Motion To Dismiss (FAC) (Redaction)
Motion To Dismiss (FAC) (Redaction)
Motion To Dismiss (FAC) (Redaction)
BRETT KIMBERLIN,
Plaintiff
v.
Arts and the Blaze (Dkt. No. 49) (Blaze Memo) as the opinion of this Court with only three
exceptions. Those exceptions are that 1) the Court did not believe that the shorter statute of
limitations of one year should apply, 2) that the Court could not determine that Mr. Kimberlin
was a public figure (based on the filings made at that time) and 3) the Court could not accept
based on those filings that Mr. Kimberlin filed this suit in bad faith and, therefore, the Maryland
SLAPP statute could not apply.1 Aside from those three exceptions, those three memoranda can
be treated as the opinion of this Court and the law of this case.
Thus, to a significant degree this Court has already ruled that the Plaintiffs claims fail
against Mr. Walker. It ruled that false light claims fail because the Plaintiff is defamation-proof
and because the statements at issue would not be seriously offensive to an ordinary reasonable
person in the Plaintiffs position. It ruled that as a matter of law there can be no interference
with the Plaintiffs relationship with his own company, and this Court ruled that the Plaintiff
failed to allege interference with his music business on terms that apply equally to Mr. Walker.
Finally, this Court ruled that defamation or even a conspiracy to harass is not sufficient to make
out a claim for Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress.
In addition to those failings already noted by this Court, the Plaintiffs claims for false
light continues to lack specificity even after this Court told him what he must plead. In relation
to publication of private facts, the Plaintiff fails to allege that Mr. Walker discussed anything that
was either private or a fact. In relation to intrusion into seclusion, the Plaintiff fails to allege any
wrongful intrusion or that such intrusion was into private matters. Meanwhile, the Plaintiff fails
to allege that his name has any value, that Mr. Walker has taken advantage of his good name or
any non-incidental use of that likeness as is necessary to maintain a claim for appropriation of
Mr. Walker also raises these objections not to challenge this Courts rulingit is the law of this
case after allbut to preserve the objection for appeal.
1
name or likeness. Likewise, the statute of limitations for battery has expired. Moreover, the
Plaintiff has failed to allege that he has felt any emotional distress or has shown any physical
manifestation of that distress, in addition to the failings this Court has already noted. Finally, the
Plaintiff has made no non-conclusory allegation of conspiracy. For these reasons, the FAC
should be dismissed with prejudice and without leave to amend.
I.
THE PLAINTIFF FAILS TO PROPERLY PLEAD FALSE LIGHT
Under Maryland Law, the elements of false light invasion of privacy are defined as
follows:
One who gives publicity to a matter concerning another that places the other
before the public in a false light is subject to liability to the other for invasion of
his privacy, if
(a) the false light in which the other person was placed would be highly
offensive to a reasonable person, and
(b) the actor had knowledge of or acted in reckless disregard as to the
falsity of the publicized matter and the false light in which the other would
be placed.
Bagwell v. Peninsula Regional Medical, 106 Md.App. 470, 513-514 (1995).
First, this Court has already ruled that the Plaintiff is defamation-proof by adopting the
Malkin Memo, including this passage: Kimberlins claim also could be dismissed because he is
libel-proof: his record is so odious that, as a matter of law, his reputation cannot be damaged
further. Malkin Memo p. 7, n. 2. On a similar note, the Restatement requires that the false light
be offensive to a reasonable person in the Plaintiffs position, the Malkin Memo stating that this
cause of action
applies only when the defendant knows that the plaintiff, as a reasonable man,
would be justified in the eyes of the community in feeling seriously offended and
aggrieved by the publicity.It is only when there is such a major
misrepresentation of his character, history, activities or beliefs that serious offense
3
mere implications and imputations would not be sufficient, but the Plaintiff continued to use
those terms in the FAC.8 Indeed, attached as Exhibit A is a paragraph by paragraph comparison
of the body of the original complaint in this case with the FAC. There is not a single instance
where the Plaintiff has provided additional specificity for any of the statements alleged to have
been made, nor has he removed the conclusory references to Mr. Walker allegedly implying or
imputing that the Plaintiff was involved in SWATting. Likewise, this Court also adopted the
Breitbart Memos reasoning that malice is a required element of false light, p. 10, and the
Plaintiff never alleges any facts that would lead this Court to believe that Mr. Walker made any
false statement with malice. In short, this Court has told the Plaintiff what he must plead when
amending his complaint this fourth time, and he has failed to do so.
