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Strategic lawsuit against public participation

Strategic lawsuits against public participation (also known as SLAPP suits or intimidation lawsuits),[1] or strategic litigation against public participation,[2] are lawsuits intended to censor, intimidate, and silence critics by burdening them with the cost of a legal defense until they abandon their criticism or opposition.[3]

In a typical SLAPP, the plaintiff does not normally expect to win the lawsuit. The plaintiff's goals are accomplished if the defendant succumbs to fear, intimidation, mounting legal costs, or simple exhaustion and abandons the criticism. In some cases, repeated frivolous litigation against a defendant may raise the cost of directors and officers liability insurance for that party, interfering with an organization's ability to operate.[4] A SLAPP may also intimidate others from participating in the debate. A SLAPP is often preceded by a legal threat. SLAPPs bring about freedom of speech concerns due to their chilling effect and are often difficult to filter out and penalize because the plaintiffs attempt to obfuscate their intent to censor, intimidate, or silence their critics.

To protect freedom of speech, some jurisdictions have passed anti-SLAPP laws (often called SLAPP-back laws). These laws often function by allowing a defendant to file a motion to strike and/or dismiss on the grounds that the case involves protected speech on a matter of public concern. The plaintiff then bears the burden of showing a probability that they will prevail. If the plaintiffs fail to meet their burden their claim is dismissed and the plaintiffs may be required to pay a penalty for bringing the case.

Anti-SLAPP laws sometimes come under criticism from those who believe that there should not be barriers to the right to petition for those who sincerely believe they have been wronged, regardless of ulterior motives. Hence, the difficulty in drafting SLAPP legislation, and in applying it, is to craft an approach which affords an early termination to invalid, abusive suits, without denying a legitimate day in court to valid good faith claims. Anti-SLAPP laws are generally considered to have a favorable effect, and many lawyers have fought to enact stronger laws protecting against SLAPPs.[5]

Characteristics

SLAPP is a form of strategic litigation or impact litigation. SLAPPs take various forms. The most common used to be a civil suit for defamation, which in the English common law tradition was a tort. The common law of libel dates to the early 17th century and, unlike most English law, is reverse onus, meaning that once someone alleges a statement is libelous, the burden is on the defendant to prove that it is not. In England and Wales, the Defamation Act 2013 removed most of the uses of defamation as a SLAPP by requiring the proof of special damage. Various abuses of this law including political libel (criticism of the political actions or views of others) have ceased to exist in most places, but persist in some jurisdictions (notably British Columbia and Ontario) where political views can be held as defamatory.

A common feature of SLAPPs is forum shopping, wherein plaintiffs find courts that are more favourable towards the claims to be brought than the court in which the defendant (or sometimes plaintiffs) live.[6]

Other widely mentioned elements of a SLAPP are the actual effectiveness at silencing critics, the timing of the suit, inclusion of extra or spurious defendants (such as relatives or hosts of legitimate defendants), inclusion of plaintiffs with no real claim (such as corporations that are affiliated with legitimate plaintiffs), making claims that are very difficult to disprove or rely on no written record, ambiguous or deliberately mangled wording that lets plaintiffs make spurious allegations without fear of perjury, refusal to consider any settlement (or none other than cash), characterization of all offers to settle as insincere, extensive and unnecessary demands for discovery, attempts to identify anonymous or pseudonymous critics, appeals on minor points of law, and demands for broad rulings when appeal is accepted on such minor points of law. In some instances it is clear that plaintiffs are attempting to drain defendants of their financial resources by making the lawsuit as costly as possible,[7] and in these cases the plaintiff's motive may not be legal victory, but merely to waste the defendant's time and money.[8]

History

The acronym was coined in the 1980s by University of Denver professors Penelope Canan and George W. Pring.[9] The term was originally defined as "a lawsuit involving communications made to influence a governmental action or outcome, which resulted in a civil complaint or counterclaim filed against nongovernment individuals or organizations on a substantive issue of some public interest or social significance." The concept's originators later dropped the notion that government contact had to be about a public issue to be protected by the right to petition the government, as provided in the First Amendment. It has since been defined less broadly by some states, and more broadly in one state (California) where it includes suits about speech on any public issue.[10]

The original conceptualization proffered by Canan and Pring emphasized the right to petition as protected in the United States under the US Constitution's specific protection in the First Amendment's fifth clause. It is still definitional: SLAPPs are civil lawsuits filed against those who have communicated to government officialdom (in its entire constitutional apparatus). The right to petition, granted by Edgar the Peaceful, King of England in the 10th century, antedates Magna Carta in terms of its significance in the development of democratic institutions. As currently conceived, the right claims that democracy cannot properly function in the presence of barriers between the governed and the governing.[11][12]

New York Supreme Court Judge J. Nicholas Colabella said in reference to SLAPPs: "Short of a gun to the head, a greater threat to First Amendment expression can scarcely be imagined."[13] In the United States a number of jurisdictions have made such suits illegal, however the conditions that a defendant must satisfy for a dismissal of the suit vary from state to state. In some states, such as California, defendants may be entitled to counter-sue SLAPP plaintiffs under some circumstances.[14] This is commonly referred to as SLAPPback.

Jurisdictional variations

Australia

In the Australian Capital Territory, the Protection of Public Participation Act 2008 (ACT) protects conduct intended to influence public opinion or promote or further action in relation to an issue of public interest. A party starting or maintaining a proceeding against a defendant for an improper purpose may be ordered to pay a financial penalty to the Territory.[15]

Canada

Some political libel and forum shopping incidents, both relatively uncommon in Canada, have been called SLAPPs, because such suits load defendants with costs of responding in unfamiliar jurisdictions or at times (typically elections) when they are extremely busy and short of funds. Both types of suit are unusual in Canada, so there is little academic concern or examination of whether political subject matter or remote forums are a clear indicator of SLAPP.[citation needed]

Canada's three most populous provinces (Quebec, British Columbia, and Ontario) have enacted anti-SLAPP legislation.

British Columbia

One of the first cases in Canada to be explicitly ruled a SLAPP was Fraser v. Saanich (see [1999] B.C.J. No. 3100 (B.C. S.C.)) (QL), where the British Columbia Supreme Court struck out the claim of a hospital director against the District of Saanich, holding that it was a meritless action designed to silence or intimidate the residents who were opposed to the plaintiff's plan to redevelop the hospital facilities.

Following the decision in Fraser v. Saanich, the Protection of Public Participation Act (PPPA) went into effect in British Columbia in April 2001. The legislation was repealed in August 2001. There was extensive debate on its merits and the necessity of having hard criteria for judges and whether this tended to reduce or increase process abuse. The debate was largely formed by the first case to discuss and apply the PPPA, Home Equity Development v. Crow.[16] The defendants' application to dismiss the action against them was dismissed. The defendants failed to meet the burden of proof required by the PPPA, that the plaintiffs had no reasonable prospect of success. While it was not the subject of the case, some felt that the plaintiffs did not bring their action for an improper purpose, and the suit did not inhibit the defendants in their public criticism of the particular project, and that the Act was, therefore, ineffective in this case.

Since the repeal, BC activists especially the BCCLA have argued repeatedly for a broad understanding of SLAPP and a broad interpretation of judicial powers especially in intervener applications in BC and other common law jurisdictions and when arguing for new legislation to prevent SLAPPs. The activist literature contains extensive research on particular cases and criteria. The West Coast Environmental Law organization agrees and generally considers BC to lag other jurisdictions.[17]

In March 2019, the legislature voted unanimously to pass another anti-SLAPP bill, the Protection of Public Participation Act.[18]

Nova Scotia

A private member's bill introduced in 2001 by Graham Steele (NDP, Halifax Fairview) proposed a "Protection of Public Participation Act" to dismiss proceedings or claims brought or maintained for an improper purpose, awarding punitive or exemplary damages (effectively, a "SLAPP back") and protection from liability for communication or conduct which constitutes public participation. The bill did not progress beyond first reading.[19]

Ontario

In Ontario, the decision in Daishowa v. Friends of the Lubicon [1996] O.J. No. 3855 Ont. Ct. Gen. Div. (QL) was instructive on SLAPPs. A motion brought by the corporate plaintiff Daishowa to impose conditions on the defendant Friends of the Lubicon Indian Band that they would not represent Daishowa's action as a SLAPP was dismissed.

By 2010, the Ontario Attorney-General had issued a major report which identified SLAPP as a major problem[20] but initially little to nothing was done.[21]

In June 2013, the Attorney General introduced legislation to implement the recommendations of the report. The bill proposed a mechanism for an order to dismiss strategic lawsuits which attack free expression on matters of public interest, with full costs (but not punitive damages) and on a relatively short timeframe, if the underlying claims had no reasonable prospect of success.[22]

The bill enjoyed support from a wide range of groups including municipalities,[23] the Canadian Environmental Law Association, EcoJustice, Environmental Defence,[24] Ontario Clean Air Alliance, Ontario Nature, Canadian Civil Liberties Association,[25] Canadian Journalists for Free Expression,[26] Citizens Environment Alliance of Southwestern Ontario, The Council of Canadians, CPAWS Wildlands League, Sierra Club Ontario, Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario[27] and Greenpeace Canada.[28]

The legislation was re-introduced following the 2014 Ontario election as Bill 52, and on 3 November 2015, Ontario enacted it as the Protection of Public Participation Act, 2015.[29]

Quebec

Québec's then Justice Minister, Jacques Dupuis, proposed an anti-SLAPP bill on 13 June 2008.[30] The bill was adopted by the National Assembly of Quebec on 3 June 2009. Quebec's amended Code of Civil Procedure was the first anti-SLAPP mechanism in force in Canada.

Prior to Ontario enacting its own Anti-SLAPP law the bill was invoked there (and then Supreme Court of Canada docket 33819). In the case of Les Éditions Écosociété Inc., Alain Deneault, Delphine Abadie and William Sacher vs. Banro Inc., in which the publisher Écosociété pleaded (supported by the BCCLA[31]) that it should not face Ontario liability for a publication in Quebec, as the suit was a SLAPP and the Quebec law explicitly provided to dismiss these. The court denied the request, ruling it had jurisdiction.[32] A separate 2011 decision in Quebec Superior Court had ruled that Barrick Gold had to pay $143,000 to the book's three authors and publisher, Les Éditions Écosociété Inc., to prepare their defence in a "seemingly abusive" strategic lawsuit against public participation.[33] Despite the Québec ruling, a book Noir Canada documenting the relationship between Canadian mining corporations, armed conflict and political actors in Africa was never published as part of a settlement which, according to the authors, was only made for the sole purpose of resolving the three-and-a-half-year legal battle.

The Quebec law is substantially different in structure than that of California[34] or other jurisdictions, however, as Quebec's Constitution generally subordinates itself to international law, and as such the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights applies. That treaty only permits liability for arbitrary and unlawful speech. The ICCPR has also been cited, in the BC case Crookes v. Newton, as the standard for balancing free speech versus reputation rights. The Supreme Court of Canada in October 2011, ruling in that case, neither reiterated nor rescinded that standard.

European Union

On 25 November 2020, the European Parliament passed a resolution expressed "its continued deep concern about the state of media freedom within the EU in the context of the abuses and attacks still being perpetrated against journalists and media workers in some Member States because of their work" and called on the European Commission to "establish minimum standards against SLAPP practices across the EU". In 2021 the European Union was considering adopting an anti-SLAPP directive to protect the freedom of speech of European citizens.[35]

United States

Thirty-two states, the District of Columbia, and Guam have enacted statutory protections against SLAPPs.[36] These states are Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut,[37] Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky,[38] Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts,[39] Minnesota,[40] Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas,[41][42] Utah, Vermont, Virginia,[43] and Washington. In Colorado and West Virginia, the courts have adopted protections against SLAPPs. These laws vary dramatically in scope and level of protection and the remaining states lack specific protections.

There is no federal anti-SLAPP law, but legislation for one has been previously introduced, such as the SPEAK FREE Act of 2015. The extent to which state laws apply in federal courts is unclear, and the circuits are split on the question. The First,[44] Fifth[45] and Ninth[46] circuits have allowed litigants from Maine, Louisiana and California, respectively, to use their state's special motion in federal district courts in diversity actions. The D.C. Circuit has held the reverse for D.C. litigants.[47]

It has been argued that the lack of uniform protection against SLAPPs has encouraged forum shopping; proponents of federal legislation have argued that the uncertainty about one's level of protection has likely magnified the chilling effect of SLAPPs.[48]

In December 2009, Rep. Steve Cohen (D–Tennessee) introduced the Citizen Participation Act in the U.S. House.[49] This marks the first time the Congress has considered federal anti-SLAPP legislation, though the Congress enacted the SPEECH Act on the closely related issue of libel tourism.[50] Like many state anti-SLAPP laws, H.R. 4364 would allow the defendant of a SLAPP to have the suit quickly dismissed and to recover fees and costs.

California

California has a unique variant of anti-SLAPP legislation. In 1992 California enacted Code of Civil Procedure § 425.16, a statute intended to frustrate SLAPPs by providing a quick and inexpensive defense.[10] It provides for a special motion that a defendant can file at the outset of a lawsuit to strike a complaint when it arises from conduct that falls within the rights of petition or free speech. The statute expressly applies to any writing or speech made in connection with an issue under consideration or review by a legislative, executive, or judicial proceeding, or any other official proceeding authorized by law, but there is no requirement that the writing or speech be promulgated directly to the official body. It also applies to speech in a public forum about an issue of public interest and to any other petition or speech conduct about an issue of public interest.

