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SLAPP-happy: Virginia’s weak anti-SLAPP law attracts defamation lawsuits

What do Johnny Depp, California Congressman Devin Nunes, and Confederate statue defender Edward Tayloe II all have in common?

This year, they all filed defamation lawsuits in Virginia. Depp sued his ex-wife Amber Heard for allegedly defaming him in a Washington Post op-ed in which she wrote about being a victim of domestic violence. Nunes sued both Twitter and his hometown newspaper, The Fresno Bee, for various perceived slights. And Tayloe sued UVA associate professor Jalane Schmidt, reporter Lisa Provence, and C-VILLE Weekly for writing about his family’s slave-owning past.

This bizarre collection of cases highlights the weakness in Virginia’s rules concerning defamation lawsuits. All of these suits have been called “strategic lawsuits against public participation,” commonly referred to by the acronym SLAPPs. 

In their statement about the Tayloe case, the ACLU described the suit against Schmidt as a typical SLAPP: “litigation intended to silence, censor and intimidate critics out of the marketplace of ideas by burdening them with the cost of a lawsuit they may not be able to afford.”

A recent high-profile SLAPP in West Virginia involved late-night TV host John Oliver, who was sued by coal tycoon Bob Murray after Oliver’s show “Last Week Tonight” aired an episode about Murray’s business practices. Oliver described the SLAPP in layman’s terms—“Obviously the lawsuit was a bullshit effort to silence us,” he said in a follow-up segment on the show. 

“Winning the case was never really his goal,” Oliver said, arguing that Murray simply hoped his lawsuit would intimidate and inconvenience “Last Week Tonight.” “Lawsuits are like famous Instagram pugs,” Oliver said. “They don’t have to work to be considered very, very successful.” 

Thirty-one states have adopted legislation—known as anti-SLAPP laws—to prevent these kinds of lawsuits from being filed. Virginia expanded its anti-SLAPP legislation in 2017, but  advocates say the new statute still isn’t strong enough to be effective. 

Evan Mascagni, policy director at the Public Participation Project, highlights two important components of strong anti-SLAPP statutes that are absent from the Virginia law: a mechanism for frivolous cases to be dismissed before the trial begins, and a provision that requires unsuccessful defamation plaintiffs to pay the attorney’s fees of the defendant.

In the Tayloe case, ACLU lawyers representing Schmidt argued that the case should be dismissed through the anti-SLAPP law. But although an Albemarle County Circuit Court judge found that there was no legal basis for the defamation claims, he declined to rule on whether the case was a SLAPP.

Jen Nelson, co-director of the UVA School of Law’s First Amendment Clinic, attributes that decision to Virginia’s weak anti-SLAPP statute.

In a state with stronger anti-SLAPP laws, she says, the Tayloe case might have been dismissed earlier and Tayloe might have been forced to foot the bill for Schmidt and Provence’s attorneys. That didn’t happen.

In fact, Virginia’s anti-SLAPP law is so weak that the state has become a popular site for non-Virginia residents to file defamation claims that they fear might not pass muster in other states.

“Forum shopping is when a plaintiff will seek to file a SLAPP in a state where there’s no protection against SLAPPs, or there’s very weak protection against SLAPPs,” Mascagni says. “We see that all the time.”

Nunes and Depp are obvious examples, Mascagni says. Both are California residents, but California has some of the country’s strongest anti-SLAPP laws, and so both chose to file in Virginia.

The connection to Virginia is tenuous in both cases. Depp can sue Heard, another California resident, in Virginia because “the op-ed at issue there was published by the Washington Post, who have printing presses in Springfield, Virginia,” Nelson says. 

In October, a judge ruled that Nunes’ suits against his hometown paper, The Fresno Bee, and two anonymous Twitter parody accounts, Devin Nunes’ Cow and Devin Nunes’ Mom, could take place in Virginia. Charlottesville-based lawyer Steven Biss is representing Nunes in both cases.

“If a plaintiff is filing what could potentially be a SLAPP in Virginia, when there’s no real connection to the state of Virginia, one can only assume that they did that to avoid a stronger state anti-SLAPP law,” says Mascagni. “Where does Devin Nunes live, California, right? He doesn’t want to file that lawsuit in California.”

Nelson says she believes the problem is on the radar of the state legislature, and that she “wouldn’t be surprised” if the incoming majority-Democrat government worked toward legislation to strengthen Virginia’s laws.

For now, though, Virginia will remain an appealing destination for those hoping to file intimidating defamation cases. “If your goal is to punish the defendant for having spoken out or made a statement on a matter of public concern,” Nelson says, “to drag them through litigation for as long as possible, and make them pay a lot in attorneys’ fees, then Virginia right now is one of the states where you can do it pretty successfully.”