Finally, the Plaintiff does not properly allege that Mr. Walker proximately caused the
Plaintiff any damage by any alleged false statements. For all of these reasons, the claim for false
light should be dismissed.
description of the content of the alleged statements, as well as when and how they were
communicated).
8
See, e.g., FAC 68 (stating Frey, in concert with others including Mr. Walker, began
publicly implying and stating that Plaintiff had him swatted), 71 (accusing Mr. Walker of
imputing that Plaintiff swatted him), 72 (accusing Mr. Beck of allowing Messrs. Walker and
Frey to impute, imply and state that Plaintiff targeted Defendant Frey with swatting and caused
Defendant Walker to be fired), 75 (claiming that in the same interviews that Messrs. Walker
and Frey imply and impute that Plaintiff swatted them), 80 (claiming that letters to
Congresspersons by Mr. Walker and others in conjunction with the false statements by
Defendants imputed that Plaintiff was involved in the swattings), 105 (claiming a webinar that
included Mr. Walker stated and/or imputed that Plaintiff was involved with swatting and had
gotten Defendant Walker terminated from his employment), and 144 (The named
Defendants statements... contained false statements, representations or imputations about
Plaintiff that place him before the public in a false light).
5
II.
THE PLAINTIFF FAILS TO PROPERLY PLEAD PUBLICITY OF PRIVATE FACTS BY
FAILING TO ALLEGE THAT THE DEFENDANTS PUBLICIZED ANYTHING THAT
WAS PRIVATE OR A FACT
This is one of three new causes of action based on invasion of privacy that the Plaintiff
has alleged in the new case: invasion of privacy by publication of private facts, invasion of
privacy by intrusion into seclusion and invasion of privacy by misappropriation of name or
likeness. That is, he did not list them as causes of action in Kimberlin v. National Bloggers Club,
et al. (I), No. GJH-13-3059 (D. Md. 2013), and didnt, therefore, allege facts to support these
causes of action in that original statement of facts. So it should not be a surprise that, having
submitted a virtually identical statement of facts in this case, the Plaintiff has failed to allege
facts sufficient to sustain these new causes of action.
Under Maryland law, in order to plead the tort of publicity given to private facts the
Plaintiff must allege the following elements:
One who gives publicity to a matter concerning the private life of another is
subject to liability to the other for unreasonable invasion of his privacy, if the
matter publicized is of a kind which
(a)
(b)
Hollander v. Lubow, 277 Md. 47, 55, 351 A. 2d 421 (1976). However, the only claims that the
Plaintiff alleges the Defendants gave publicity to were 1) allegations and implications that he
was involved in the SWATting of Messrs. Walker, Frey and Erickson, 2) allegations that he
caused Mr. Walker to lose his job, and 3) allegations that he attempted to frame Mr. Walker for
the crime of assault.
First, these claims fail because they are conclusory allegations. See Twitchy Memo p. 5,
Blaze Memo pp. 11-12, Breitbart Memo p. 7. In essence, the Plaintiff asserts the claim without
6
actually alleging factual support in his Statement of Facts or in the claim itself.
Secondand this almost seems too obvious to saybut in order to claim that the
Defendants have publicized private facts, the Plaintiff must first admit they are true:
A fact is a proposition which correctly describes a state of affairs in the world.
