ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS
BACKGROUND
As was stated in another defamation lawsuit based on an underlying situation of intense national interest, albeit one of less tragic dimensions: “Long after the public spotlight has moved on in search of fresh intrigue, the lawyers remain.”
Flowers v. Carville,
Six-year-old JonBenét Ramsey was brutally murdered in her home on the night of December 25, 1996 or in the early morning hours of December 26. Her parents, along with her brother Burke, were in the house at the time of the murder. No one has ever been charged with the crime. Six years later, during the period of December 25-27, 2002, Defendant Fox News Network, L.L.C. (“Fox News”) broadcast a report noting the sixth anniversary of the murder of JonBenét Ramsey and the state of the criminal investigation. A transcript of the broadcast, as set forth verbatim in Plaintiffs’ Response to the Motion to Dismiss, is attached this opinion. Most pertinent is the following statement from the broadcast uttered by Fox News reporter Carol McKinley:
Detectives say they have had good reason to suspect the Ramseys. The couple and JonBenét’s nine year old brother, Burke, were the only known people in the house the night she was killed. JonBenét had been strangled, bludgeoned and sexually assaulted, most likely from one of her mother’s paintbrushes. The longest ransom note most experts have ever seen-three pages-was left behind. Whomever killed her spent a long time in the family home, yet there has never been any evidence to link an intruder to her brutal murder.
First Amended Complaint, ¶ 29.
The broadcast was televised nationally. Plaintiffs sue Fox News for defamation seeking compensatory and punitive damages.
Plaintiffs originally filed this case in the Northern District of Georgia on February 17, 2004. Jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332 due to Fox News being a Delaware corporation and having its principal place of business in New York. At the time of the broadcast, JonBenét’s parents, John and Patsy Ramsey, and their son Burke were citizens of Georgia. Plaintiffs’ filings in this case indicate that in July 1997 they moved from Boulder, Colorado to Atlanta, where they lived until September 2003. They now reside in Michigan. U.S. District Judge Thomas W. Thrash, Jr. transferred the case to this district by order dated July 6, 2004. The transfer was made pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), which states: “For the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought.”
On April 28, 2004, Fox News filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to F.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. That motion has been fully briefed. The Court heard oral argument on the motion on December 20, 2004.
CHOICE OF LAW
A. Might It Make a Difference?
The first question that the Court must address is whether Georgia or Colorado defamation law applies. This is not necessarily a minor issue. If Colorado, rather than Georgia, law were to apply, plaintiffs might well be subject to a higher proof *1148 standard and might obtain a higher damages award.
In Colorado, the “actual malice” standard of
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
Under this higher standard, a person claiming defamation must prove with “convincing clai'ity” that the alleged defamatory statement was made with “actual malice” — that is, with knowledge that the statement was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.
Diversified Mgmt., Inc., supra,
In contrast, under Georgia law someone who is not a public figure claiming defamation need only prove negligence on the part of the defamer, even if the matter involving the private person is a matter of public or general concern.
Triangle Publications, Inc. v. Chumley,
Secondly, which state’s law applies would affect the maximum amount of recovery plaintiffs could receive. Under Colorado law, noneconomic loss or injury is capped at $366,000, including loss of reputation. C.R.S. § 13-21-102.5(3)(a) (a court can raise the actual damage limit to $500,000 only if it “finds justification by clear and convincing evidence” to exceed the limit);
James v. Coors Brewing Co.,
B. Which State’s Law Applies ?
This Colorado Court must look to Georgia’s choice of law rules to see which state’s law applies here. This is because a court sitting in diversity that has a case transferred to it from another district must apply the choice of law rules of the transferor court.
Van Dusen v. Barrack,
As stated at the oral argument on December 20, 2004, in applying the “most significant relationship” test to the instant matter, and mindful of the factors set forth in Comment e to the Restatement (Second) § 150 “Multistate communication involving natural person,” it is clear that Colorado, not Georgia, is the state having the most significant relationship to alleged defamation. Certainly, Judge Thrash of the Northern District of Georgia appears to so agree in his July 6, 2004 order in which he states at p. 12, “This is primarily a Colorado ease, with a Georgia connection that is at best, now tenuous.” The broadcast at issue concerns the murder of a child who died in Colorado while plaintiffs lived in Colorado. The statements in question particularly relate to alleged acts or omissions of plaintiffs while they resided in this state. Employees of Fox News who lived and worked in Colorado developed the report. The investigation leading up to the report dealt mainly with Colorado sources and the injuries sustained by plaintiffs, if any, occurred as much in Colorado as elsewhere. Colorado has an interest in applying its defamation laws to Colorado-based journalists, to be weighed along with other considerations. Therefore, Colorado’s substantive law applies.
The fact that plaintiffs lived in Georgia at the time the lawsuit was filed is not insignificant. According to the
Restatement (Second) ■
§ 150(2), the state where plaintiffs aggrieved by an allegedly defamatory television broadcast are domiciled is usually the state having the most significant relationship for choice of law purposes. Yet that Restatement section recognizes that the law of the domicile of the allegedly defamed is not always applied.