 

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Muzzled: Free speech wall creator shuts down

During its heyday, the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression was known for calling out censorship with its Muzzle awards and for launching the Downtown Mall’s Free Speech Wall in 2006, where luminaries like John Grisham and Dahlia Lithwick turned out to chalk the first messages on the monument.

Over the past couple of years, the center seemed to have disappeared from the free speech landscape, and on July 1, UVA law school quietly buried news of the center’s death in a release for the relaunch of a First Amendment Clinic, funded in part from assets from the TJ Center.

Former Daily Progress owner Tom Worrell founded the center in 1989 with a reported $3.5 million gift and bestowed its unwieldy moniker. Worrell, who was on UVA’s Board of Visitors, offered the job of leading the new free speech institute to outgoing UVA president and constitutional law expert Bob O’Neil—who later said changing the name was nonnegotiable.

During O’Neil’s 21-year leadership, the center was involved in high-profile free speech cases. After televangelist Jerry Falwell sued Hustler publisher Larry Flynt—and lost—over a parody that contended Falwell had sex with his mother, O’Neil said he got the two men together and they became friends. The center also prepped Margie Phelps, a member of the notorious Westboro Baptist Church, which protested the funerals of soldiers with signs bearing messages like “God hates fags,” before her appearance in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.

The Muzzles came out every April 13, on Jefferson’s birthday, and highlighted a free speech hall of shame. Locals occasionally made the list, either as victims of censorship, like Aaron Tobey, who was arrested by TSA in Richmond for displaying the Fourth Amendment on his chest as he went through airport security, or perpetrators, like Albemarle High for seizing and destroying all copies of the school’s student newspaper in 2010. (Physical education teachers didn’t like an op-ed that suggested student athletes be able to opt out of P.E.)

Board chair Bruce Sanford says the center had been winding down for the past year and a half. When Worrell founded it in 1989, “its chief mission was First Amendment advocacy in court,” says Sanford, although finding those cases and defending them was more difficult than anticipated.

Robert O’Neil, who died last fall, led the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression for 21 years. photo Michael Bailey

O’Neil taught a First Amendment clinic at UVA, as did Wheeler. “The First Amendment clinics are doing a lot of good work,” and both Columbia and Yale have them, says Sanford. “We’re very pleased to refocus our assets”—over $1 million—to fund the UVA clinic.

Attorneys from the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press will teach a new generation of potential First Amendment lawyers, says Sanford. “It’s perfect for the original mission.”

As for why the center seemed to fizzle out, Sanford notes that the Muzzle recipients the past two years weren’t as compelling as in the past. And when O’Neil retired, “We didn’t have a leading constitutional scholar,” says Sanford. O’Neil died last fall at age 83.

Attorney Josh Wheeler succeeded O’Neil in 2011 and has been in private practice for the past two years. He did not respond to calls from C-VILLE.

The center’s shutdown leaves unresolved the fate of the Free Speech Wall, which has become the go-to site for protesters over its 13 years as a mall landmark.

When the city agreed to install the TJ Center-owned wall, it also agreed to not censor its content—although that did happen when a sexually explicit image was chalked on the wall in 2011. However, passersby are free to erase as they please, and the wall is cleaned twice a week to give citizens a blank slate.

“The cost of the upkeep is not great,” says Sanford, and the center is having discussions with the city about continuing the maintenance.

Longtime wall critic Kevin Cox says it’s an ineffectual monument to free speech, and it does not accomplish much as an educational tool. “It doesn’t really teach people what the First Amendment is” and how it applies to government, he says. Its location in front of City Hall creates the impression the government owns it.

He says the wall was a prescient “kind of a monument to Twitter” because it only accommodates short messages. Any lessons about free speech are “shallow,” he says. “It’s fun to write, ‘fuck City Council,’ but that’s about as far as it goes.”

Of the center’s closing, Cox says, “It seemed to be pretty superfluous. All they did was give their Muzzles.”

In fact, the TJ Center also filed a lot of briefs in First Amendment cases, according to Rutherford Institute founder John Whitehead. He calls O’Neil and Wheeler a “dynamic duo,” and says they would defend anyone’s free speech rights. “There’s never enough people doing First Amendment issues,” he says. “I hate to see them go.”

C-VILLE was unable to reach Worrell for his response to the shuttering of the free speech org he founded 30 years ago. He was active in the beginning, says Sanford, but moved to Florida and shifted his focus to other projects. Says Sanford, “He didn’t really stay engaged.”

Update: The original headline was “Muzzled: Free speech center shuts down.”