To say that something is a fact is necessarily to say that it is true. It is for this
reason that one never encounters the phrase false facts, while the phrase true
facts is a barbarous redundancy.
Doe v. U.S., 83 F. Supp. 2d 833, 841 (S.D. Tex. 2000). 9 In Doe, as in the instant case, the
plaintiff was claiming invasion of privacy by publicity of private facts, while simultaneously
claiming that they were not true. The Doe court dismissed the claim, stating that in contrast to
defamation and false light, where the harm is caused by falsehoods being uttered about a person,
the tort of publication of private facts is designed to redress reputational injuries made all the
more painful because the public revelations about deeply private and intimate matters are
undeniably true. 83 F. Supp. 2d at 842.
Third, even if we read the assertion of this cause of action as a spontaneous confession to
these criminal and immoral acts, none of these alleged facts are private. The commission of a
crime is not rightfully considered a matter of privacy, and the only person who might arguably
have a right to privacy regarding the facts of Mr. Walkers termination is Mr. Walker.
Finally, once again the Plaintiff has failed to properly allege that Mr. Walker has
proximately caused any damage under this tort. For all of these reasons, the Plaintiff has failed
to allege the tort of publicity of private facts, justifying dismissal of this count.
See also Uranga v. Federated Publications, Inc., 138 Idaho 550, 67 P. 3d 29, 32-33. (2003)
([t]he cause of action for public disclosure of embarrassing private facts provides for tort
liability involving a judgment for damages for publicity given to true statements of fact
(emphasis added)). As Dean Prosser has said, this is a cause of action in publicity, of a highly
objectionable kind, given to private information about the plaintiff, even though it is true and no
action would lie for defamation. Hollander, 277 Md. at 57 (emphasis added).
9
III.
THE PLAINTIFF FAILS TO PROPERLY PLEAD INVASION OF PRIVACY BY
INTRUSION INTO SECLUSION BY FAILING TO ALLEGE UNLAWFUL INTRUSION,
OR INVOLVEMENT IN PRIVATE MATTERS
The Plaintiff also alleges invasion of privacy by intrusion into seclusion and also fails to
plead its elementsanother new tort unsupported by his statement of facts. The Court of
Appeals has described unlawful intrusion into seclusion as follows:
One who intentionally intrudes, physically or otherwise, upon the solitude or
seclusion of another, or his private affairs or concerns, is subject to liability to the
other for unreasonable invasion of his privacy, if the intrusion would be highly
offensive to a reasonable person.
Hollander, 351 A. 2d at 55. The Plaintiff has neither alleged unlawful intrusion nor that any
alleged intrusion was into the Plaintiffs seclusion.
First, once again, the Plaintiff only makes conclusory allegations.
Second, the Plaintiff has not alleged unlawful intrusion.
intrusion on seclusion tort deals with the manner in which Defendant obtained the information
rather than the truth or falsehood of the information itself. Trundle v. Homeside Lending, Inc.,
162 F.Supp.2d 396, 401 (D. Md., 2001). The Plaintiff never alleges that any of the Defendants
did anything outside of using the ordinary tools of journalismasking persons questions,
examining public records, or reciting eyewitness accountsand, therefore, the Plaintiff has
failed to allege intrusion in a manner which would be highly offensive to a reasonable person.
Id.10 As in Beaumont, the instant Plaintiff in reality objects to the allegedly false and scurrilous
comments, an objection not going to the method used to secure information. 237 NW 2d at
See also Beaumont v. Brown, 65 Mich. App. 455, 463, 237 NW 2d 501 (1975) (merely writing
a letter was not an unlawful method of intrusion); Wilson v. Sysco Food Services of Dallas, Inc.,
940 F. Supp. 1003, 1014 (N.D. Tex. 1996) (inquiries into Plaintiffs private affairs, particularly
her sexual activities was not an unlawful method of intrusion); and Pierson v. News Group
Publications, Inc., 549 F. Supp. 635, 640 (S.D. Ga. 1982) (An essential element of this tort is a
physical intrusion analogous to a trespass).