See
Comment e to Section 150. The state of plaintiffs’ domicile can be outweighed by other considerations. Plaintiffs cite to no specific injuries they suffered in Georgia as opposed to Colorado, Michigan or some other state, Georgia’s nexus to the claim is at best limited. Paragraph 56 of the First Amended Complaint asserts plaintiffs “suffered permanent injury throughout the United States and the world” because of the Fox News broadcast. Although that paragraph goes on to assert that the most significant damage to. plaintiffs’ reputation occurred in Georgia where they were living in December 2002, plaintiffs plead no facts to support that assertion. Rather “millions”- of viewers were exposed to the broadcast according to ¶¶.57~60 of the First Amended Complaint. The Court takes that to mean throughout the United States and the world as referenced in ¶ 56, not just Georgia. Georgia is the state of residence of
*1150
one of plaintiffs’ counsel. However, that is not a significant factor for purposes of which state has the most significant relationship.
See Reyes v. Experian Info. Solutions, Inc.,
A MATTER OF PUBLIC OR GENERAL CONCERN
The next question is whether the broadcast related to a matter of public or general concern. The parties so stipulate and the Court agrees. Judge Thrash recognized this as such in his July 6, 2004 order at p. 12, where he describes the case as being “sensational.” It appears he is referring to the underlying events described in the broadcast. Also, there is supporting precedent in other cases. In
Miles v. Ramsey,
The Court finds that the JonBenét murder investigation falls in the later category — one in which the public may have a legitimate public interest. It is undeniable that JonBenét’s murder investigation has drawn almost unprecedented media attention. Given the media spectacle that surrounds the investigation, it is reasonable to assume that the public at large would legitimately be interested in the Enquirer’s statements about the investigation, despite the Enquirer’s tabloid status.
Id. at 875. The same holds true for the Fox News broadcast.
DEFAMATORY MEANING
A. Applicable Standards
The next question is whether the broadcast is capable'of defamatory meaning as against plaintiffs. In deciding this issue the Court must construe the averments of the First Amended Complaint in a light most favorable to plaintiffs.
Montgomery v. City of Ardmore,
Defamation is a communication holding an individual up to contempt or ridicule that causes the individual to incur injury or damage.
Keohane v. Stewart,
Whether a statement is defamatory presents a legal issue for the Court to determine.
Gordon, supra,
Defamation
per se
differs from defamation
per quod,
which requires innuendo or extrinsic evidence to establish its defamatory nature.
Bernstein v. Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.,
To determine defamation, the Court must view the broadcast as a whole rather than dwell upon specific parts of the broadcast. The Court must give each part its proper weight and the entire broadcast the meaning that people of average intelligence and understanding would give it.
See
C.J.I. 4th, Instruction 22:10;
Bums, supra,
B. Discussion
Applying the above legal standards to the contents of the Fox News broadcast reveals a lack of defamatory meaning in this per se case as a matter of law. Taking the broadcast as a whole, it did not hold up any member of the Ramsey family to public contempt or ridicule or accuse any of them of participating in the murder their youngest family member. The broadcast was not a particularly unfair or unreasonable recapitulation of recent events on or about the sixth anniversary of the murder.
The broadcast reports that plaintiffs have recovered millions of dollars from “people who called JonBenét’s older brother Burke, who’s been cleared, a suspect.” This statement does not state or imply that Burke Ramsey ever was a suspect, only that “millions of dollars have changed hands” as a result of making that accusation against one who has been cleared of suspicion by authorities. Being “cleared” is a concept not synonymous with having been a suspect but no longer being one. Persons not “suspects” are “cleared” by law enforcement all the time without a prior imputation of wrongdoing. Even John Ramsey in a sworn affidavit in another lawsuit used that phasing after expressly denying that Burke ever was a suspect: “My son, Burke Ramsey, has been officially cleared in connection with the death of his sister.” Exhibit A at ¶¶ 5, 6 & 8 to Hanswirth Declaration in Further Support of Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss, which affidavit was filed in Otworth v. Ramsey, File No. 1-00-CV-2023-CAM. Nothing else in the broadcast links Burke to the crime.
The broadcast goes on to state that “the Ramseys have successfully sued tabloid and mainstream media for defamation. Former employees have sued the Ramsey’s for the same reason. But still no one stands responsible for the six year-old murder of the little beauty princess.” All true, and while the broadcast does not *1152 exonerate plaintiffs from any involvement in the murder, it need not in order to avoid being defamatory. Moreover, reporting that plaintiffs have successfully sued for defamation suggests that, plaintiffs have been falsely accused of complicity in the crime.