Washington State

In May 2015, the Washington Supreme Court struck down the state's 2010 anti-SLAPP statute.[51] However, in 2021, a new anti-SLAPP law was enacted.[52]

Balancing the right of access to the courts

The SLAPP penalty stands as a barrier to access to the courts by providing an early penalty to claimants who seek judicial redress. In recent years, the courts in some states have recognized that enforcement of SLAPP legislation must recognize and balance the constitutional rights of both litigants. It has been said:

Since Magna Carta, the world has recognized the importance of justice in a free society. "To no one will we sell, to no one will we refuse or delay, right or justice." (Magna Carta, 1215.) This nation's founding fathers knew people would never consent to be governed and surrender their right to decide disputes by force, unless government offered a just forum for resolving those disputes.[53]

The right to bring grievances to the courts, in good faith, is protected by state and federal constitutions in a variety of ways. In most states, the right to trial by jury in civil cases is recognized. The right to cross-examine witnesses is considered fundamental to the American judicial system. Moreover, the first amendment protects the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. The "right to petition extends to all departments of the Government. The right of access to the courts is indeed but one aspect of the right of petition."[54] Because "the right to petition is 'among the most precious of the liberties safeguarded by the Bill of Rights', ... the right of access to the courts shares this 'preferred place' in [the United States'] hierarchy of constitutional freedoms and values."[55] This balancing question is resolved differently in different states, often with substantial difficulty.[56][57][58][59]

In Palazzo v. Alves, the Supreme Court of Rhode Island stated:

By the nature of their subject matter, anti-SLAPP statutes require meticulous drafting. On the one hand, it is desirable to seek to shield citizens from improper intimidation when exercising their constitutional right to be heard with respect to issues of public concern. On the other hand, it is important that such statutes be limited in scope lest the constitutional right of access to the courts (whether by private figures, public figures, or public officials) be improperly thwarted. There is a genuine double-edged challenge to those who legislate in this area.[60]

The most challenging balancing problem arises in application to SLAPP claims which do not sound (give rise to a claim) in tort. The common law and constitutional law have developed in the United States to create a high substantive burden to tort and tort-like claims which seek redress for public speech, especially public speech which addresses matters of public concern. The common law in many states requires the pleader to state accurately the content of libelous words. Constitutional law has provided substantive protection which bars recovery against a first amendment defense except upon clear and convincing evidence that there has been deliberate or reckless falsehood. For this reason, ferreting out the bad faith SLAPP claim at an early stage of litigation should be accomplished with relative ease. Extension of the SLAPP penalties to factually complex cases, where the substantive standard of proof at common law is lower presents special challenges.

A Minnesota Supreme Court case, Middle-Snake-Tamarac Rivers Watershed Dist. v. Stengrim, 784 N.W.2d 834 (Minn. 2010) establishes a two-step process to determine whether SLAPP procedure should be applied. The decision arises in the context of an effort to enforce a settlement agreement between a local government and an opponent of a flood control project. The landowner had accepted a significant monetary settlement in settlement of his opposition to land acquisition. The landowner agreed as part of the settlement to address no further challenges to the project. When the local government sued the landowner for breach of settlement, the landowner contended that enforcement of the settlement was a strategic lawsuit against public participation. The Supreme Court rejected that claim and affirmed the District Court's denial of SLAPP relief, holding "The District Court properly denied a motion to dismiss where the underlying claim involved an alleged breach of a settlement agreement that potentially limited the moving party's rights to public participation." The Supreme Court explained:

Preexisting legal relationships, such as those based on a settlement agreement where a party waives certain rights, may legitimately limit a party's public participation. It would be illogical to read sections 554.01-.05 as providing presumptive immunity to actions that a moving party may have contractually agreed to forgo or limit.

Under the Minnesota approach, as a preliminary matter, the moving party must meet the burden of showing that the circumstances which bring the case within the purview of SLAPP protection exists. Until that has been accomplished, no clear and convincing burden has been shifted to the responding party.

Notable SLAPPs

Australia

  • "Gunns 20": In the 2005 Gunns Limited v Marr & Ors case,[61] Gunns filed a writ in the Supreme Court of Victoria against 20 individuals and organisations, including Senator Bob Brown, for over A$7.8 million.[62] The defendants have become collectively known as the "Gunns 20".[63] Gunns claimed that the defendants sullied its reputation and caused it to lose jobs and profits. The defendants claimed that they are protecting the environment. Opponents and critics of the case have suggested that the writ was filed with the intent to discourage public criticism of the company. Gunns has maintained the position that they were merely trying to prevent parties enjoined to the writ from undertaking unlawful activities that disrupt their business. The statement of claim alleged incidents of assault against forestry workers and vandalism.[64][65] At a hearing before the Supreme Court of Victoria, an amended statement of claim lodged by the company and served on defendants on 1 July 2005, was dismissed.[61] However, the judge in the case granted the company leave to lodge a third version of their statement of claim with the court no later than 15 August 2005.[61] The application continued before the court, before being brought to a close on 20 October 2006.[62] In his ruling, Justice Bernard Bongiorno made an award of costs in favour of the respondents only as far as it covered those costs incurred with striking out the third version of the statement of claim, and costs incurred associated with their application for costs.[62] In November 2006, Gunns dropped the case against Helen Gee, Peter Pullinger and Doctors for Forests. In December 2006, it abandoned the claim against Greens MPs Bob Brown and Peg Putt.[66] The other matters were all settled in favour of Gunns following the payment of more than $150,000 in damages or, in some cases, undertakings to the court not to protest at certain locations.

Belgium

Belgian law recognizes the concept of "tergend geding" (bullying litigation), any litigation of which the underlying aim is to cause discomfort to the opposing party, and hence increase the possibility of its redrawal from the law suit. Qualification of litigation as such by a judge can lead to its dismissal.

Brazil

  • ThyssenKrupp Atlantic Steel Company (TKCSA), one of the largest private enterprises in Latin America, sued Brazilian researchers from public universities as UERJ (Rio de Janeiro State University) and Fiocruz (Oswaldo Cruz Foundation) for moral damages.[67][68] First, TKCSA sued research pulmonologist Hermano Albuquerque de Castro from Sergio Arouca National School of Public Health (ENSP – Fiocruz). Then TKCSA sued Alexandre Pessoa Dias, research professor of the Joaquim Venâncio Polytechnic School of Health (EPSJV – Fiocruz), and Monica Cristina Lima, a biologist from Pedro Ernesto University Hospital and board member of the Public University Workers Union of Rio de Janeiro State (Sintuperj). The last two lawsuits occurred after the disclosure of the technical report "Evaluation of social, environmental and health impacts caused by the setup and operation of TKCSA in Santa Cruz".

Canada

  • Daishowa Inc. v. Friends of the Lubicon: From 1995 to 1998 a series of judgements (OJ 1536 1995, OJ 1429 1998 (ONGD)) established that defendants, who had accused a global company of engaging in "genocide", were entitled to recover court costs[69] due to the public interest in the criticism, even if it was rhetorically unjustifiable. This was the first case to establish clearly the SLAPP criteria.
  • Fraser v. Saanich (District) 1995, [BCJ 3100 BCSC] was held explicitly to be a SLAPP, the first known case to be so described. Justice Singh found plaintiff's conduct to be "reprehensible and deserving of censure", ordering he pay "special costs" (page 48, Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation: The British Columbia Experience, RECEIL 19(1) 2010 ISSN 0962-8797) to compensate.
  • Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper filed a suit against the Liberal Party of Canada, the Official Opposition, after the latter paid for trucks to drive through the streets playing a journalist's tape of Harper admitting he knew of "financial considerations" offered to dying MP Chuck Cadman before a critical House of Commons of Canada vote in 2005. This, the Liberals and most commentators and authorities agreed, would be a serious crime if proven. Harper alleged the tape had been altered but a court found no evidence of this. The suit was dropped by Michael Ignatieff after he replaced Stephane Dion as Leader of the Opposition, and so was not heard in court, but was transparently a (successful) effort to get the trucks off the streets.[70]
  • Crookes v. Openpolitics.ca, filed May 2006 [S063287, Supreme Court of BC], and a series of related suits leading to a unanimous October 2011 ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada in Crookes v. Newton, upheld the rights of online debaters to link freely to third parties without fear of liability for contents at the other end of the link.[71] A number of related rulings had previously established that transient comments on the Internet could not be, in themselves, simply printed and used to prove that "publication" had occurred for purposes of libel and defamation law in Canada. Other elements of the ruling clarified how responsible journalism (and therefore the right to protect anonymous sources), qualified privilege and innocent dissemination defenses applied to persons accused of online defamation.
  • In May 2010, Youthdale Treatment Centres of Toronto, Ontario filed a defamation suit against various former patients, parents of former patients, and other persons, claiming C$5 million in damages.[citation needed] The lawsuit, filed on 5 May 2010, on behalf of Youthdale by Harvin Pitch and Jennifer Lake of Teplitsky, Colson LLP, claimed that these persons were involved in a conspiracy to, among other things, have Youthdale's licence to operate revoked. Youthdale also claimed their reputation was damaged as a result of various actions by the named defendants, which Youthdale alleged included the creation of websites and blogs containing complaints against Youthdale, including alleged accusations of unlawful administration of psychotropic medications. A notable left-turn for Youthdale occurred in July 2010, when Youthdale became the subject of a Toronto Star investigation, in which it was found that Youthdale had been admitting children to its Secure Treatment Unit that did not have mental disorders.[72] The case has since been dismissed.
  • In 2011, in Robin Scory v. Glen Valley Watersheds Society, a BC court ruled that "an order for special costs acts as a deterrent to litigants whose purpose is to interfere with the democratic process", and that "Public participation and dissent is an important part of our democratic system."[73][74] However, such awards remained rare.[17]
  • Morris vs Johnson et al. 22 October 2012, ONSC 5824 (CanLII): During the final weeks of the 2010 municipal election in Aurora, Ontario, a group of town councilors and the incumbent Mayor Phyllis Morris agreed to use town funds to launch what was later referenced as a private lawsuit fronted by the Mayor, seeking $6M, against both named and anonymous residents who were critical of the local government. After the mayor and a number of councilors lost the election the new town council cut public funding for the private lawsuit and they issued a formal apology to the defendants. Almost one year after the town cut funding and after Morris lost a Norwich motion, Morris discontinued her case. The discontinuance cost decision delivered by Master Hawkins reads, per para. 32 (Ontario Superior court of Justice court file no.10-CV-412021): "Because I regard this action as SLAPP litigation designed to stifle debate about Mayor Morris' fitness for office, commenced during her re-election campaign, I award Johnson and Hogg special enhanced costs as was done in Scory v. Krannitz 2011 BCSC 1344 per Bruce J. at para. 31 (B.C.S.C)." Morris subsequently sued the town for $250,000 in the spring of 2013 to recover her legal costs for the period after the town cut funding of her case. Almost one and a half years after the final ruling in the Morris defamation case (i.e. the second Master Hawkins cost ruling delivered in January 2013) and approximately one year after suing the town, Morris amended her statement of claim to note that her legal costs were actually $27,821.46 and not the $250,000 as noted in the initial statement of claim. Morris then attempted to move the case to small claims court after the town had already spent over $150,000 in preparing its defense. As of the summer of 2015 the case is ongoing.
  • In 2012, Sino-Forest sued Muddy Waters Research for $4 billion for defamation in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. Muddy Waters had accused Sino-Forest of fraudulently inflating its assets and earnings, and had claimed the company's shares were essentially worthless.[75] However, on 10 January 2012, Sino-Forest announced that its historic financial statements and related audit reports should not be relied upon.[76] Sino-forest also filed for bankruptcy protection. In response to the lawsuit, Muddy Waters stated that Sino's bankruptcy protection filing vindicated its accusations since the company would not require bankruptcy protection if it was really generating close to $2 billion in cash flow.[77] Sino-Forest was represented by Bennett Jones LLP.[78]
  • Businesspeople Garth Drabinsky and Conrad Black filed numerous suits against critics of their business activities. These received much publicity but were usually settled quickly.[citation needed]
  • In September 2014, Brampton, Ontario mayor Susan Fennell used threats of legal action against fellow councillors, the Toronto Star, the city's integrity commissioner, and auditor Deloitte to delay a city council meeting which was to discuss a major spending scandal.[79][80] As the parties involved needed an opportunity to seek legal advice, regardless of the merit (or spuriousness) of the claims, this tactic served to defer a key debate which otherwise would have, and should have, taken place before the city's 27 October municipal election.[81]

Estonia

In 2016, the real-estate investment company Pro Kapital Ltd sued urbanist Teele Pehk who expressed her opinion about the company's development plans in the Kalasadam area of Tallinn, Estonia. The accusations were based on an interview given for the article "The battle for the Estonian coastline", published by the monthly newspaper The Baltic Times. Initially, instead of clarifying the questionable quotes in the article with the Baltic Times' editors, Pro Kapital sent a legal demand to Pehk demanding that she publish a pre-written explanation and pay €500 to cover their legal advice expenses. Pehk provided proof to the lawyer that she had not lied to the journalist of The Baltic Times, and the newspaper published a clarification online that Pehk's words were misinterpreted. Few months later Pro Kapital sued Pehk for damaging their reputation by spreading lies about the detailed plan of the Kalasadam area. Teele Pehk had been involved with the detailed plan of Kalasadam since 2011, as a member of the neighbourhood association Telliskivi selts and caretaker of the Kalarand beach, situated on the edge of the Kalasadam area.

Half a year into the court case, Pro Kapital began negotiations and settled with a compromise before the court hearing. Pro Kapital paid for Pehk's legal costs and both parties agreed not to disparage each other in the future. Teele Pehk is still active in Tallinn urban development and continues to spread the word about SLAPP suits.

This case took place at the end of the 12-year process of planning the Kalasadam area, which over the years had witnessed exceptionally high public interest regarding the planned residential development and most importantly, the public use of the seaside and the beach. The planning system in Estonia allows anyone to express their opinion, present suggestions or objections to any detailed plan. Many Estonian civic organisations were raising concerned voices about the case and the Chancellor for Justice of Estonia condemned that practice many times in public appearances.

