a
public official
from recovering damages for a defamatory falsehood relating to his official conduct unless he proves that the statement was made with
‘actual malice.’
”
New York Times,
1. Status as Public Official
In
Rosenblatt v. Baer,
The district court found that Revell had a “[thirty-year] career in the government, in particular the high echelons of the FBI where he had an influential role in fundamental issues of this country’s national and foreign policy.” Dist. Ct. Order at 9. We have no doubt that Revell’s various governmental positions are of “such apparent importance that the public has an independent interest in the qualifications and performance of the person who holds it, beyond the general public interest in the qualifications and performance of all government employees.”
Rosenblatt,
Revell argues, however, that he is no longer a public official, as he has now retired from the FBI. We disagree. In Udevitz, we noted:
That the person defamed no longer holds the same position does not by itself strip him of his status as a public official for constitutional purposes. If the defamatory remarks relate to his conduct while he was a public official and the manner in which he performed his responsibilities is still a matter of public interest, he remains a public offi *1233 cial within the meaning of New York Times.
Id.
at 591 n. 3 (citing
Rosenblatt,
Under
Udevitz
and
Rosenblatt,
we hold that Revell is a public official for First Amendment purposes.
See Rosenblatt,
2. Actual Malice
Actual malice exists where a party publishes a defamatory statement “[1] with [actual] knowledge that it was false or [2] with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.”
Id.
at 280,
Revell proffers no evidence indicating that Hoffman entertained doubts regarding the truth of the statements in Oklahoma City Bombing. Throughout his brief, Revell characterizes the existence of malice as facially “apparent” and “obvious” based on the “inherent improbability” of Hoffman’s statements. Revell argues that “malice here is evidenced by both the specific statements and the totality of the book.”
Revell confuses what might be considered
some
evidence of actual malice with what, standing alone, will suffice to carry his burden of proving actual malice. Even if we were to accept that Hoffman’s statements were “inherently improbable,” this would merely lessen — rather than meet — Revell’s burden of offering some extrinsic evidence of Hoffman’s actual malice.
St. Amant
makes quite clear that
New York Times
requires “either deliberate falsification or reckless publication ‘despite the publisher’s awareness of probable falsity.’ ”
St. Amant,
Further, we have no evidence that Hoffman purposefully avoided the truth. On
*1234
the contrary, Hoffman did conduct an investigation prior to publishing,
1
and we have no facts before us that might call into question the veracity of Hoffman’s sources.
Cf. id.
at 691,
Under
Rosenblatt,
Revell is a public official.
See Rosenblatt,
C. Civil Conspiracy
Revell’s alleged as part of his complaint that ARM conspired with Hoffmann to commit defamation. Under Oklahoma law, “[tjhere can be no civil conspiracy where the
act
complained of and the
means employed
are lawful.”
Brock v. Thompson,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons set out above, we AFFIRM.
Notes
. Hoffman relied upon several sources, including: (1) a Public Broadcasting System-sponsored book and a 1995 documentary, both accusing Revell of efforts to obstruct justice in collaboration with former Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North; (2) an essay by Hart Lidov highly critical of Revell, posted on the website Columbia Journalism Review, USA (www.cjr.org); (3) an article by Gene Whea-ton, formerly with the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command, published in 1996 by the Portland Free Press, in which Wheaton alleges that several security consultants, including Revell, approached him proposing to create a "Death Squad” — a group to assassinate individuals identified as "terrorists” by the White House; and (4) statements of Paul Hudson, an attorney and the head of the Pan Am 103 survivor's group, concerning the alleged advance warning of the Pan Am 103 bombing and allegations that Revell pulled his son off of Pan Am 103.