The language in the broadcast that plaintiffs found most offensive, quoted at the top of this opinion, does not create a jury issue as to defamation. John and Patsy Ramsey acknowledge that , they “were at some point in the past described by the Chief of the Boulder Police Department as being ‘under the umbrella of suspicion’ with respect to the investigation of the murder of JonBenét Ramsey.” First Amended Complaint, ¶ 24. The statement “detectives say they had good reason to suspect the Ramseys” appears not to refer to Burke. The next sentence goes on to say: “The couple and JonBenét’s nine year old brother, Burke, were the only known people in the house the night she was killed”-indicating that the preceding reference to “the Ramseys” was to John and Patsy, not Burke. Even if the broadcast could be construed as implying that Burke was once a suspect in the eyes of Boulder law enforcement officials-something the Court concludes it does not-such a statement would not be defamatory as the broadcast goes to assert that law enforcement has “cleared” him. A statement that detectives once said they had good reason to suspect someone now unequivocally cleared of having committing a crime is insufficient to meet the high threshold for defamation per se.
Importantly, a major thrust of the broadcast was to report “a recent major development,” that the Boulder Police Department “long suspicious of the Ramseys, has turned the case over to District Attorney Mary Keenan, to bring ‘fresh eyes’ to the investigation.” Plaintiffs’ own counsel in this case, Lin Wood, Esq., appears in the broadcast stating: “This is new day in this investigation. The days of the Ram-seys being the focus of the investigation ... those days are over.” Clearly the broadcast reflects that the investigation is moving in a new direction, one in which none of the plaintiffs is being accused or suspected of being involved.
The Colorado Supreme Court has observed that “in order to insure ‘uninhibited, robust, and wide-open’ debate on matters of public concern, ‘a statement of opinion relating to matters of public concern which does not contain a provably false factual connotation,’ or which ‘cannot reasonably [be] interpreted as stating actual facts about an individual,’ continues to receive full constitutional protection.”
NBC Subsidiary (KCNC-TV), Inc. v. Living Will Center,
Here the broadcast did not make any judgment as to who was involved in the murder nor did it urge any provably false factual connotation suggesting that plaintiffs were complicit in any crime. In essence, the broadcast simply noted the following: that the killer of JonBenét Ramsey had not been determined; the case had very few pieces of physical evidence and the crime scene had been contaminated; , the only known people in the home that night were Ramsey family members; whoever killed JonBenét spent a long-time in the home but no evidence linked to an intruder .had been found; Boulder law. enforcement officials suspected John or Patsy Ramsey of committing the crime; Burke had been cleared of suspicion and recovered monetary settlements from media outlets who designated him otherwise; and, the investigation is shifting its focus away from John and Patsy Ramsey in part due to the new *1153 Boulder District Attorney who would be taking a fresh look at the investigation. Looking at the totality of the broadcast, the plain meaning of its language and John and Patsy Ramsey’s acknowledgment that they had been suspected, no defamatory meaning as against plaintiffs can be derived from it as a matter of law.
The Court has considered all other arguments of plaintiffs and finds them to be unmeritorious. Specifically, the statement as to the absence of evidence of an intruder, even if untrue as plaintiffs claim, is insufficient to constitute an accusation of misconduct as against plaintiffs. The statement no more suggests that plaintiffs are blameworthy than it suggests that a stealthy intruder covered his or her tracks well, the investigation to date had a “Keystone Kops” flavor to it or a new crime-solving effort unburdened by preconceived notions may well lead to the “real killer.” It is not a sly nod towards plaintiffs as evildoers.
CONCLUSION
The Colorado Supreme Court has noted that “[protecting the important competing interests of free speech and reputation requires a flexible approach anchored in the context of each cause of action.”
Bums, supra,
Good name in man and woman, dear my lord, is the immediate jewel of their souls: Who steals my purse steals trash; ‘tis something, nothing; ‘twas mine, ‘tis his, and has been slave to thousands; but he that filches from me my good name robs me of that which not enriches-him, and makes me poor indeed.
These constitutional protections are not just for broadcast media. Indeed, free speech itself acts as a check on the media. For example, in our current technologically-advanced era anyone can get on the internet, become a self-proclaimed journalist or pundit and draw a worldwide audience. Webloggers can in a matter of hours point out key errors in reporting by mainstream media outlets. When people have the means and expertise to generally publish fair and perhaps insightful comments quickly and easily on matters of public concern, such as what a .crime scene reveals or does not reveal, law enforcement and the rest of us may benefit. The robust protections guaranteed by the First Amendment thus remain as important and valuable as ever.
Plaintiffs may well have filed this case more for vindication than for money, and perhaps vindication is what they deserve. But they have a better chance for meaningful vindication in the court of public opinion through vigorous debate about the background and details of this heinous crime than by suing those whose reporting may.arguably include some less than favorable inferences about them. Plaintiffs *1154 cannot have the public discourse playing field entirely to themselves.
Of course, those who broadcast publicly must accept some responsibilities of basic decency towards others as embodied in our Nation’s defamation laws. Fox News, however, did not shirk those responsibilities here. While the December 2002 broadcast appears to plaintiffs not to have been “fair and balanced” towards them, it was not defamatory. The Court therefore GRANTS Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint Pursuant to F.R.C.P. 12(b)(6) and DISMISSES this case with prejudice.