France

  • In 2010 and 2011, a French blogger was summoned twice by the communication company Cometik (NOVA-SEO) over exposing their quick-selling method (a.k.a. one shot method) and suggesting a financial compensation for his first trial.[82] The company's case was dismissed twice, but appealed both times. On 31 March 2011, the company won:
    • the censorship of any reference (of its name) on Mathias Poujol-Rost's weblog,
    • €2,000 as damages,
    • the obligation to publish the judicial decision for 3 months,
    • €2,000 as procedural allowance,
    • all legal fees for both first and appeal instances.[83]

Germany

In September 2017, a naturopath in Arizona named Colleen Huber filed a defamation lawsuit, preceded by two cease and desist letters, against Britt Marie Hermes, a naturopathy whistleblower. The lawsuit was filed for Hermes' blog post criticizing Huber for using naturopathic remedies to treat cancer and speculating that Hermes' name was being used without her permission in several registered domain names owned by Huber.[84][85] The lawsuit was filed in Kiel, Germany where Hermes was residing to pursue her PhD in evolutionary genomics. Jann Bellamy of Science-Based Medicine speculates that this is "due to good old forum shopping for a more plaintiff-friendly jurisdiction" as there are no protections against SLAPP lawsuits in Germany.[84] Britt Hermes is a notable scientific skeptic and the organization Australian Skeptics set up a fund to help with legal costs on the case. In an interview at CSICon 2019, Britt Hermes told Susan Gerbic that she had won her case on 24 May 2019. According to Britt Hermes, "the court ruled that my post is protected speech under Article 5 (1) of the German constitution".[86]

Greece

In 2022, in the wake of revelations that Greece's National Intelligence Service (Greece) was spying on the leader of PASOK, the third largest party, Nikos Androulakis, the executive director of NIS, Grigoris Kontoleon, and the Secretary General to prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, Grigoris Dimitriadis (also a close relative of Kyriakos Mitsotakis) resigned from office. Grigoris Dimitriadis filed lawsuits against two journalists who had helped uncover the scandal, Thodoris Chondrogiannos and Nikolas Leontopoulos, demanding 150,000 euros as damages for false publications and the removal of those publications, but also against Thanassis Koukakis, a journalist who during 2021 was spied upon because of his investigations on Greek businessmen.

India

In 2020, Karan Bajaj, the founder of WhiteHat Jr., now owned by Byju's, filed a 2.6 million dollar lawsuit against Pradeep Poonia, an engineer who publicly accused the company of having a toxic work environment and unethical business practices.[87][88][89] The Delhi High Court issued an interim order requiring Poonia to remove certain tweets from his account.[87] In 2021, Bajaj rescinded the lawsuit.[87]

Israel

During 2016, Amir Bramly, who at the time was being investigated and subsequently indicted for an alleged Ponzi scheme,[90] sued for libel Tomer Ganon, a Calcalist reporter, privately for 1 million in damages, due to a news item linking him to Bar Refaeli.[91][92] In addition Bramly sued Channel-2 News and its reporters and managers for ₪5 million in damages due to an alleged libel in an in-depth TV news item and interview with the court appointed liquidator of his companies,[93] and has threatened to sue additional bodies.[94] The sued individuals and bodies have claimed that these are SLAPP actions.[95][96]

Japan

In 2006, Oricon Inc., Japan's music chart provider, sued freelance journalist Hiro Ugaya due to his suggesting in an article for business and culture magazine Cyzo [ja] that the company was fiddling its statistics to benefit certain management companies and labels, specifically Johnny and Associates. The company sought ¥50 million and apology from him.[97] He found allies in the magazine's editor-in-chief Tadashi Ibi,[97] lawyer Kentaro Shirosaki,[97] and Reporters Sans Frontières (RSF).[98]

He was found guilty in 2008 by the Tokyo District Court and ordered to pay one million yen, but he appealed and won. Oricon did not appeal later. His 33-month struggle against Oricon and his research on SLAPPs through his self-expense trip in the United States was featured on the TBS program JNN Reportage, titled as "Legal Intimidation Against Free Speech: What is SLAPP?"[99]

RSF expressed its support to the journalist and was relieved on the abandonment of the suit.[98]

Norway

On 17 May 2018, a non-profit project rettspraksis.no challenged a perceived monopoly on the publication of pre-2009 Supreme Court of Norway decisions by publishing a large back catalogue of historical decisions. To prevent publication, the government-established Lovdata foundation demanded an immediate injunction against two project volunteers, Håkon Wium Lie and Fredrik Ljone, that the website be shut down. The foundation claimed that rettspraksis.no had "developed or used software to systematically download rulings from Lovdatas online services"[100] in order to publish the rulings in violation of Lovdata's rights according to the Norwegian Copyright Act section 43, the Database Rights Section. The District Court granted the injunction without a hearing based on finding that the volunteer actions was in violation of section 43, and that the publication on rettspraksis.no would enable other commercial actors to exploit the material in violation of Lovdata's rights even if the project itself did not.[101] A postjudgement hearing on 30 and 31 August 2018 resulted in a reduction in the injunction's effects, most significantly that the Database Rights Section did not extend to rulings published before 2005. Appeals from Ljone and Wium Lie to the Appeals Court and the Supreme Court were denied.[102]

Serbia

In the late 1990s, many SLAPP cases against independent and pro-opposition media ensued after adoption of the infamous media law, proposed by then minister of information, Aleksandar Vučić.[103] The main characteristic of these cases were quick trials and extremely high fines, most of which were unaffordable for journalists and their media houses.[103] While SLAPP cases became, more or less, rare after the Overthrow of Slobodan Milošević, they gradually reappeared in the late 2010s, and especially in the early 2020s, during SNS-led cabinets.[103] Notably, Aleksandar Vučić is current president of Serbia, the most influential figure of the regime, and he is often accused of suppression of media freedoms.[104]

United Kingdom

A 2021 libel action brought against the publisher HarperCollins and the author and journalist Catherine Belton over the latter's book Putin's People was described by former Conservative cabinet minister David Davis as a SLAPP.[105] Despite winning the legal case brought by several Russian oligarchs, including Roman Abramovich, Belton was left facing legal costs of £1.5 million.[105] UK Government justice minister James Cartlidge said, "the Ministry of Justice is monitoring SLAPP threats against journalists and announced that the UK will be a member of the Council of Europe’s inaugural working group on SLAPPs with an anti-SLAPP draft recommendation for member states due in December 2023. I will be giving SLAPPs in UK courts urgent consideration. I want to make it clear that the Government are committed to a robust defence of transparency and freedom of speech. We will not tolerate anything that risks tarnishing the integrity of our judicial and legal profession".[105]

Ministers later said that they would reform the legal system to prevent "intimidation lawsuits"; amendments to this effect were proposed for an anti-corruption economic crime bill before Parliament in March 2022.[106]

United States

  • From 1981 to 1986, Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF) and San Luis Obispo County, California, filed a suit attempting to obtain the mailing list of the Abalone Alliance to get the group to pay for the police costs of the largest anti-nuclear civil-disobedience act in U.S. history at the Diablo Canyon Power Plant.[107] The September 1981 demonstration involved tens of thousands of people.[108] The County was dismissed from the case by the trial judge, and lost on appeal for recovery of police costs (including in part because such costs are intended to be covered by taxes).[109] In 1985, the Supreme Court of California declined to block a lower court ruling that allowed PLF to sue "leaders of the demonstration [for] costs associated with the protest", which defendants said was an attempt to chill dissent.[110] Pacific Legal Foundation lost at every court level and withdrew the suit the day before it was due to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.[citation needed]
  • Kim Shewalter and other neighborhood activists, as defendants, won a 1998 anti-SLAPP motion against apartment building owners. The owners had filed a SLAPP because of the defendants' protest activities.[111]
  • Karen Winner, the author of Divorced From Justice, is recognized as "[the] catalyst for the changes that we adopted", said Leo Milonas, a retired justice with the Appellate Division of the New York state courts who chaired a special commission that recommended the changes adopted by Chief Judge Judith Kaye.[112][113] (The NY state court report's committee cited a previous New York City Commissioner of Consumer Protection report as a "major" reason for its study. Karen Winner was the author of the earlier study.[114][115][116]) But in 1999, Winner, along with a psychologist/whistleblower, and several citizens were SLAPPed for criticizing the guardian ad litem system and a former judge in South Carolina. Winner's report, "Findings on Judicial Practices & Court-appointed Personnel in the Family Courts in Dorchester, Charleston & Berkeley Counties, South Carolina" and citizen demonstrations led to the first laws in South Carolina to establish minimum standards and licensing requirements for guardians ad litem, who represent the interests of children in court cases.[117] The retaliatory SLAPPs have been dragging on for nearly 10 years, with judgments totaling more than $11 million against the co-defendants collectively. Reflecting the retaliatory nature of these suits, at least one of the co-defendants is still waiting to find out from the judges which particular statements, if any, he made were false.[118]
  • Barbra Streisand, as plaintiff, lost a 2003 SLAPP motion after she sued an aerial photographer involved in the California Coastal Records Project. Streisand v. Adelman, (California Superior Court Case SC077257)[119][120] See Streisand effect.
  • Barry King and another Internet poster, as defendants, won an anti-SLAPP motion against corporate plaintiffs based on critical posts on an Internet financial message board.[121]
  • Kathi Mills won an anti-SLAPP motion against the Atlanta Humane Society, Atlanta Humane Society v. Mills, in Gwinnett County (Georgia) Superior Court; case 01-A-13269-1.[122][123][124] She had been sued based on comments she made to an internet forum after a news program had aired critical of the AHS. In part, the judge ruled that private citizens do not need to investigate news coverage before they make their own comments on it, and that governmental entities may not sue for defamation.[122]
  • In 2004, RadioShack Corporation sued Bradley D. Jones, the webmaster of RadioShackSucks.com and a former RadioShack dealer for 17 years, in an attempt to suppress online discussion of a class action lawsuit in which more than 3,300 current or former RadioShack managers were alleging the company required them to work long hours without overtime pay.[125]
  • Nationally syndicated talk radio host Tom Martino prevailed in an anti-SLAPP motion in 2009 after he was sued for libel by a watercraft retailer. The case received national attention for its suggestion that no one reasonably expects objective facts from a typical talk show host, who is often a comedian telling jokes.[126][127][128]
  • In March 2009, MagicJack (a company that promotes a USB VoIP device) filed a defamation suit against Boing Boing for exposing their unfair and deceptive business tactics regarding their EULA, visitor counter, and 30-day trial period. This was dismissed as a SLAPP by a California judge in late 2009. In the resulting ruling, MagicJack was made responsible for most of Boing Boing's legal costs.[129]
  • In the 2009 case Comins vs. VanVoorhis, a Florida man named Christopher Comins filed a defamation suit against a University of Florida graduate student after the student blogged about a video of Comins repeatedly shooting someone's pet dogs. This was cited as an example of a SLAPP by the radio show On the Media.[3]
  • In November 2010, filmmaker Fredrik Gertten, as defendant, won an anti-SLAPP motion after he was sued for defamation by Dole Fruit Company. The case concerned Gertten's documentary film about farm workers. The lengthy lawsuit was documented in Gertten's film Big Boys Gone Bananas!*.[130]
  • In an effort to prevent four women from filing any Public Records Requests without first getting permission from a judge, or from filing future lawsuits, the Congress Elementary School District filed the lawsuit Congress Elementary School District v. Warren, et. al. on 28 January 2010. The Goldwater Institute, a think tank based in Phoenix, Arizona, represented the four defendants. The school district said that it has been harassed so often by Warren that it was not able to functionally educate its students. Toni Wayas, the school district's superintendent, claimed "that it had, time and time again, complied with the requests". The Goldwater Institute argued that the school district had been in violation of state laws mandating government transparency in the past. Investigations in 2002 and 2007 by the state Ombudsman and Attorney General uncovered violations of the state's open meeting law by the Attorney General's Office. According to Carrie Ann Sitren of the Goldwater Institute, this was "a clear attempt to silence people in the community who have been critical of the board's actions, and have made good-faith attempts to ensure the district is spending taxpayer money wisely". None of the records requested were private or confidential, and thus, should have been readily available to be released to the public, according to the assistant state Ombudsman.[131]
  • In December 2010, prominent foreclosure defense attorney Matthew Weidner was sued by Nationwide Title, a foreclosure processing firm.[132]
  • In January 2011 Sony Computer Entertainment America sued George Hotz and other individuals for jailbreaking the PlayStation 3 and publishing encryption and signing keys for various layers of the system's architecture. The defendants and the Electronic Frontier Foundation consider the case an egregious abuse of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Hotz settled with Sony before trial.[133]
  • In December 2015, James McGibney was ordered to pay a $1 million anti-SLAPP court sanction and $300,000 in attorney's fees to Neal Rauhauser for filing a series of baseless lawsuits against him.[134] The ruling was temporarily reversed when the presiding judge granted McGibney's request for a new trial in February 2016, but reinstated in favor of Rauhasuer on 14 April 2016, with the SLAPP sanction against McGibney reduced from $1 million to $150,000.[135][136] The judge ruled that McGibney had filed the suits to willfully and maliciously injure Rauhauser and to deter him from exercising his constitutional right to criticize McGibney.[134]
  • "Scientology versus the Internet" refers to a number of disputes relating to the Church of Scientology's efforts to suppress material critical of Scientology on the Internet through the use of lawsuits and legal threats.
  • The Agora Six – The Cynwyd Group, LLC v. Stefany (2009)[citation needed]
  • Saltsman v. Goddard (the Steubenville High School rape case): In an effort to stop blogger Alexandria Goddard's website from allowing allegedly defamatory posts about their son, two parents of a teenaged boy from Steubenville, Ohio sued Goddard and a dozen anonymous posters in October 2012.[137] The lawsuit asked for an injunction against the blogger, a public apology, acknowledgement that he was not involved in the rape, and $25,000 in damages.[138]
  • In August 2015, the State Fair of Texas was sanctioned more than $75,000 for filing a SLAPP suit against a lawyer who had requested financial documents from the State Fair.[139]
  • On 27 August 2012, Robert E. Murray and Murray Energy filed a lawsuit against environment reporter Ken Ward Jr. and the Charleston Gazette-Mail of Charleston, West Virginia. The lawsuit alleged Ken Ward Jr. posted libelous statements on his blog. Murray claims the blog post entitled "Mitt Romney, Murray Energy and Coal Criminals" has damaged his business, reputation, and has jeopardized the jobs Murray Energy provides in Belmont County, Ohio. In June 2017, Murray Energy issued a cease and desist letter to the HBO television show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver following the show's attempt to obtain comment about the coal industry. The show went ahead with the episode (18 June), in which host John Oliver discussed the Crandall Canyon Mine collapse in Utah in 2007, and expressed the opinion that Murray did not do enough to protect his miners' safety. Three days later, Murray and his companies brought suit against Oliver, the show's writers, HBO, and Time Warner. The lawsuit alleged that, in the Last Week Tonight show, Oliver "incited viewers to do harm to Mr. Murray and his companies". The ACLU filed an amicus brief in support of HBO in the case; the brief has been described as "hilarious"[140] and the "snarkiest legal brief ever".[141] The brief also included a comparison of Murray with the fictional character Dr. Evil that was used in the Oliver show, with the explanation that "it should be remembered that truth is an absolute defense to a claim of defamation". On 11 August 2017, a federal district court judge ruled that Murray Energy suits against The New York Times and HBO could each proceed in a lower state court. The suit against HBO was dismissed with prejudice on 21 February 2018. In November 2019, John Oliver discussed the implications of the lawsuit (and of SLAPP suits in general) on his show after Murray dropped the suit.[142]
  • In March 2019, U.S. Rep. Devin Nunes (R-California) filed a defamation lawsuit against Twitter, Elizabeth "Liz" Mair, Mair Strategies LLC, and the people behind the parody Twitter accounts "Devin Nunes' Cow" (@DevinCow) and "Devin Nunes' Mom" (@DevinNunesMom), seeking $250 million in damages. The lawsuit has been described by legal experts as a SLAPP.[143][144] Notably, the suit was filed in Virginia, a state known to have weak anti-SLAPP laws, rather than in California, where Nunes resides and where Twitter is headquartered, but which also has strong anti-SLAPP laws.[143] In April 2019, Nunes filed a defamation lawsuit against The Fresno Bee, his hometown newspaper, and its owner, McClatchy, after it published a story detailing how investors in his winery partied on a yacht with cocaine and prostitutes. Like the prior lawsuit, it was filed in Virginia.[143] Nunes has since filed additional lawsuits claiming defamation against CNN, Ryan Lizza, Hearst Magazines, Campaign for Accountability, Fusion GPS, and others.[145][146] In February 2020 (following the 2019 elections in which Democrats took control of both chambers for the first time since 1994), the Virginia General Assembly passed bills intended to discourage future SLAPPs in the state by strengthening defendant protections.[147]

