- M. "Every one of which is said to demonstrate fraud, but every one of which is demonstrably accurate."
Defendants next dispute a succinct paragraph in Plaintiffs brief opposing the motion for
reconsideration, in which Plaintiffs characterized a portion of Defendants' brief (Doc. 170, pp. 7-10) as a "more or less random series of nitpicky complaints about statements made by Plaintiffs or their counsel, in briefs or argument, everyone of which is said to demonstrate fraud, but every one of which is demonstrably accurate." (Doc. 175, p. 9). That sentence captured the gist fairly well, but Defendants characterize it as sanctionable so a bit more will be required.
- 1.The Complaint identified 24 specific defamatory statements.
Defendants complain that the brief characterizes the 24 allegations of defamation as
"specific," when they are actually "broad." (Doc. 184, p. 8). Defendants themselves
acknowledged that the scope of the complaint was narrow as they devised their plan to use the discovery process to gain access to irrelevant information. (Doc. 76-21). "Specific" and "broad" are not antonyms like "specific" and "general." A thing can be both at the same time.
- 2. "They were given access to thousands of pages of records in
discovery.. .."
Although initially promising to confine their motion to the two most recent briefs of the
Plaintiffs, Defendants expand their grievances to include statements made in motions that were heard and decided long ago. They protest that in a memo opposing Defendants' motion to impose costs submitted last November, Doc. 140, Plaintiffs wrote that Defendants had been given access to thousands of pages of financial records of 3ABN. (Doc. 184, p. 8). Defendants replied to Doc. 140 by suggesting that some of the requested tax documents had not been produced, but it is just their conjecture that many of the records they say were absent from the production actually exist. (Doc. 149 at p. 12). Further, since the document requests were stricken by Judge Hillman, there was never a finding that any of the requested documents were not produced.
Undoubtedly discovery was not complete, but the case ended before the disputes
reached resolution. Plaintiffs were within their rights to describe their document production as voluminous and comprehensive, since that is objectively verifiable fact.
- 3. "Finding litte help..."
Defendants next take issue with a sentence in the November 26,2008 fiing (Doc. 140) in
which Plaintiffs wrote that Defendants adopted a strategy of seeking oppressively large amounts of irrelevant documents. Plaintiffs cited an email between the Defendants that proves the point. (Doc. 76-21). Nothing more need be said.
- 4. "In other words, Plaintiffs' efforts to narrow the scope of discovery were justified.
Defendants next protest a statement by Plaintiffs that the ruling by Judge Hillman striking Defendants' discovery as overly broad demonstrated that the efforts to narrow discovery was justified. (Doc. 184, p. 9). Defendants quote a passage in which Judge Hillman observed that Plaintiffs were taking an overly narrow view of the appropriate scope of discovery. However,Judge Hillman did not identify any specific respect in which Plaintiffs were being too restrictive. His ruling was to grant Plaintiffs' motion for a protective order, to scrap Defendants' discovery requests, and to order that new ones be served that were more carefully limited to the issues in the case. Thus, Plaintiffs' position was substantively justified.
- 5. "Defendants sought to circumvent any limitations..."
Defendants next disagree with a statement to the effect that their third party subpoenas
constituted an "end run" around the Massachusetts district court. This rather self-evident
observation derives from the fact that the subpoenas were served seeking the very information for which protective orders were pending and/or contemplated in the Massachusetts court. It is not remotely sanctionable.
- 6. "The goals of the lawsuit had been met..."
Defendants next argue that Plaintiffs' statement that the goals of the lawsuit have been
resolved by other means merits Rule 11 sanctions. (Doc. 184, p. 10). They say that 16 other internet domain names are using the logo 3ABN to defame the Plaintiffs. What they do not mention is that this lawsuit could not do anything about websites that the Defendants in this lawsuit do not own. The primary objectives of
this lawsuit were achieved by other means.
- 7. "And by obtaining favorable rulings..."
