Eduardo ORTEGA, Appellant,
v.
POST-NEWSWEEK STATIONS, FLORIDA, INC., a Florida Corporation, D/B/a WPLG-TV, Channel 10, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
R. Stuart Huff, Coral Gables, for appellant.
*973 Steel Hector & Davis and Donald M. Middlebrooks, Miami, for appellee.
Before NESBITT, BASKIN and JORGENSON, JJ.
JORGENSON, Judge.
Eduardo Ortega appeals from a final summary judgment entered in favor of Post-Newsweek Stations, d/b/a WPLG-TV [WPLG]. We affirm upon a holding that fair and accurate reports of statements made during official proceedings are conditionally privileged.
Ortega sued WPLG following two broadcasts which he claimed were defamatory. Clarence Jones, a reporter at WPLG, was initially tipped off to the story by a staff member of the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Consumer, and Monetary Affairs. The staffer told Jones that there would be testimony at the subcommittee's hearing regarding money laundering in the South Florida area. Jones became interested in the story when he was told that one of the corporations being investigated by the subcommittee, Clemwood, N.V., owned the old Nixon compound on Key Biscayne. The staffer also told Jones that Robert Edwards, Deputy Commissioner of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement [FDLE], would be testifying before the subcommittee. Jones called Edwards to ask him about his testimony; Edwards was not there, so Jones spoke to FDLE agent Cummings. Jones also gathered information from public records, from FDLE agent Nill and a real estate analyst named Charles Kimball.
In addressing the Congressional subcommittee, Edwards introduced his remarks by stating:
Mr. Chairman, your staff has requested that I provide specific testimony concerning difficulties that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement has experienced in identifying principals involved in financial transactions resulting from Florida criminal activities when these transactions are conducted through the Netherlands Antilles. (Emphasis added.)[1]
The portion of Edwards' testimony specifically regarding Botero and Ortega was as follows:
This subject [Botero] is an indicted money launderer and cocaine smuggler in the Southern District of Florida. A copy of that indictment has been provided to the committee, Mr. Chairman.
This subject has been accused of laundering $55,000,000 in a twelve-month period (1979-1980) through a bank in Miami. Currency Transaction Reports (IRS Form 4789) were knowingly and intentionally not filed with IRS. This Miami bank also wired millions of dollars to unknown foreign banks and corporations and U.S. banks.
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement examined the subject's real estate holdings in South Florida, placing emphasis on Dade County.
* * * * * *
In the interest of clarity, I am directing your attention to Chart # 2 ... to help illustrate the numerous Netherlands Antilles' corporations that the subject is associated with. As you can see, A Florida general partnership is 30% owned by Haywards Heath Investments, N.V., and 70% owned by the subject and his fronts. The general partnership (alone) owns over $500,000 of real estate in Dade County.
* * * * * *
One final illustration on chart # 1 is the Clemwood, N.V., purchase of a residential compound on Key Biscayne, Florida. The house was purchased for $380,000, then torn down and another extremely large residence was built for an additional $1.2 million. These transactions were conducted by subject's partners and nominees. (Emphasis added.)
Edwards concluded by saying:
*974 In summary, Mr. Chairman, I would like to point out that the Netherlands Antilles' corporations, in concert with their banks, provide almost total anonymity for these criminals who wish to "launder" monies from the United States and who do not wish to pay taxes in the United States. (Emphasis added.)
Jones' report for WPLG can be summarized as follows:
Using a front to hide the true investor is an old tradition in this country. One of the best places now to hide real ownership is the Netherlands Antilles. Nixon's home on Key Biscayne has been bought with cash and bulldozed, and a new $1.2 home, also paid for with cash, has been erected in its place by Clemwood, N.V., a Netherlands Antilles corporation. Ortega was given power of attorney for Clemwood, N.V. "The Congressional Committee's investigation indicates Ortega is a front for Hernan Botero now waiting trial on charges of laundering 55 million dollars in drug profits. One of his investments may have been the old Nixon property."
This report was a fair and accurate abridgement of Edwards' testimony before the subcommittee and of information contained in public records and the FDLE's files. Although Botero's and Ortega's names were not mentioned in Edwards' public testimony, the subcommittee was provided with Botero's name by separate documentation.[2] Also, FDLE agents had told Jones that Botero was the subject involved and that Ortega held power of attorney for Clemwood, N.V., and lived on the property mentioned in the testimony.
In compliance with the mandatory notice requirement of section 770.01, Florida Statutes (1981), Ortega's attorney wrote WPLG, denying the allegations and stating that Ortega would be filing a defamation suit against WPLG.[3] WPLG directed Jones to investigate the matter further. Jones' additional investigation resulted in the broadcast of a second story which, summarized, went as follows:
The subcommittee explored how Netherlands Antilles corporations are used to evade taxes, hide narcotics profits, and hide the real investors in South Florida real estate. Bob Edwards, Deputy Director of the FDLE testified about the activities of two brothers, Hernan and Robert Botero, who are accused of laundering $55 million in drug profits. Edwards put charts into evidence showing the Boteros' real estate holdings. Included in the chart are eight Netherlands Antilles corporations. One of those, Clemwood, N.V., holds title to the Nixon property. Ortega lives in the new house on the Nixon property and says it is his house. Of the eight Netherlands Antilles corporations on the chart, three had given Ortega the power of attorney to sign real estate transactions for them.