10
463. Thus, the Plaintiff has failed to allege that there is any unlawful intrusion.
Third, just as the Plaintiff failed to allege private facts in relation to publicity of private
facts, he has failed to allege that the Defendants intruded into his private affairs.
Finally, the Plaintiff has failed again to properly allege that he was damaged or that Mr.
Walker proximately caused such damage. Therefore, this Court should dismiss any claim for
invasion of privacy by intrusion into seclusion.
IV.
THE PLAINTIFF FAILS TO PROPERLY PLEAD APPROPRIATION OF HIS NAME OR
LIKENESS
The Plaintiffs final new cause of action is the most absurd. After spending 52 pages
alleging that the Defendants have essentially trashed his reputation, rendering him odious,
infamous and/or frightening, FAC 128, the Plaintiff suddenly decides five pages later that the
same Defendants are trading on his good name.
Under Maryland law, [o]ne who appropriates to his own use or benefit the name or
likeness of another is subject to liability to the other for invasion of his privacy. Lawrence v.
A.S. Abell Co., 299 Md. 697, 702, 475 A.2d 448 (1982).
First, as usual, his allegations are purely conclusory.
Second, the Plaintiffs most basic error is that there is no cause of action for such
appropriation unless they are using the Plaintiffs good reputation for their economic benefit:
The value of the plaintiffs name is not appropriated by mere mention of it, or by
reference to it in connection with legitimate mention of his public activities; nor is
the value of his likeness appropriated when it is published for purposes other than
taking advantage of his reputation, prestige, or other value associated with him,
for purposes of publicity.
Id. at 702 (emphasis added). In other words, if Nike sold Air Jordans emblazoned with the
familiar silhouette of retired basketball player Michael Jordan without Mr. Jordans permission,
he would have a cause of action against Nike because the company would be taking advantage of
his enduring good reputation as an athlete to sell its athletic shoes. However, that isnt what the
Plaintiff has alleged in this case. In this case, the Plaintiff claims that the Defendants havent
taken advantage of his good name; he alleges that they ruined his allegedly good name and
allegedly made money in the process of doing so. That simply isnt what the tort is about.
Third, Lawrence instructs that a persons name or likeness must have commercial or
other value before an appropriation is actionable. 299 Md. at 706. The Plaintiff has made no
such allegation.
Fourth, Lawrence instructs that the use must be more than incidental:
The fact that the defendant is engaged in the business of publication, for example
of a newspaper, out of which he makes or seeks to make a profit, is not enough to
make the incidental publication a commercial use of the name or likeness. Thus a
newspaper, although it is not a philanthropic institution, does not become liable
under the rule stated... to every person whose name or likeness it publishes.
299 Md. at 703. The Plaintiff has not made any proper allegations of non-incidental uses of his
name or likeness. In his non-conclusory allegations, he has alleged that the Defendants used his
name and likeness solely in websites where news is disseminated.
Fifth, the Plaintiff has made no proper allegation as to how he has been damaged by the
alleged use of his name and likeness or how Mr. Walker proximately caused such damage.
For all of these reasons, the Plaintiff has failed to properly allege invasion of privacy by
misappropriation of his name or likeness, and this count should be dismissed.
V.
THE PLAINTIFF DOESNT PROPERLY ALLEGE ANY ACTUAL INTERFERENCE
WITH AN EXISTING CONTRACT, OR HIS BUSINESS RELATIONSHIPS
Mr. Walker has previously noted that the Plaintiffs claims for Interference with Business
Relations and Interference with Prospective Economic Advantage are in fact claims for Tortious
10
These same allegations (found in paragraph 173 in the original Complaint) were not sufficient to
state a claim against Malkin and Twitchy as part of that undifferentiated group of defendants and,
logically, are insufficient to state a claim against Mr. Walker.