Defendants next dispute a statement in the November 2008 filing in which Plaintiffs
wrote that they had received favorable rulings from the governmental agencies that had been investigating them. (Doc. 184, p. 10). This non-controversial statement derives from the facts set forth in the Thompson Affidavit, including that the IRS terminated their investigation, and the state and federal civil rights agencies found no reasonable cause to believe that discrimination had occurred. (Doc. 184, p. 10). Defendants' contrary opinion does not mean that Plaintiffs' view of the facts violates Rule 11.
- 8. "...the bankruptcy judge closed down the web site..."
Defendants next take issue with a statement
in an email by 3ABN officer Walt Thompson to an unnamed correspondent in which Thompson (or somebody writing in his name, since no foundation is provided) appears to state that the bankruptcy judge closed down the infringing web site. It would have been more accurate to say that the bankruptcy judge approved the trustee's sale of the infringing web sites to 3ABN, which then shut them down, but for a layperson describing the event to another layperson, the gist of the communication was true. In any event, out-of-court statements don't implicate Rule 11.
- 9. "When it became apparent..."
Defendants argue that the November 2008 brief is sanctionable because they disagree
with the statement in it that donations levels were restored. As usual, the evidence is their idle speculation. Plaintiffs submitted direct evidence in the form of the Walt Thompson affdavit, Doc. 123, regarding the fact that the Defendants had ceased to have a significant impact on the Plaintiffs' fundraising activities, despite their gadfly activities. Defendants cannot rebut the evidence in the record with mere conjecture.
- 10. "...documents that had no relevance..."
Defendants next complain about a sentence in Doc. 158 (filing date 12/22/2008) in which
Plaintiffs opposed a motion to fie the Remnant Publications documents under seal because they were irrelevant. (Doc. 184, p. 11). That was, and remains, the Plaintiffs' position. It is not an issue of fact, however, and is not appropriately raised as a basis for sanctions.
- N. "Defendants told anybody who would listen....
Defendants complain about a sentence in which Plaintiffs said the courts did not agree
that Plaintiffs' discovery positions were not well-founded. (Doc. 175, p. 10). Defendants again fail to recognize the distinction between a well-founded argument and one that the Court accepts and adopts. It is a matter of record that not one court found Plaintiffs' position to lack a legal or factual basis, even if the Plaintiffs did not win every argument. None of the examples listed by Defendants show otherwise.
- O. "To the contrary, Plaintiffs prevailed every time..."
Defendants quibble with Plaintiffs' contention that they prevailed in each of the out-of-district subpoena skirmishes because they succeeded in getting the documents to be subject to the protective order issued in this case. The basis for the quibble is not clear, but the record is. The statement is accurate.
- P. "They also offer a tape recording..."
Defendants next argue that Plaintiffs wrote a sentence which indicated they
misunderstood the thrust of Defendants' argument about the Dryden tape recording. (Doc. 184, p. 15). Plaintiffs confess to being perplexed by much of Defendants' written work, but it is hard to see how that would violate Rule 11. Defendants are clearly using their Rule 11 memo to clarify their arguments in pending motions, rather than to identify sanctionable conduct.
CONCLUSION
Defendants' "Argument" section is a rehash of the misunderstandings and distortions that
infect the "Fact" section of the brief, but with a more scolding tone directed at the undersigned counsel for Plaintiffs. This brief has demonstrated that each assertion of sanctionable conduct was nothing of the sort. To paraphrase the Defendants,
"the number of glaring, factual misrepresentations contained in (Defendants' brief) that are devoid of evidentiary support is truly astounding." (Doc. 184, p. 18). Defendants' motion for sanctions should be denied.
Respectfully Submitted:
Dated: July 8, 2009
MEAGHER & GEER, P.L.L.P.
s/ M. Gregory Simpson
M. Gregory Simpson (*****)
****
Minneapolis, MN 55402
Direct ****
Fax ****
-and-
SIEGEL, BRILL, GREUPNER,
DUFFY & FOSTER, P.A.
Gerald S. Duffy
Kristin Kingsbury
****
Minneapolis, MN 55401
****
>>>> - Facsimile
-and-
FIERST, PUCCI & KAN, LLP
John P. Pucci, ****
1. Lizette Richards,****
****
Northampton, MA 01060
Telephone: ****
Attorneys for Plaintiffs Three Angels Broadcasting Network, Inc. and Danny Shelton