The second story corrected the first story by saying that, although the FDLE had told Jones that the property was paid for in cash, in fact the property was encumbered by large mortgages. Jones also said that Ortega's attorney denied that Botero ever had an interest in Clemwood, N.V., that Ortega was a front for anyone, or that Ortega had anything to do with drug smuggling or money laundering. Finally, Jones stated that Ortega (or his attorney) was given the chance to discuss the matter on camera, but Ortega declined. The second story was also a fair and accurate report of the proceedings before the subcommittee.
*975 At the conclusion of discovery, WPLG moved for summary judgment. Relying on Nodar v. Galbreath,
At the outset, it should be noted that in Florida the press has no qualified privilege to defame a private individual simply by virtue of the matter being of public concern. This "neutral reporting privilege" was WPLG's second argument on appeal. As the Florida supreme court stated in Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Ane,
Although the press has no qualified privilege to report on private individuals involved in matters of public concern, it does have a qualified privilege to report on matters brought out in public proceedings. Jamason v. Palm Beach Newspapers, Inc.,
The United States Supreme Court held in Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
Because the standard of negligence set out in Ane still remains, the qualified privilege of reporting on official proceedings is limited in Florida. Thus, while the press may report upon a defamatory statement made at an official proceeding, it will nevertheless be liable if the private plaintiff shows that the press failed to take reasonable measures to insure that the report of the proceeding is accurate. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 611 (1976); see Walsh v. Miami Herald Publishing Co.,
In support of his argument that summary judgment was improper, Ortega maintains that he has no connection with Hernan Botero. Whether Ortega is in fact involved with Botero is irrelevant. The fact is that Edwards testified before a Congressional subcommittee that Botero was linked to Clemwood, N.V., and it is undisputed that Clemwood bought the Key Biscayne property, that Ortega has power of attorney for Clemwood, N.V., and that Ortega says the property is his home.
In arguing that the report was not fair and accurate, Ortega states that WPLG knew that there were many legitimate reasons for creating Netherlands Antilles corporations. *976 He therefore objected to WPLG calling Ortega (through Clemwood, N.V.) a "front" for Botero. "Front," however, is the term used by Edwards in his testimony before the subcommittee in referring to Botero's associates. Ortega therefore cannot prevail on that ground.
As an alternative argument, Ortega suggests that either the reporter must be present at the time of the official proceeding or he must review the transcript of the proceeding. Ortega relies on the fact that, before airing the first report, Jones did not actually attend the hearing or read Edward's testimony to the subcommittee. This does not change the fact that Jones' report was a fair and accurate summary because Jones' report consisted of information either testified to at the subcommittee hearing, Binder v. Triangle Publications, Inc.,
In Lavin v. New York News, Inc.,
Ortega's ultimate fall-back position is that WPLG knew or should have known that the law enforcement information and the subcommittee testimony were untrue. Even if this were the case, he cannot prevail. The privilege to report on official proceedings exists so that the public may be kept informed of the workings of government. That purpose is served, notwithstanding any inaccuracy of the information, when the information brought out in official proceedings is reported. Therefore, as the court concluded in Lavin, whether governmental agents "misinterpreted the situation, had incorrect information, or even consciously misstated the facts in the affidavit, there can be no liability on the part of the [newspaper] for republishing the contents of an official document, so long as their account is reasonably accurate and fair." Lavin,
We also agree with the Third Circuit's observation in Medico,
In summary, we hold that a qualified privilege of reporting on official proceedings is the settled law of Florida. Because both reports of the official proceeding regarding the private individual, Ortega, were fair and substantially accurate, the trial court correctly ruled that WPLG was not liable as a matter of law. Summary judgment was therefore appropriate. Brake & Alignment Supply Corp. v. Post-Newsweek Stations of Fla., Inc.,
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Tax Evasion Through the Netherlands Antilles and Other Tax Haven Countries: Hearings Before the Subcomm. on Commerce, Consumer, and Monetary Affairs of the House Comm. on Government Operations, 98th Cong., 1st Sess. 99-119 (1983) (statement of Robert Edwards, Deputy Commissioner of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement).
[2] Names were not mentioned before the subcommittee in Botero's and Ortega's case because Edwards stated at the outset of his testimony that he would not mention subjects by name when they were under active investigation or pending trial. The subcommittee was provided with Botero's name via the federal case number reflecting his indictment. The subcommittee was also shown a chart linking Botero to Clemwood, N.V. While the subcommittee was not provided with Ortega's name, it is undisputed that Ortega is attorney-in-fact for Clemwood, N.V., and lives on the property mentioned in the testimony, i.e., the property formerly comprising the Nixon White House.
[3] Section 770.01 requires that a plaintiff first notify the broadcaster and specify the alleged defamatory statements before an action for libel or slander can be brought against the broadcaster.
[4] In view of our holding, we do not address WPLG's third argument that Ortega is a Vortex Public Figure. See e.g., Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