See also

Case studies

References

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Further reading

  • Delfino, Michelangelo; Day, Mary E. (2002). Be careful who you SLAPP. MoBeta Pub. ISBN 978-0-9725141-0-1.
  • Nader, Ralph; Smith, Wesley J. (1998). No Contest: Corporate Lawyers and the Perversion of Justice in America. Random House. ISBN 978-0-375-75258-2.

External links

  • "Anti-SLAPP Advisory Panel". Ontario (Canada) Office of the Attorney General. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  • "Survival Guide for SLAPP Victims". California Anti-SLAPP Project. 22 December 2010.
  • "Activist SLAPPs Back in Countersuit against Sienna Developer". Fort Bend Now. 2006. Archived from the original on 11 July 2011.
  • Bernstein, Fred A. (10 April 2005). "Tenants Sound Off; Landlord Files Suit". The New York Times.
  • . Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Archived from the original on 24 September 2017. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  • "PDF materials for California suits".
  • . 2007. Archived from the original on 5 February 2009.
  • . Archived from the original on 14 October 2005.
  • Beder, Sharon (November 1995). . Current Affairs Bulletin. 72 (3): 22–29. Archived from the original on 14 April 2009. Retrieved 2 January 2003.
  • "'McLibel' pair win legal aid case". BBC News. 15 February 2005.
  • Weinstein, Henry (16 August 2005). . The Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 16 July 2012. Retrieved 22 August 2005 – via Reclaim Democracy!.
  • Gregerson, Chris. "Photography Copyright Lawsuit (06-cv-01164, D. Minn.)".
  • Mckay, Rich (28 March 2007). . Orlando Sentinel. Archived from the original on 19 May 2008.
  • . SLAPPSUIT.com. April 2007. Archived from the original on 19 May 2007.