For all of these reasons, the Plaintiff has failed to properly allege any form of tortious
interference, and this count should be dismissed.
VI.
THE PLAINTIFFS CLAIM FOR BATTERY IS BARRED BY THE STATUTE OF
LIMITATIONS
The Plaintiffs claim of battery arises from the incident on January 9, 2012. As will be
shown in a forthcoming Motion for Summary Judgment, any claim that Mr. Walker assaulted the
Plaintiff on that day is precluded by collateral estoppeltwice. The Plaintiff had his day in court
on these claims, twice. He lost, twice. Mr. Walker should not be forced to litigate the issue a
third time.
In addition, his claim is untimely. Courts have has regularly held that MD CODE CTS. &
JUD. PROC. 5-105, which states that [a]n action for assault, libel, or slander shall be filed
within one year from the date it accrues applies equally to actions for battery. See, e.g., Coby v.
Mobley, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5125, *5 (D. Md. 1994) (Ms. Coby had not alleged the
intentional torts of assault and battery, both of which would be barred by Marylands one year
statute of limitations...) and Madison v. Harford Cnty, No. MJG-12-CV-1120, *45 n. 38 (D. Md.
Aug. 2, 2013) ([a]ssault and battery claims are subject to a one year limitation period under
Maryland law. See MD. CODE CTS. & JUD. PROC. 5-105.).11 On the face of the Complaint the
11
The reason for this is that in Maryland law, the terms assault and battery are deeply
blended and often confused. As stated in Lamb v. State, 93 Md. App. 422, 428 (1991):
By way of informal (or sometimes even formal) shorthand, both the case law and
the statutory law frequently use the simple noun assault to connote a
consummated battery alone and at other times to connote the combination of the
12
Plaintiff alleges that the incident involving the alleged battery occurred on January 9, 2012,
Compl. 43-44,12 and, therefore, this litigation falls well outside this statute of limitations.
Thus, even if the claim was not precluded by collateral estoppel, any claim for battery should be
dismissed because the statute of limitation has run out on the face of the FAC.
VII.
THE PLAINTIFF DOESNT PROPERLY STATE A CLAIM FOR INTENTIONAL
INFLICTION OF EMOTIONAL DISTRESS BECAUSE HE FAILED TO ALLEGE
OUTRAGEOUS CONDUCT OR A PHYSICAL MANIFESTATION OF DISTRESS
This Court has all but decided this claim in Mr. Walkers favor. As stated in the Blaze
Memorandum and adopted by this court:
[E]ven if the Blaze Defendants made or published intentionally false statements...
such acts could not possibly give rise to an IIED claim. See Spirpal v. Fengrong
Wang, CIV. WDQ-12-0365, 2012 WL 2880565, at *4 (D. Md. July 12, 2012)
(granting motion to dismiss because [d]efamatory conduct in no way satisfies
[the] exacting standard for extreme and outrageous conduct .) (internal citations
omitted). Moreover, even if the Blaze Defendants deliberately joined Kimberlins
portrayed vast blogger conspiracy in an attempt to target and harass him..., even
that would not constitute the extreme conduct necessary for an IIED claim.
[S]trategically designed [speech] that may even be intended and calculated
to harass the plaintiff by accusing him of crimes is not extreme and outrageous.
Id. at *4 (internal citation omitted).
inchoate attempt to beat or to batter followed immediately by the consummation
of that attempt. Thus used, assault is a synonym for battery and is also a
synonym for the combined form assault and battery.
Therefore, in Maryland, assault is shorthand for a number of acts that include what is in other
states referred to as battery. See, e.g., MD. CODE CRIM. LAW 3-201(b) (defining assault as
assault, battery, and assault and battery); Snyder v. State, 210 Md. App. 370, 380-381 (2013)
([c]ommon law assault, then, is a chameleon concept that no one should attempt to describe too
precisely); Dixon v. State, 133 Md. App. 325, 755 A.2d 560, 570 (2000) ([a]ssault generally
requires either an actual battery, an attempted battery, or an attempt to frighten).