strategic, lawsuit, against, public, participation, slapp, suits, redirects, here, last, week, tonight, segment, slapp, suits, strategic, lawsuits, against, public, participation, also, known, slapp, suits, intimidation, lawsuits, strategic, litigation, agains. SLAPP suits redirects here For the Last Week Tonight segment see SLAPP Suits Strategic lawsuits against public participation also known as SLAPP suits or intimidation lawsuits 1 or strategic litigation against public participation 2 are lawsuits intended to censor intimidate and silence critics by burdening them with the cost of a legal defense until they abandon their criticism or opposition 3 In a typical SLAPP the plaintiff does not normally expect to win the lawsuit The plaintiff s goals are accomplished if the defendant succumbs to fear intimidation mounting legal costs or simple exhaustion and abandons the criticism In some cases repeated frivolous litigation against a defendant may raise the cost of directors and officers liability insurance for that party interfering with an organization s ability to operate 4 A SLAPP may also intimidate others from participating in the debate A SLAPP is often preceded by a legal threat SLAPPs bring about freedom of speech concerns due to their chilling effect and are often difficult to filter out and penalize because the plaintiffs attempt to obfuscate their intent to censor intimidate or silence their critics To protect freedom of speech some jurisdictions have passed anti SLAPP laws often called SLAPP back laws These laws often function by allowing a defendant to file a motion to strike and or dismiss on the grounds that the case involves protected speech on a matter of public concern The plaintiff then bears the burden of showing a probability that they will prevail If the plaintiffs fail to meet their burden their claim is dismissed and the plaintiffs may be required to pay a penalty for bringing the case Anti SLAPP laws sometimes come under criticism from those who believe that there should not be barriers to the right to petition for those who sincerely believe they have been wronged regardless of ulterior motives Hence the difficulty in drafting SLAPP legislation and in applying it is to craft an approach which affords an early termination to invalid abusive suits without denying a legitimate day in court to valid good faith claims Anti SLAPP laws are generally considered to have a favorable effect and many lawyers have fought to enact stronger laws protecting against SLAPPs 5 Contents 1 Characteristics 2 History 3 Jurisdictional variations 3 1 Australia 3 2 Canada 3 2 1 British Columbia 3 2 2 Nova Scotia 3 2 3 Ontario 3 2 4 Quebec 3 3 European Union 3 4 United States 3 4 1 California 3 4 2 Washington State 4 Balancing the right of access to the courts 5 Notable SLAPPs 5 1 Australia 5 2 Belgium 5 3 Brazil 5 4 Canada 5 5 Estonia 5 6 France 5 7 Germany 5 8 Greece 5 9 India 5 10 Israel 5 11 Japan 5 12 Norway 5 13 Serbia 5 14 United Kingdom 5 15 United States 6 See also 6 1 Case studies 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksCharacteristics EditSLAPP is a form of strategic litigation or impact litigation SLAPPs take various forms The most common used to be a civil suit for defamation which in the English common law tradition was a tort The common law of libel dates to the early 17th century and unlike most English law is reverse onus meaning that once someone alleges a statement is libelous the burden is on the defendant to prove that it is not In England and Wales the Defamation Act 2013 removed most of the uses of defamation as a SLAPP by requiring the proof of special damage Various abuses of this law including political libel criticism of the political actions or views of others have ceased to exist in most places but persist in some jurisdictions notably British Columbia and Ontario where political views can be held as defamatory A common feature of SLAPPs is forum shopping wherein plaintiffs find courts that are more favourable towards the claims to be brought than the court in which the defendant or sometimes plaintiffs live 6 Other widely mentioned elements of a SLAPP are the actual effectiveness at silencing critics the timing of the suit inclusion of extra or spurious defendants such as relatives or hosts of legitimate defendants inclusion of plaintiffs with no real claim such as corporations that are affiliated with legitimate plaintiffs making claims that are very difficult to disprove or rely on no written record ambiguous or deliberately mangled wording that lets plaintiffs make spurious allegations without fear of perjury refusal to consider any settlement or none other than cash characterization of all offers to settle as insincere extensive and unnecessary demands for discovery attempts to identify anonymous or pseudonymous critics appeals on minor points of law and demands for broad rulings when appeal is accepted on such minor points of law In some instances it is clear that plaintiffs are attempting to drain defendants of their financial resources by making the lawsuit as costly as possible 7 and in these cases the plaintiff s motive may not be legal victory but merely to waste the defendant s time and money 8 History EditThe acronym was coined in the 1980s by University of Denver professors Penelope Canan and George W Pring 9 The term was originally defined as a lawsuit involving communications made to influence a governmental action or outcome which resulted in a civil complaint or counterclaim filed against nongovernment individuals or organizations on a substantive issue of some public interest or social significance The concept s originators later dropped the notion that government contact had to be about a public issue to be protected by the right to petition the government as provided in the First Amendment It has since been defined less broadly by some states and more broadly in one state California where it includes suits about speech on any public issue 10 The original conceptualization proffered by Canan and Pring emphasized the right to petition as protected in the United States under the US Constitution s specific protection in the First Amendment s fifth clause It is still definitional SLAPPs are civil lawsuits filed against those who have communicated to government officialdom in its entire constitutional apparatus The right to petition granted by Edgar the Peaceful King of England in the 10th century antedates Magna Carta in terms of its significance in the development of democratic institutions As currently conceived the right claims that democracy cannot properly function in the presence of barriers between the governed and the governing 11 12 New York Supreme Court Judge J Nicholas Colabella said in reference to SLAPPs Short of a gun to the head a greater threat to First Amendment expression can scarcely be imagined 13 In the United States a number of jurisdictions have made such suits illegal however the conditions that a defendant must satisfy for a dismissal of the suit vary from state to state In some states such as California defendants may be entitled to counter sue SLAPP plaintiffs under some circumstances 14 This is commonly referred to as SLAPPback Jurisdictional variations EditAustralia Edit In the Australian Capital Territory the Protection of Public Participation Act 2008 ACT protects conduct intended to influence public opinion or promote or further action in relation to an issue of public interest A party starting or maintaining a proceeding against a defendant for an improper purpose may be ordered to pay a financial penalty to the Territory 15 Canada Edit Some political libel and forum shopping incidents both relatively uncommon in Canada have been called SLAPPs because such suits load defendants with costs of responding in unfamiliar jurisdictions or at times typically elections when they are extremely busy and short of funds Both types of suit are unusual in Canada so there is little academic concern or examination of whether political subject matter or remote forums are a clear indicator of SLAPP citation needed Canada s three most populous provinces Quebec British Columbia and Ontario have enacted anti SLAPP legislation British Columbia Edit One of the first cases in Canada to be explicitly ruled a SLAPP was Fraser v Saanich see 1999 B C J No 3100 B C S C QL where the British Columbia Supreme Court struck out the claim of a hospital director against the District of Saanich holding that it was a meritless action designed to silence or intimidate the residents who were opposed to the plaintiff s plan to redevelop the hospital facilities Following the decision in Fraser v Saanich the Protection of Public Participation Act PPPA went into effect in British Columbia in April 2001 The legislation was repealed in August 2001 There was extensive debate on its merits and the necessity of having hard criteria for judges and whether this tended to reduce or increase process abuse The debate was largely formed by the first case to discuss and apply the PPPA Home Equity Development v Crow 16 The defendants application to dismiss the action against them was dismissed The defendants failed to meet the burden of proof required by the PPPA that the plaintiffs had no reasonable prospect of success While it was not the subject of the case some felt that the plaintiffs did not bring their action for an improper purpose and the suit did not inhibit the defendants in their public criticism of the particular project and that the Act was therefore ineffective in this case Since the repeal BC activists especially the BCCLA have argued repeatedly for a broad understanding of SLAPP and a broad interpretation of judicial powers especially in intervener applications in BC and other common law jurisdictions and when arguing for new legislation to prevent SLAPPs The activist literature contains extensive research on particular cases and criteria The West Coast Environmental Law organization agrees and generally considers BC to lag other jurisdictions 17 In March 2019 the legislature voted unanimously to pass another anti SLAPP bill the Protection of Public Participation Act 18 Nova Scotia Edit A private member s bill introduced in 2001 by Graham Steele NDP Halifax Fairview proposed a Protection of Public Participation Act to dismiss proceedings or claims brought or maintained for an improper purpose awarding punitive or exemplary damages effectively a SLAPP back and protection from liability for communication or conduct which constitutes public participation The bill did not progress beyond first reading 19 Ontario Edit In Ontario the decision in Daishowa v Friends of the Lubicon 1996 O J No 3855 Ont Ct Gen Div QL was instructive on SLAPPs A motion brought by the corporate plaintiff Daishowa to impose conditions on the defendant Friends of the Lubicon Indian Band that they would not represent Daishowa s action as a SLAPP was dismissed By 2010 the Ontario Attorney General had issued a major report which identified SLAPP as a major problem 20 but initially little to nothing was done 21 In June 2013 the Attorney General introduced legislation to implement the recommendations of the report The bill proposed a mechanism for an order to dismiss strategic lawsuits which attack free expression on matters of public interest with full costs but not punitive damages and on a relatively short timeframe if the underlying claims had no reasonable prospect of success 22 The bill enjoyed support from a wide range of groups including municipalities 23 the Canadian Environmental Law Association EcoJustice Environmental Defence 24 Ontario Clean Air Alliance Ontario Nature Canadian Civil Liberties Association 25 Canadian Journalists for Free Expression 26 Citizens Environment Alliance of Southwestern Ontario The Council of Canadians CPAWS Wildlands League Sierra Club Ontario Registered Nurses Association of Ontario 27 and Greenpeace Canada 28 The legislation was re introduced following the 2014 Ontario election as Bill 52 and on 3 November 2015 Ontario enacted it as the Protection of Public Participation Act 2015 29 Quebec Edit Quebec s then Justice Minister Jacques Dupuis proposed an anti SLAPP bill on 13 June 2008 30 The bill was adopted by the National Assembly of Quebec on 3 June 2009 Quebec s amended Code of Civil Procedure was the first anti SLAPP mechanism in force in Canada Prior to Ontario enacting its own Anti SLAPP law the bill was invoked there and then Supreme Court of Canada docket 33819 In the case of Les Editions Ecosociete Inc Alain Deneault Delphine Abadie and William Sacher vs Banro Inc in which the publisher Ecosociete pleaded supported by the BCCLA 31 that it should not face Ontario liability for a publication in Quebec as the suit was a SLAPP and the Quebec law explicitly provided to dismiss these The court denied the request ruling it had jurisdiction 32 A separate 2011 decision in Quebec Superior Court had ruled that Barrick Gold had to pay 143 000 to the book s three authors and publisher Les Editions Ecosociete Inc to prepare their defence in a seemingly abusive strategic lawsuit against public participation 33 Despite the Quebec ruling a book Noir Canada documenting the relationship between Canadian mining corporations armed conflict and political actors in Africa was never published as part of a settlement which according to the authors was only made for the sole purpose of resolving the three and a half year legal battle The Quebec law is substantially different in structure than that of California 34 or other jurisdictions however as Quebec s Constitution generally subordinates itself to international law and as such the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights applies That treaty only permits liability for arbitrary and unlawful speech The ICCPR has also been cited in the BC case Crookes v Newton as the standard for balancing free speech versus reputation rights The Supreme Court of Canada in October 2011 ruling in that case neither reiterated nor rescinded that standard European Union Edit On 25 November 2020 the European Parliament passed a resolution expressed its continued deep concern about the state of media freedom within the EU in the context of the abuses and attacks still being perpetrated against journalists and media workers in some Member States because of their work and called on the European Commission to establish minimum standards against SLAPP practices across the EU In 2021 the European Union was considering adopting an anti SLAPP directive to protect the freedom of speech of European citizens 35 United States Edit Thirty two states the District of Columbia and Guam have enacted statutory protections against SLAPPs 36 These states are Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut 37 Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Illinois Indiana Kansas Kentucky 38 Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts 39 Minnesota 40 Missouri Nebraska Nevada New Mexico New York Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island Tennessee Texas 41 42 Utah Vermont Virginia 43 and Washington In Colorado and West Virginia the courts have adopted protections against SLAPPs These laws vary dramatically in scope and level of protection and the remaining states lack specific protections There is no federal anti SLAPP law but legislation for one has been previously introduced such as the SPEAK FREE Act of 2015 The extent to which state laws apply in federal courts is unclear and the circuits are split on the question The First 44 Fifth 45 and Ninth 46 circuits have allowed litigants from Maine Louisiana and California respectively to use their state s special motion in federal district courts in diversity actions The D C Circuit has held the reverse for D C litigants 47 It has been argued that the lack of uniform protection against SLAPPs has encouraged forum shopping proponents of federal legislation have argued that the uncertainty about one s level of protection has likely magnified the chilling effect of SLAPPs 48 In December 2009 Rep Steve Cohen D Tennessee introduced the Citizen Participation Act in the U S House 49 This marks the first time the Congress has considered federal anti SLAPP legislation though the Congress enacted the SPEECH Act on the closely related issue of libel tourism 50 Like many state anti SLAPP laws H R 4364 would allow the defendant of a SLAPP to have the suit quickly dismissed and to recover fees and costs California Edit Main article Special motion to strike California has a unique variant of anti SLAPP legislation In 1992 California enacted Code of Civil Procedure 425 16 a statute intended to frustrate SLAPPs by providing a quick and inexpensive defense 10 It provides for a special motion that a defendant can file at the outset of a lawsuit to strike a complaint when it arises from conduct that falls within the rights of petition or free speech The statute expressly applies to any writing or speech made in connection with an issue under consideration or review by a legislative executive or judicial proceeding or any other official proceeding authorized by law but there is no requirement that the writing or speech be promulgated directly to the official body It also applies to speech in a public forum about an issue of public interest and to any other petition or speech conduct about an issue of public interest Washington State Edit In May 2015 the Washington Supreme Court struck down the state s 2010 anti SLAPP statute 51 However in 2021 a new anti SLAPP law was enacted 52 Balancing the right of access to the courts EditThe SLAPP penalty stands as a barrier to access to the courts by providing an early penalty to claimants who seek judicial redress In recent years the courts in some states have recognized that enforcement of SLAPP legislation must recognize and balance the constitutional rights of both litigants It has been said Since Magna Carta the world has recognized the importance of justice in a free society To no one will we sell to no one will we refuse or delay right or justice Magna Carta 1215 This nation s founding fathers knew people would never consent to be governed and surrender their right to decide disputes by force unless government offered a just forum for resolving those disputes 53 The right to bring grievances to the courts in good faith is protected by state and federal constitutions in a variety of ways In most states the right to trial by jury in civil cases is recognized The right to cross examine witnesses is considered fundamental to the American judicial system Moreover the first amendment protects the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances The right to petition extends to all departments of the Government The right of access to the courts is indeed but one aspect of the right of petition 54 Because the right to petition is among the most precious of the liberties safeguarded by the Bill of Rights the right of access to the courts shares this preferred place in the United States hierarchy of constitutional freedoms and values 55 This balancing question is resolved differently in different states often with substantial difficulty 56 57 58 59 In Palazzo v Alves the Supreme Court of Rhode Island stated By the nature of their subject matter anti SLAPP statutes require meticulous drafting On the one hand it is desirable to seek to shield citizens from improper intimidation when exercising their constitutional right to be heard with respect to issues of public concern On the other hand it is important that such statutes be limited in scope lest the constitutional right of access to the courts whether by private figures public figures or public officials be improperly thwarted There is a genuine double edged challenge to those who legislate in this area 60 The most challenging balancing problem arises in application to SLAPP claims which do not sound give rise to a claim in tort The common law and constitutional law have developed in the United States to create a high substantive burden to tort and tort like claims which seek redress for public speech especially public speech which addresses matters of public concern The common law in many states requires the pleader to state accurately the content of libelous words Constitutional law has provided substantive protection which bars recovery against a first amendment defense except upon clear and convincing evidence that there has been deliberate or reckless falsehood For this reason ferreting out the bad faith SLAPP claim at an early stage of litigation should be accomplished with relative ease Extension of the SLAPP penalties to factually complex cases where the substantive standard of proof at common law is lower presents special challenges A Minnesota Supreme Court case Middle Snake Tamarac Rivers Watershed Dist v Stengrim 784 N W 2d 834 Minn 2010 establishes a two step process to determine whether SLAPP procedure should be applied The decision arises in the context of an effort to enforce a settlement agreement between a local government and an opponent of a flood control project The landowner had accepted a significant monetary settlement in settlement of his opposition to land acquisition The landowner agreed as part of the settlement to address no further challenges to the project When the local government sued the landowner for breach of settlement the landowner contended that enforcement of the settlement was a strategic lawsuit against public participation The Supreme Court rejected that claim and affirmed the District Court s denial of SLAPP relief holding The District Court properly denied a motion to dismiss where the underlying claim involved an alleged breach of a settlement agreement that potentially limited the moving party s rights to public participation The Supreme Court explained Preexisting legal relationships such as those based on a settlement agreement where a party waives certain rights may legitimately limit a party s public participation It would be illogical to read sections 554 01 05 as providing presumptive immunity to actions that a moving party may have contractually agreed to forgo or limit Under the Minnesota approach as a preliminary matter the moving party must meet the burden of showing that the circumstances which bring the case within the purview of SLAPP protection exists Until that has been accomplished no clear and convincing burden has been shifted to the responding party Notable SLAPPs EditAustralia Edit Gunns 20 In the 2005 Gunns Limited v Marr amp Ors case 61 Gunns filed a writ in the Supreme Court of Victoria against 20 individuals and organisations including Senator Bob Brown for over A 7 8 million 62 The defendants have become collectively known as the Gunns 20 63 Gunns claimed that the defendants sullied its reputation and caused it to lose jobs and profits The defendants claimed that they are protecting the environment Opponents and critics of the case have suggested that the writ was filed with the intent to discourage public criticism of the company Gunns has maintained the position that they were merely trying to prevent parties enjoined to the writ from undertaking unlawful activities that disrupt their business The statement of claim alleged incidents of assault against forestry workers and vandalism 64 65 At a hearing before the Supreme Court of Victoria an amended statement of claim lodged by the company and served on defendants on 1 July 2005 was dismissed 61 However the judge in the case granted the company leave to lodge a third version of their statement of claim with the court no later than 15 August 2005 61 The application continued before the court before being brought to a close on 20 October 2006 62 In his ruling Justice Bernard Bongiorno made an award of costs in favour of the respondents only as far as it covered those costs incurred with striking out the third version of the statement of claim and costs incurred associated with their application for costs 62 In November 2006 Gunns dropped the case against Helen Gee Peter Pullinger and Doctors for Forests In December 2006 it abandoned the claim against Greens MPs Bob Brown and Peg Putt 66 The other matters were all settled in favour of Gunns following the payment of more than 150 000 in damages or in some cases undertakings to the court not to protest at certain locations Belgium Edit Belgian law recognizes the concept of tergend geding bullying litigation any litigation of which the underlying aim is to cause discomfort to the opposing party and hence increase the possibility of its redrawal from the law suit Qualification of litigation as such by a judge can lead to its dismissal Brazil Edit ThyssenKrupp Atlantic Steel Company TKCSA one of the largest private enterprises in Latin America sued Brazilian researchers from public universities as UERJ Rio de Janeiro State University and Fiocruz Oswaldo Cruz Foundation for moral damages 67 68 First TKCSA sued research pulmonologist Hermano Albuquerque de Castro from Sergio Arouca National School of Public Health ENSP Fiocruz Then TKCSA sued Alexandre Pessoa Dias research professor of the Joaquim Venancio Polytechnic School of Health EPSJV Fiocruz and Monica Cristina Lima a biologist from Pedro Ernesto University Hospital and board member of the Public University Workers Union of Rio de Janeiro State Sintuperj The last two lawsuits occurred after the disclosure of the technical report Evaluation of social environmental and health impacts caused by the setup and operation of TKCSA in Santa Cruz Canada Edit Daishowa Inc v Friends of the Lubicon From 1995 to 1998 a series of judgements OJ 1536 1995 OJ 1429 1998 ONGD established that defendants who had accused a global company of engaging in genocide were entitled to recover court costs 69 due to the public interest in the criticism even if it was rhetorically unjustifiable This was the first case to establish clearly the SLAPP criteria Fraser v Saanich District 1995 BCJ 3100 BCSC was held explicitly to be a SLAPP the first known case to be so described Justice Singh found plaintiff s conduct to be reprehensible and deserving of censure ordering he pay special costs page 48 Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation The British Columbia Experience RECEIL 19 1 2010 ISSN 0962 8797 to compensate Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper filed a suit against the Liberal Party of Canada the Official Opposition after the latter paid for trucks to drive through the streets playing a journalist s tape of Harper admitting he knew of financial considerations offered to dying MP Chuck Cadman before a critical House of Commons of Canada vote in 2005 This the Liberals and most commentators and authorities agreed would be a serious crime if proven Harper alleged the tape had been altered but a court found no evidence of this The suit was dropped by Michael Ignatieff after he replaced Stephane Dion as Leader of the Opposition and so was not heard in court but was transparently a successful effort to get the trucks off the streets 70 Crookes v Openpolitics ca filed May 2006 S063287 Supreme Court of BC and a series of related suits leading to a unanimous October 2011 ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada in Crookes v Newton upheld the rights of online debaters to link freely to third parties without fear of liability for contents at the other end of the link 71 A number of related rulings had previously established that transient comments on the Internet could not be in themselves simply printed and used to prove that publication had occurred for purposes of libel and defamation law in Canada Other elements of the ruling clarified how responsible journalism and therefore the right to protect anonymous sources qualified privilege and innocent dissemination defenses applied to persons accused of online defamation In May 2010 Youthdale Treatment Centres of Toronto Ontario filed a defamation suit against various former patients parents of former patients and other persons claiming C 5 million in damages citation needed The lawsuit filed on 5 May 2010 on behalf of Youthdale by Harvin Pitch and Jennifer Lake of Teplitsky Colson LLP claimed that these persons were involved in a conspiracy to among other things have Youthdale s licence to operate revoked Youthdale also claimed their reputation was damaged as a result of various actions by the named defendants which Youthdale alleged included the creation of websites and blogs containing complaints against Youthdale including alleged accusations of unlawful administration of psychotropic medications A notable left turn for Youthdale occurred in July 2010 when Youthdale became the subject of a Toronto Star investigation in which it was found that Youthdale had been admitting children to its Secure Treatment Unit that did not have mental disorders 72 The case has since been dismissed In 2011 in Robin Scory v Glen Valley Watersheds Society a BC court ruled that an order for special costs acts as a deterrent to litigants whose purpose is to interfere with the democratic process and that Public participation and dissent is an important part of our democratic system 73 74 However such awards remained rare 17 Morris vs Johnson et al 22 October 2012 ONSC 5824 CanLII During the final weeks of the 2010 municipal election in Aurora Ontario a group of town councilors and the incumbent Mayor Phyllis Morris agreed to use town funds to launch what was later referenced as a private lawsuit fronted by the Mayor seeking 6M against both named and anonymous residents who were critical of the local government After the mayor and a number of councilors lost the election the new town council cut public funding for the private lawsuit and they issued a formal apology to the defendants Almost one year after the town cut funding and after Morris lost a Norwich motion Morris discontinued her case The discontinuance cost decision delivered by Master Hawkins reads per para 32 Ontario Superior court of Justice court file no 10 CV 412021 Because I regard this action as SLAPP litigation designed to stifle debate about Mayor Morris fitness for office commenced during her re election campaign I award Johnson and Hogg special enhanced costs as was done in Scory v Krannitz 2011 BCSC 1344 per Bruce J at para 31 B C S C Morris subsequently sued the town for 250 000 in the spring of 2013 to recover her legal costs for the period after the town cut funding of her case Almost one and a half years after the final ruling in the Morris defamation case i e the second Master Hawkins cost ruling delivered in January 2013 and approximately one year after suing the town Morris amended her statement of claim to note that her legal costs were actually 27 821 46 and not the 250 000 as noted in the initial statement of claim Morris then attempted to move the case to small claims court after the town had already spent over 150 000 in preparing its defense As of the summer of 2015 the case is ongoing In 2012 Sino Forest sued Muddy Waters Research for 4 billion for defamation in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice Muddy Waters had accused Sino Forest of fraudulently inflating its assets and earnings and had claimed the company s shares were essentially worthless 75 However on 10 January 2012 Sino Forest announced that its historic financial statements and related audit reports should not be relied upon 76 Sino forest also filed for bankruptcy protection In response to the lawsuit Muddy Waters stated that Sino s bankruptcy protection filing vindicated its accusations since the company would not require bankruptcy protection if it was really generating close to 2 billion in cash flow 77 Sino Forest was represented by Bennett Jones LLP 78 Businesspeople Garth Drabinsky and Conrad Black filed numerous suits against critics of their business activities These received much publicity but were usually settled quickly citation needed In September 2014 Brampton Ontario mayor Susan Fennell used threats of legal action against fellow councillors the Toronto Star the city s integrity commissioner and auditor Deloitte to delay a city council meeting which was to discuss a major spending scandal 79 80 As the parties involved needed an opportunity to seek legal advice regardless of the merit or spuriousness of the claims this tactic served to defer a key debate which otherwise would have and should have taken place before the city s 27 October municipal election 81 Estonia Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 2016 the real estate investment company Pro Kapital Ltd sued urbanist Teele Pehk who expressed her opinion about the company s development plans in the Kalasadam area of Tallinn Estonia The accusations were based on an interview given for the article The battle for the Estonian coastline published by the monthly newspaper The Baltic Times Initially instead of clarifying the questionable quotes in the article with the Baltic Times editors Pro Kapital sent a legal demand to Pehk demanding that she publish a pre written explanation and pay 500 to cover their legal advice expenses Pehk provided proof to the lawyer that she had not lied to the journalist of The Baltic Times and the newspaper published a clarification online that Pehk s words were misinterpreted Few months later Pro Kapital sued Pehk for damaging their reputation by spreading lies about the detailed plan of the Kalasadam area Teele Pehk had been involved with the detailed plan of Kalasadam since 2011 as a member of the neighbourhood association Telliskivi selts and caretaker of the Kalarand beach situated on the edge of the Kalasadam area Half a year into the court case Pro Kapital began negotiations and settled with a compromise before the court hearing Pro Kapital paid for Pehk s legal costs and both parties agreed not to disparage each other in the future Teele Pehk is still active in Tallinn urban development and continues to spread the word about SLAPP suits This case took place at the end of the 12 year process of planning the Kalasadam area which over the years had witnessed exceptionally high public interest regarding the planned residential development and most importantly the public use of the seaside and the beach The planning system in Estonia allows anyone to express their opinion present suggestions or objections to any detailed plan Many Estonian civic organisations were raising concerned voices about the case and the Chancellor for Justice of Estonia condemned that practice many times in public appearances France Edit In 2010 and 2011 a French blogger was summoned twice by the communication company Cometik NOVA SEO over exposing their quick selling method a k a one shot method and suggesting a financial compensation for his first trial 82 The company s case was dismissed twice but appealed both times On 31 March 2011 the company won the censorship of any reference of its name on Mathias Poujol Rost s weblog 2 000 as damages the obligation to publish the judicial decision for 3 months 2 000 as procedural allowance all legal fees for both first and appeal instances 83 Germany Edit In September 2017 a naturopath in Arizona named Colleen Huber filed a defamation lawsuit preceded by two cease and desist letters against Britt Marie Hermes a naturopathy whistleblower The lawsuit was filed for Hermes blog post criticizing Huber for using naturopathic remedies to treat cancer and speculating that Hermes name was being used without her permission in several registered domain names owned by Huber 84 85 The lawsuit was filed in Kiel Germany where Hermes was residing to pursue her PhD in evolutionary genomics Jann Bellamy of Science Based Medicine speculates that this is due to good old forum shopping for a more plaintiff friendly jurisdiction as there are no protections against SLAPP lawsuits in Germany 84 Britt Hermes is a notable scientific skeptic and the organization Australian Skeptics set up a fund to help with legal costs on the case In an interview at CSICon 2019 Britt Hermes told Susan Gerbic that she had won her case on 24 May 2019 According to Britt Hermes the court ruled that my post is protected speech under Article 5 1 of the German constitution 86 Greece Edit See also Kyriakos Mitsotakis Wiretapping Scandal In 2022 in the wake of revelations that Greece s National Intelligence Service Greece was spying on the leader of PASOK the third largest party Nikos Androulakis the executive director of NIS Grigoris Kontoleon and the Secretary General to prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis Grigoris Dimitriadis also a close relative of Kyriakos Mitsotakis resigned from office Grigoris Dimitriadis filed lawsuits against two journalists who had helped uncover the scandal Thodoris Chondrogiannos and Nikolas Leontopoulos demanding 150 000 euros as damages for false publications and the removal of those publications but also against Thanassis Koukakis a journalist who during 2021 was spied upon because of his investigations on Greek businessmen India Edit In 2020 Karan Bajaj the founder of WhiteHat Jr now owned by Byju s filed a 2 6 million dollar lawsuit against Pradeep Poonia an engineer who publicly accused the company of having a toxic work environment and unethical business practices 87 88 89 The Delhi High Court issued an interim order requiring Poonia to remove certain tweets from his account 87 In 2021 Bajaj rescinded the lawsuit 87 Israel Edit During 2016 Amir Bramly who at the time was being investigated and subsequently indicted for an alleged Ponzi scheme 90 sued for libel Tomer Ganon a Calcalist reporter privately for 1 million in damages due to a news item linking him to Bar Refaeli 91 92 In addition Bramly sued Channel 2 News and its reporters and managers for 5 