12
The paragraph numbering in the FAC, like the original Complaint, is not entirely sequential. It
goes from 1-159, up until the Third Claim for Relief, then that claim is numbered 42-48, and
then the Complaint resumes the prior numbering at 160 until the end. Further, there are no page
numbers aiding navigation by page. In this case, the paragraphs referenced (43-44) refer to the
first 43rd and 44th paragraph (found in the Statement of Facts), which is found on the thirteenth
page of the FAC.
p. 13. In Mr. Walkers case, he is alleged to have done the following to cause distress 1) made
intentionally false statements and 2) battery. This Court has already found, vis--vis the Blaze
Defendants, that intentionally false statements are not sufficient to make out a claim for IIED,
and adding battery (if it were not barred by collateral estoppel) is not sufficient to drag his claim
across the high threshold required for such claims.
Further, Maryland law requires that the Plaintiff must also allege that his emotional
distress has a physical manifestation. As the Maryland Court of Appeals affirmed, [a] plaintiff
must prove, however, a clearly apparent and substantial physical injury in one of four ways: (1)
an external condition; or (2) symptoms of a resulting pathological; (3) physiological; or (4)
mental state. Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Albright, 433 Md. 303, 71 A.3d 30, 63 (2013). The
requirement of such a showing of physical manifestation is a guard against falsehoods, allowing
some objective measure of the persons emotional state. The instant Plaintiff has not made any
non-conclusory allegation that he has felt any emotional distress and has made no allegation at
all of a physical manifestation of such distress. As a result, his claim to have suffered Intentional
Infliction of Emotional Distress fails.
Finally, the Plaintiff doesnt make any non-conclusory allegations establishing proximate
causation of his non-distress. For all of these reasons, this claim should be dismissed.
VIII.
PLAINTIFFS CLAIM FOR CIVIL CONSPIRACY MUST FAIL BECAUSE IT IS NOT
AN INDEPENDENT TORT AND HE HAS NOT PLED ANY OF THE ELEMENTS OF
CONSPIRACY
First, under Maryland law there is no independent tort of civil conspiracy. Alleco Inc. v.
Harry & Jeanette Weinberg Foundation, Inc., 340 Md. 176, 191 (1994). It is only a method of
aggregating responsibility for torts. As stated in Carr v. Watkins, [t]he act done must be one
which if done by one alone would be unlawful, 227 Md. 578, 588 (1962). Having failed to
properly allege any state law tort, the Plaintiff has likewise failed to allege any conspiracy to
commit any tort.
Second, the Plaintiff has made no effort to actually allege the elements needed to make
out a claim of conspiracy. He simply says conspiracy, and similar terms throughout the
Complaint, without alleging facts that would allow this Court to conclude that such a conspiracy
existed.
Such conclusory allegations are not sufficient to attach conspiracy liability, and,
any hearing if possible, so that any unexpected hearings in Virginia are less likely to come into
conflict with any hearing before this Court.
WHEREFORE Defendant Walker requests that all claims are dismissed under Md. Rule 2-322(b)
(2); that such dismissals be granted with prejudice and without leave to amend; that this Court
should consider motions for sanctions and, upon such motions, grant monetary sanctions and
injunctive relief appropriate for a vexatious litigant; and that this Court grant such other relief as
appropriate.
Respectfully submitted,
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I certify that on the
day of
, 2015, I served copies of this
document on Brett Kimberlin at [redacted], Bethesda, Maryland 20817, via U. S. Mail, on the
following co-Defendants via email: William Hoge via Patrick Ostronic; DB Capital Strategies
and Dan Backer, Esq. via Dan Backer, Esq.
MARYLAND:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY
BRETT KIMBERLIN,
Plaintiff
v.