million in damages due to an alleged libel in an in depth TV news item and interview with the court appointed liquidator of his companies 93 and has threatened to sue additional bodies 94 The sued individuals and bodies have claimed that these are SLAPP actions 95 96 Japan Edit In 2006 Oricon Inc Japan s music chart provider sued freelance journalist Hiro Ugaya due to his suggesting in an article for business and culture magazine Cyzo ja that the company was fiddling its statistics to benefit certain management companies and labels specifically Johnny and Associates The company sought 50 million and apology from him 97 He found allies in the magazine s editor in chief Tadashi Ibi 97 lawyer Kentaro Shirosaki 97 and Reporters Sans Frontieres RSF 98 He was found guilty in 2008 by the Tokyo District Court and ordered to pay one million yen but he appealed and won Oricon did not appeal later His 33 month struggle against Oricon and his research on SLAPPs through his self expense trip in the United States was featured on the TBS program JNN Reportage titled as Legal Intimidation Against Free Speech What is SLAPP 99 RSF expressed its support to the journalist and was relieved on the abandonment of the suit 98 Norway Edit On 17 May 2018 a non profit project rettspraksis no challenged a perceived monopoly on the publication of pre 2009 Supreme Court of Norway decisions by publishing a large back catalogue of historical decisions To prevent publication the government established Lovdata foundation demanded an immediate injunction against two project volunteers Hakon Wium Lie and Fredrik Ljone that the website be shut down The foundation claimed that rettspraksis no had developed or used software to systematically download rulings from Lovdatas online services 100 in order to publish the rulings in violation of Lovdata s rights according to the Norwegian Copyright Act section 43 the Database Rights Section The District Court granted the injunction without a hearing based on finding that the volunteer actions was in violation of section 43 and that the publication on rettspraksis no would enable other commercial actors to exploit the material in violation of Lovdata s rights even if the project itself did not 101 A postjudgement hearing on 30 and 31 August 2018 resulted in a reduction in the injunction s effects most significantly that the Database Rights Section did not extend to rulings published before 2005 Appeals from Ljone and Wium Lie to the Appeals Court and the Supreme Court were denied 102 Serbia Edit In the late 1990s many SLAPP cases against independent and pro opposition media ensued after adoption of the infamous media law proposed by then minister of information Aleksandar Vucic 103 The main characteristic of these cases were quick trials and extremely high fines most of which were unaffordable for journalists and their media houses 103 While SLAPP cases became more or less rare after the Overthrow of Slobodan Milosevic they gradually reappeared in the late 2010s and especially in the early 2020s during SNS led cabinets 103 Notably Aleksandar Vucic is current president of Serbia the most influential figure of the regime and he is often accused of suppression of media freedoms 104 United Kingdom Edit A 2021 libel action brought against the publisher HarperCollins and the author and journalist Catherine Belton over the latter s book Putin s People was described by former Conservative cabinet minister David Davis as a SLAPP 105 Despite winning the legal case brought by several Russian oligarchs including Roman Abramovich Belton was left facing legal costs of 1 5 million 105 UK Government justice minister James Cartlidge said the Ministry of Justice is monitoring SLAPP threats against journalists and announced that the UK will be a member of the Council of Europe s inaugural working group on SLAPPs with an anti SLAPP draft recommendation for member states due in December 2023 I will be giving SLAPPs in UK courts urgent consideration I want to make it clear that the Government are committed to a robust defence of transparency and freedom of speech We will not tolerate anything that risks tarnishing the integrity of our judicial and legal profession 105 Ministers later said that they would reform the legal system to prevent intimidation lawsuits amendments to this effect were proposed for an anti corruption economic crime bill before Parliament in March 2022 106 United States Edit From 1981 to 1986 Pacific Legal Foundation PLF and San Luis Obispo County California filed a suit attempting to obtain the mailing list of the Abalone Alliance to get the group to pay for the police costs of the largest anti nuclear civil disobedience act in U S history at the Diablo Canyon Power Plant 107 The September 1981 demonstration involved tens of thousands of people 108 The County was dismissed from the case by the trial judge and lost on appeal for recovery of police costs including in part because such costs are intended to be covered by taxes 109 In 1985 the Supreme Court of California declined to block a lower court ruling that allowed PLF to sue leaders of the demonstration for costs associated with the protest which defendants said was an attempt to chill dissent 110 Pacific Legal Foundation lost at every court level and withdrew the suit the day before it was due to be heard by the U S Supreme Court citation needed Kim Shewalter and other neighborhood activists as defendants won a 1998 anti SLAPP motion against apartment building owners The owners had filed a SLAPP because of the defendants protest activities 111 Karen Winner the author of Divorced From Justice is recognized as the catalyst for the changes that we adopted said Leo Milonas a retired justice with the Appellate Division of the New York state courts who chaired a special commission that recommended the changes adopted by Chief Judge Judith Kaye 112 113 The NY state court report s committee cited a previous New York City Commissioner of Consumer Protection report as a major reason for its study Karen Winner was the author of the earlier study 114 115 116 But in 1999 Winner along with a psychologist whistleblower and several citizens were SLAPPed for criticizing the guardian ad litem system and a former judge in South Carolina Winner s report Findings on Judicial Practices amp Court appointed Personnel in the Family Courts in Dorchester Charleston amp Berkeley Counties South Carolina and citizen demonstrations led to the first laws in South Carolina to establish minimum standards and licensing requirements for guardians ad litem who represent the interests of children in court cases 117 The retaliatory SLAPPs have been dragging on for nearly 10 years with judgments totaling more than 11 million against the co defendants collectively Reflecting the retaliatory nature of these suits at least one of the co defendants is still waiting to find out from the judges which particular statements if any he made were false 118 Barbra Streisand as plaintiff lost a 2003 SLAPP motion after she sued an aerial photographer involved in the California Coastal Records Project Streisand v Adelman California Superior Court Case SC077257 119 120 See Streisand effect Barry King and another Internet poster as defendants won an anti SLAPP motion against corporate plaintiffs based on critical posts on an Internet financial message board 121 Kathi Mills won an anti SLAPP motion against the Atlanta Humane Society Atlanta Humane Society v Mills in Gwinnett County Georgia Superior Court case 01 A 13269 1 122 123 124 She had been sued based on comments she made to an internet forum after a news program had aired critical of the AHS In part the judge ruled that private citizens do not need to investigate news coverage before they make their own comments on it and that governmental entities may not sue for defamation 122 In 2004 RadioShack Corporation sued Bradley D Jones the webmaster of RadioShackSucks com and a former RadioShack dealer for 17 years in an attempt to suppress online discussion of a class action lawsuit in which more than 3 300 current or former RadioShack managers were alleging the company required them to work long hours without overtime pay 125 Nationally syndicated talk radio host Tom Martino prevailed in an anti SLAPP motion in 2009 after he was sued for libel by a watercraft retailer The case received national attention for its suggestion that no one reasonably expects objective facts from a typical talk show host who is often a comedian telling jokes 126 127 128 In March 2009 MagicJack a company that promotes a USB VoIP device filed a defamation suit against Boing Boing for exposing their unfair and deceptive business tactics regarding their EULA visitor counter and 30 day trial period This was dismissed as a SLAPP by a California judge in late 2009 In the resulting ruling MagicJack was made responsible for most of Boing Boing s legal costs 129 In the 2009 case Comins vs VanVoorhis a Florida man named Christopher Comins filed a defamation suit against a University of Florida graduate student after the student blogged about a video of Comins repeatedly shooting someone s pet dogs This was cited as an example of a SLAPP by the radio show On the Media 3 In November 2010 filmmaker Fredrik Gertten as defendant won an anti SLAPP motion after he was sued for defamation by Dole Fruit Company The case concerned Gertten s documentary film about farm workers The lengthy lawsuit was documented in Gertten s film Big Boys Gone Bananas 130 In an effort to prevent four women from filing any Public Records Requests without first getting permission from a judge or from filing future lawsuits the Congress Elementary School District filed the lawsuit Congress Elementary School District v Warren et al on 28 January 2010 The Goldwater Institute a think tank based in Phoenix Arizona represented the four defendants The school district said that it has been harassed so often by Warren that it was not able to functionally educate its students Toni Wayas the school district s superintendent claimed that it had time and time again complied with the requests The Goldwater Institute argued that the school district had been in violation of state laws mandating government transparency in the past Investigations in 2002 and 2007 by the state Ombudsman and Attorney General uncovered violations of the state s open meeting law by the Attorney General s Office According to Carrie Ann Sitren of the Goldwater Institute this was a clear attempt to silence people in the community who have been critical of the board s actions and have made good faith attempts to ensure the district is spending taxpayer money wisely None of the records requested were private or confidential and thus should have been readily available to be released to the public according to the assistant state Ombudsman 131 In December 2010 prominent foreclosure defense attorney Matthew Weidner was sued by Nationwide Title a foreclosure processing firm 132 In January 2011 Sony Computer Entertainment America sued George Hotz and other individuals for jailbreaking the PlayStation 3 and publishing encryption and signing keys for various layers of the system s architecture The defendants and the Electronic Frontier Foundation consider the case an egregious abuse of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act Hotz settled with Sony before trial 133 In December 2015 James McGibney was ordered to pay a 1 million anti SLAPP court sanction and 300 000 in attorney s fees to Neal Rauhauser for filing a series of baseless lawsuits against him 134 The ruling was temporarily reversed when the presiding judge granted McGibney s request for a new trial in February 2016 but reinstated in favor of Rauhasuer on 14 April 2016 with the SLAPP sanction against McGibney reduced from 1 million to 150 000 135 136 The judge ruled that McGibney had filed the suits to willfully and maliciously injure Rauhauser and to deter him from exercising his constitutional right to criticize McGibney 134 Scientology versus the Internet refers to a number of disputes relating to the Church of Scientology s efforts to suppress material critical of Scientology on the Internet through the use of lawsuits and legal threats The Agora Six The Cynwyd Group LLC v Stefany 2009 citation needed Saltsman v Goddard the Steubenville High School rape case In an effort to stop blogger Alexandria Goddard s website from allowing allegedly defamatory posts about their son two parents of a teenaged boy from Steubenville Ohio sued Goddard and a dozen anonymous posters in October 2012 137 The lawsuit asked for an injunction against the blogger a public apology acknowledgement that he was not involved in the rape and 25 000 in damages 138 In August 2015 the State Fair of Texas was sanctioned more than 75 000 for filing a SLAPP suit against a lawyer who had requested financial documents from the State Fair 139 On 27 August 2012 Robert E Murray and Murray Energy filed a lawsuit against environment reporter Ken Ward Jr and the Charleston Gazette Mail of Charleston West Virginia The lawsuit alleged Ken Ward Jr posted libelous statements on his blog Murray claims the blog post entitled Mitt Romney Murray Energy and Coal Criminals has damaged his business reputation and has jeopardized the jobs Murray Energy provides in Belmont County Ohio In June 2017 Murray Energy issued a cease and desist letter to the HBO television show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver following the show s attempt to obtain comment about the coal industry The show went ahead with the episode 18 June in which host John Oliver discussed the Crandall Canyon Mine collapse in Utah in 2007 and expressed the opinion that Murray did not do enough to protect his miners safety Three days later Murray and his companies brought suit against Oliver the show s writers HBO and Time Warner The lawsuit alleged that in the Last Week Tonight show Oliver incited viewers to do harm to Mr Murray and his companies The ACLU filed an amicus brief in support of HBO in the case the brief has been described as hilarious 140 and the snarkiest legal brief ever 141 The brief also included a comparison of Murray with the fictional character Dr Evil that was used in the Oliver show with the explanation that it should be remembered that truth is an absolute defense to a claim of defamation On 11 August 2017 a federal district court judge ruled that Murray Energy suits against The New York Times and HBO could each proceed in a lower state court The suit against HBO was dismissed with prejudice on 21 February 2018 In November 2019 John Oliver discussed the implications of the lawsuit and of SLAPP suits in general on his show after Murray dropped the suit 142 In March 2019 U S Rep Devin Nunes R California filed a defamation lawsuit against Twitter Elizabeth Liz Mair Mair Strategies LLC and the people behind the parody Twitter accounts Devin Nunes Cow DevinCow and Devin Nunes Mom DevinNunesMom seeking 250 million in damages The lawsuit has been described by legal experts as a SLAPP 143 144 Notably the suit was filed in Virginia a state known to have weak anti SLAPP laws rather than in California where Nunes resides and where Twitter is headquartered but which also has strong anti SLAPP laws 143 In April 2019 Nunes filed a defamation lawsuit against The Fresno Bee his hometown newspaper and its owner McClatchy after it published a story detailing how investors in his winery partied on a yacht with cocaine and prostitutes Like the prior lawsuit it was filed in Virginia 143 Nunes has since filed additional lawsuits claiming defamation against CNN Ryan Lizza Hearst Magazines Campaign for Accountability Fusion GPS and others 145 146 In February 2020 following the 2019 elections in which Democrats took control of both chambers for the first time since 1994 the Virginia General Assembly passed bills intended to discourage future SLAPPs in the state by strengthening defendant protections 147 See also EditBarratry common law Cease and desist Chilling effect Franchise fraud Lawfare Legal abuse Legal threat Media transparency Public participation Reputation management Spamigation Vexatious litigation Frivolous litigation Case studies Edit McDonald s Restaurants v Morris amp Steel Scientology and the legal system Varian v Delfino Horizon Group v Bonnen Santa Barbara News Press controversy Susan Paterno Steven DonzigerReferences Edit Pring George William Canan Penelope 1996 SLAPPs Getting Sued for Speaking Out Temple University Press p x ISBN 978 1 56639 369 0 Strategic Litigation Against Public Participation Freedom of Expression Bill HL Parliamentary Debates Hansard Vol 820 Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Lords 18 March 2022 col 571 a b Rafsanjani Nazanin 2 April 2010 SLAPP Back Transcript On The Media WNYC National Public Radio PBS Archived from the original on 21 May 2013 Retrieved 29 June 2011 McDevitt John 16 May 2013 Whacked By Lawsuit Costs Old City Civic Association Disbands KYW TV CBS Philadelphia Tate Kathryn W 1 April 2000 California s Anti Slapp Legislation A Summary of and Commentary on Its Operation and Scope Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 33 801 886 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Sheldrick Byron 2014 Blocking Public Participation The Use of Strategic Litigation to Silence Political Expression Wilfrid Laurier University Press p 50 ISBN 978 1 55458 930 2 Retrieved 12 November 2014 Sheldrick Byron 18 February 2014 Blocking Public Participation The Use of Strategic Litigation to Silence Political Expression Wilfrid Laurier Univ Press p 22 ISBN 978 1 55458 931 9 The strength of a SLAPP lawsuit is in its capacity to tie the defendants up in legal manoeuvring prolong the litigation and drain resources Gillers Stephen 2018 Journalism Under Fire Protecting the Future of Investigative Reporting Columbia University Press p 116 ISBN 978 0 231 54733 8 For some plaintiffs the prospect of court victory may not be primary Instead the goal may be to force the defendant to spend both time and money by making the court fight as prolonged and expensive as possible Pring George W Canan Penelope 1996 SLAPPs Getting Sued for Speaking Out Temple University Press pp 8 9 ISBN 978 0 375 75258 2 a b California Code of Civil Procedure Section 425 16 California Anti SLAPP Project 2009 Ratified 1992 last amended 2009 The Legislature finds and declares that it is in the public interest to encourage continued participation in matters of public significance and that this participation should not be chilled through abuse of the judicial process Mark Gregory A 1 January 1998 The Vestigial Constitution The History and Significance of the Right to Petition Fordham Law Review 66 6 Queen Mary II of Stuart 1689 1694 Kings of England 2010 Archived from the original on 26 March 2012 Retrieved 29 June 2011 Pring George William Canan Penelope 1996 SLAPPs Getting Sued for Speaking Out Temple University Press p ix ISBN 978 1 56639 369 0 Belmas Genelle Overbeck Wayne 4 August 2014 Major Principles of Media Law 2015 Cengage Learning p 178 189 ISBN 978 1 305 44555 0 Protection of Public Participation Act 2008 PDF Parliamentary Counsel s Office Australian Capital Territory 12 December 2011 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Home Equity Development v Crow et al 2002 BCSC 1138 British Columbia Superior Courts 30 July 2002 Retrieved 23 May 2015 a b BC trails Quebec Ontario in protecting public from chilling lawsuits West Coast Environmental Law Association 6 June 2010 Retrieved 6 July 2017 Jones Ryan Patrick 8 March 2019 B C legislature unanimously passes anti SLAPP legislation CBC News Retrieved 10 March 2019 Protection of Public Participation Act Nova Scotia legislature 23 May 2001 Anti SLAPP Advisory Panel Ministry of the Attorney General June 2013 Retrieved 16 January 2017 Renewing the Debate on Anti SLAPP Legislation in Ontario Law is Cool 6 October 2011 Ali Shelina 28 August 2014 Protecting public debate through anti SLAPP legislation rabble ca August 21 2014 Meeting Minutes Council of the Corporation of The Township of Billings 21 August 2014 SLAPP silly Environmental Defence Canada 3 March 2014 Archived from the original on 10 November 2014 CCLA Urges Ontario Attorney General to Pass Protection of Public Participation Bill Canadian Civil Liberties Association 2 December 2013 Archived from the original on 10 November 2014 Organizations continue call for anti SLAPP legislation in Ontario Canadian Journalists for Free Expression 6 October 2014 Letter Minister John Gerretson Attorney General Bill 83 Protection of Public Participation Act 2013 Registered Nurses Association of Ontario 29 November 2013 Cadan Yossi 9 February 2014 Ontario still has time to pass environmental bills Toronto Star Protection of Public Participation Act 2015 Legislative Assembly of Ontario Retrieved 27 March 2020 Pelletier Vincent August 2008 Strategic Lawsuits against Public Participation SLAPPs and other abusive lawsuits PDF Uniform Law Conference of Canada Civil Section English amp French Archived from the original PDF on 1 October 2011 Retrieved 29 June 2011 Les Editions Ecosociete Inc Alain Deneault Delphine Abadie and William Sacher v Banro Corporation PDF British Columbia Civil Liberties Association 10 March 2011 Archived PDF from the original on 6 April 2012 Full text of Supreme Court of Canada decision available at LexUM and CanLII Noir Canada Defamation Lawsuit Settled Publication of Book Stopped Canadian Association of University Teachers Bulletin Archived from the original on 30 September 2017 Retrieved 16 January 2017 Anti SLAPP Law in California Digital Media Law Project Retrieved 16 January 2017 Pollet Mathieu 13 May 2021 EU Parliament to counter lawsuits designed to silence journalists NGOs EURACTIV France State Anti SLAPP Laws Public Participation Project Retrieved 18 February 2017 Wiggin and Dana Secures Dismissal of Defamation Suit under New Anti SLAPP Law Wiggin and Dana LLP Retrieved 22 August 2019 Adkisson Jay 18 April 2022 Kentucky Adopts The Uniform Public Expression Protection Act Forbes Retrieved 23 November 2022 Kluft David A 9 July 2014 The Scalpel or the Bludgeon Twenty Years of Anti SLAPP in Massachusetts Boston Bar Journal Retrieved 2 June 2016 Free Speech Participation in Government 2010 Minnesota Statutes Minnesota Office of the Revisor of Statutes 2010 Retrieved 29 June 2011 Citizen Participation Act takes aim at frivolous lawsuits Alpine Avalanche 31 March 2011 Archived from the original on 28 February 2021 Retrieved 10 November 2014 Texas Citizen Participation Act gets stronger Lexology com 21 June 2013 Bill Tracking 2017 session gt Legislation lis virginia gov Retrieved 28 September 2017 Godin v Schenks 629 F 3d 79 1st Cir 2010 FindLaw 22 December 2010 Henry v Lake Charles Am Press L L C 566 F 3d 164 5th Cir 2009 PDF United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit 14 April 2009 United States v Lockheed Missiles and Space Company California Anti SLAPP Project 31 May 2011 Retrieved 29 June 2011 Abbas v Foreign Policy Grp LLC 783 F 3d 1328 D C Cir 2015 PDF United States Court of Appeals District of Columbia Circuit 24 April 2015 FAQS about SLAPPS Public Participation Project Archived from the original on 3 April 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2012 H R 4364 Citizen Participation Act of 2009 As introduced in House Dec 16 2009 Open Congress for the 112th United States Congress Participatory Politics Foundation and Sunlight Foundation Retrieved 26 June 2011 Albanese Andrew 12 August 2010 Obama Signs Libel Tourism Law Publishers Weekly Retrieved 26 June 2012 State Supreme Court Strikes Down Washington s Anti SLAPP Statute 1 February 2016 Lexology com Washington State Passes New Anti SLAPP Statute Davis Wright Tremaine www dwt com Retrieved 11 March 2022 Boucher David Kelly Paul 1994 The Social Contract from Hobbes to Rawls 1st ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 10846 1 California Motor Transport Co et al v Trucking Unlimited et al Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit FindLaw 1972 404 U S 508 510 United States Court of Appeals Eighth Circuit 1986 780 F 2d 1422 Rondell Harrison and Sharon Harrison Appellants v Springdale Water amp Sewer Commission Mcgoodwin Williams amp Yates Inc Walter Turnbow Larry Clinkscales and Harold Henson Appellees Justia com 780 F 2d 1422 1427 Supreme Court of Georgia 2002 Denton et al v Browns Mill Development Company Inc et al FindLaw 561 S E 2d 431 DeKalb Georgia Superior Court Judge Workman 2000 Browns Mill Development Company Inc et al v Denton et al LawSkills 543 S E 2d 65 Supreme Court of Georgia 30 November 2006 Earthresources LLC v Morgan County et al two cases FindLaw Nos S06A1150 S06A1713 Supreme Court Rhode Island 4 August 2004 filed Stephen Alves v Hometown Newspapers Inc d b a The Kent County Daily Times et al PDF Rhode Island Judiciary Archived from the original PDF on 30 September 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2011 857 A 2d 743 Supreme Court of Rhode Island 3 April 2008 Alan G Palazzo et al v Stephen D Alves FindLaw No 2006 172 Appeal a b c 2005 VSC 251 a b c 2006 VSC 386 Darby Andrew 29 August 2006 Gunns 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Tyler Tracey 19 October 2011 Supreme Court ruling big victory for Internet freedom Toronto Star Zlomislic Diana 7 July 2010 Youth lock ups blasted Toronto Star B C developer ordered to pay for failed defamation suit against local conservation group Ecojustice Canada 12 October 2011 Archived from the original on 24 November 2020 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Ecojustice scores big victory for the little guys Ecojustice Canada 26 May 2011 Archived from the original on 29 November 2020 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Benoit David 30 March 2012 Sino Forest Sues Muddy Waters for 4 Billion Wall Street Journal Settlement Agreement between Staff and David Horsley Ontario Securities Commission paragraph 12 21 July 2014 Retrieved 18 September 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link Sino Forest files for bankruptcy protection BBC 30 March 2012 Statement of Claim Sino Forest v Muddy Waters PDF Wall Street Journal Retrieved 18 September 2016 Hopper Tristin 24 September 2014 Everybody is suing everybody A guide to whom is threatening whom with legal action in Toronto s political scene National Post Ballingall Alex 6 November 2014 Brampton Mayor Susan Fennell threatens to sue councillors Toronto Star Bascaramurty Dakshana 24 September 2014 Brampton council puts off issue of misspending by mayor councillors The Globe and Mail Cometik home page Cometik Warning on each site a video is automatically played after the loading of the page Publication judiciaire a la demande de la societe Cometik Agences Web surprenantes in French 7 April 2011 Retrieved 29 June 2011 a b Bellamy Jann 18 January 2018 Cancer quack Colleen Huber sues Britt Hermes over criticism Science Based Medicine Retrieved 16 November 2019 Devlin Hannah 27 March 2018 The naturopath whistleblower It is surprisingly easy to sell snake oil The Guardian Retrieved 23 June 2020 Gerbic Susan 15 July 2019 Catching Up With Britt Hermes CSICon 2019 Skeptical Inquirer Retrieved 16 November 2019 a b c WhiteHat Jr withdraws defamation suit against vocal critic The Economic Times 4 May 2021 Retrieved 17 November 2021 Mandhani Apoorva Mihindukulasuriya Regina 30 November 2020 Boon for locked down kids or marketing hype Decoding WhiteHat Jr s legal brawls with critics ThePrint Retrieved 17 November 2021 Whitehat Jr to foray into Brazil Mexico create 1 lakh teaching jobs in India in 3 years The Economic Times 13 December 2020 Retrieved 17 November 2021 כתב אישום על גניבה מרמה זיוף והלבנת הון נגד אמיר ברמלי An indictment for theft fraud forgery and money laundering against Amir Bramli calcalist co il in Hebrew 26 June 2016 Retrieved 6 July 2017 Supermodel Bar Refaeli alleges identity theft Times of Israel 14 January 2016 Retrieved 6 July 2017 ברמלי תובע מיליון שקל מכתב כלכליסט פרסם ידיעות השזורות דברי השמצה Bramly sues NIS 1 million from Calcalist Published reports slanderous Walla 31 October 2016 Retrieved 6 July 2017 Amir Bramly opens another front News2 presented me as a crook TheMarker 14 March 2016 ברמלי מתכוון להגיש שורת תביעות לשון הרע נגד מכפישיו Bramly intends to file a series of libel claims against his detractors Globes 1 December 2015 Retrieved 6 July 2017 כתב כלכליסט משיב לברמלי תביעת השתקה כוחנית ובריונית Calcalist responds to Bramly Demand for aggressive and brutal silencing Walla 26 December 2016 Retrieved 6 July 2017 תביעתו של ברמלי ניסיון פסול להסיט את תשומת הלב מהחשדות נגדו וואלה ברנז ה Channel2 News Bramly s lawsuit is misguided attempt to divert attention from the suspicions against him Walla 26 May 2016 Retrieved 6 July 2017 a b c Prideaux Eric 8 February 2007 Oricon Sues Over Interviewee s Comment Libel suit attacks free speech defendant The Japan Times a b Abandonment of the Claim Against a Japanese Journalist Reporters Sans Frontieres RSF 6 August 2009 Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 2 November 2015 JNN Reportage Legal Intimidation Against Free Speech What is SLAPP Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Created by Hiroyuki Akiyama Copyright Tokyo Broadcasting System Television Inc Oslo District Court decision on 1 Juni 2018 in the matter TOBYF 2018 83936 Norwegian Court Orders Website Of Public Domain Court Decisions Shut Down With No Due Process Techdirt 18 June 2018 Supreme Court of Norway decision on 11 September 2019 in the matter HR 2019 1725 A 1 Accessed 21 October 2022 a b c N1 Serbian SLAP tuzbe protiv medija koji nisu po volji bilo nekad sad se ponavlja Europeanwesternbalkans Fall on media freedom list If it continues like this there will no longer be anything to measure a b c Tobitt Charlotte 24 January 2022 SLAPP down David Davis says Putin s People libel case cost ex FT journalist 1 5m Press Gazette Pegg Simon 4 March 2022 Move to add free speech protections to UK anti corruption bill The Guardian Turner Wallace 14 February 1982 NUCLEAR PROTEST LEADS TO LAWSUIT The New York Times Retrieved 18 November 2022 Abalone Alliance campaigns against Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plant California 1976 1984 Global Nonviolent Action Database Swarthmore College Retrieved 18 November 2022 County of San Luis Obispo v Abalone Alliance 1986 Justia 13 March 1986 Retrieved 18 November 2022 Morain Dan 29 March 1985 Court Upholds Client s Right to Sue Lawyer Los Angeles Times Retrieved 18 November 2022 Coltrain v Shewalter Appeal from the Superior Court of Riverside County No 278681 California Anti SLAPP Project 19 August 1998 Winner Karen 1996 Divorced from Justice The Abuse of Women and Children by Divorce Lawyers and Judges ReganBooks Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 06 039184 3 Ashley Guy The spark behind the court firestorm Marin Independent Journal Archived from the original on 22 October 2009 Barron James 13 March 1992 Divorce Lawyers Criticized By Consumer Affairs Chief The New York Times Retrieved 19 November 2022 Dao James 5 May 1993 DIVORCE LAWYERS ASSAILED IN STUDY BY ALBANY PANEL The New York Times Retrieved 19 November 2022 Winner Karen March 1992 Women in divorce lawyers ethics fees amp fairness a study New York NY City of New York Dept of Consumer Affairs Retrieved 19 November 2022 William J Cook Final Reply Brief of Appellant Respondent Ernie Weaver in the Charleston County case 2001 CP 10 2967 Final Reply Brief of Appellant Respondent Ernie Weaver in the Charleston County case 2001 CP 10 2967 Streisand Sues to Suppress Free Speech Protection and additional items California Coastline org Kenneth Adelman Streisand s Lawsuit to Silence Coastal Website Dismissed Mindfully org Kenneth Adelman Archived from the original on 21 December 2004 Global Telemedia International Inc v Doe 1 et al California Anti SLAPP Project 23 February 2001 a b Atlanta Humane Society v Mills Citizen Media Law Project Supreme Court of Georgia 27 September 2004 Atlanta Humane Society v Harkins Atlanta Humane Society et al v Harkins Atlanta Humane Society et al v Mills Nos S04G0613 S04G0684 S04G0685 Findlaw Kathi Mills Atlanta Humane Case Thrown Out Stop Pet Overpopulation Now Atlanta Georgia 21 November 2003 Archived from the original on 26 March 2012 Malone Dan 28 January 2004 Metropolis Suing to Silence Fort Worth Weekly Retrieved 16 January 2017 Egelko Bob 25 April 2009 What Do You Expect It s Talk Radio Court Says SFGate Hearst Communications Okamoto Sherri M 27 April 2009 Court Radio Talk Show Host s Statements Not Actionable Panel Concludes Reasonable Listeners Would Consider Comments Opinion Metropolitan News Enterprise United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit Anna J Brown District Judge Presiding 7 July 2008 Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon Gardner v Martino PDF uscourts gov Retrieved 30 June 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Beschizza Rob 23 February 2010 MagicJack Legal Documents BoingBoing Retrieved 30 June 2011 Dole Fruit Company Inc v Fredrik Gertten et al Superior Court of California County of Los Angeles PDF bananasthemovie com 17 November 2010 Wang Amy B 31 March 2011 Arizona appeals court tosses lawsuit filed against parents by school district The Arizona Republic Martin Susan Taylor 10 December 2010 Nationwide Title goes on attack against vocal critics Tampa Bay Times Archived from the original on 14 December 2010 Retrieved 11 December 2010 Newman Jared 12 April 2011 Sony George Hotz Settle PS3 Hacking Lawsuit PCWorld IDG Archived from the original on 6 May 2021 Retrieved 22 February 2019 a b Lee David 15 January 2016 1 3 Million in Anti SLAPP Sanctions Courthouse News Service Retrieved 9 October 2017 Lee David 29 February 2016 1 3 Million Anti SLAPP Award Rescinded Courthousenews com Retrieved 9 October 2017 Hanszen Laporte Wins 450 000 Against Plaintiffs Who Filed Baseless Defamation Suits PDF Hanszen LaPorte Archived from the original PDF on 6 December 2019 Retrieved 9 October 2017 Steubenville Ohio Gang Rape SLAPP Suit The Legal Satyricon 3 December 2012 Retrieved 21 March 2013 Law Mark 31 October 2012 Suit filed against site operator Herald Star Archived from the original on 4 May 2014 Retrieved 21 March 2013 Wilonsky Robert 14 August 2015 Judge sanctions State Fair of Texas after it sued lawyer who wants to see Big Tex s checkbook The Dallas Morning News Archived from the original on 7 September 2016 Retrieved 16 January 2017 Bradley Laura 2 August 2017 A C L U Defends John Oliver from Stupid Lawsuit in Hilarious Amicus Brief Vanity Fair Retrieved 7 September 2021 Luperon Alberto 1 August 2017 ACLU Files Snarkiest Legal Brief Ever Defending John Oliver Law and Crime Retrieved 7 September 2021 Oliver John 10 November 2019 SLAPP Suits Last Week Tonight with John Oliver Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2019 a b c Jouvenal Justin 22 December 2019 Devin Nunes Johnny Depp lawsuits seen as threats to free speech and press The Washington Post Retrieved 25 February 2020 Techdirt 6 December 2019 Devin Nunes Virginia SLAPP Suits Causing Virginia Legislators To Consider A New Anti SLAPP Law Above the Law Retrieved 25 February 2020 Vicky Ward and Katelyn Polantz 4 December 2019 Nunes disputes claim that he met with former Ukrainian prosecutor to get dirt on Bidens CNN Retrieved 6 December 2019 Irby Kate 1 October 2019 Another Devin Nunes lawsuit Congressman sues magazine over story about family s Iowa farm The Fresno Bee Retrieved 25 February 2020 Jouvenal Justin 11 February 2020 Va legislature passes bills aimed at lawsuits by Devin Nunes Johnny Depp The Washington Post Retrieved 25 February 2020 Further reading EditDelfino Michelangelo Day Mary E 2002 Be careful who you SLAPP MoBeta Pub ISBN 978 0 9725141 0 1 Nader Ralph Smith Wesley J 1998 No Contest Corporate Lawyers and the Perversion of Justice in America Random House ISBN 978 0 375 75258 2 External links EditThis section s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Anti SLAPP Advisory Panel Ontario Canada Office of the Attorney General Retrieved 29 June 2011 Survival Guide for SLAPP Victims California Anti SLAPP Project 22 December 2010 Activist SLAPPs Back in Countersuit against Sienna Developer Fort Bend Now 2006 Archived from the original on 11 July 2011 Bernstein Fred A 10 April 2005 Tenants Sound Off Landlord Files Suit The New York Times About the Massachusetts Anti SLAPP Law Commonwealth of Massachusetts Archived from the original on 24 September 2017 Retrieved 15 April 2015 PDF materials for California suits SLAPP Telstra 2007 Archived from the original on 5 February 2009 Varian v Delfino Archived from the original on 14 October 2005 Beder Sharon November 1995 SLAPPs Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation Coming to a Controversy Near You Current Affairs Bulletin 72 3 22 29 Archived from the original on 14 April 2009 Retrieved 2 January 2003 McLibel pair win legal aid case BBC News 15 February 2005 Weinstein Henry 16 August 2005 Law Firm Fined for Frivolous SLAPP Suit The Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 16 July 2012 Retrieved 22 August 2005 via Reclaim Democracy Gregerson Chris Photography Copyright Lawsuit 06 cv 01164 D Minn Mckay Rich 28 March 2007 Resident Suit filed to silence criticism Orlando Sentinel Archived from the original on 19 May 2008 Oklahoma SLAPP Suit Omega World Travel v MummaGraphics Inc SLAPPSUIT com April 2007 Archived from the original on 19 May 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Strategic lawsuit against public participation amp oldid 1131278228, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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