Friday, March 6, 2009

Eastern Shore Freedom Of Press Case Decided In Favor of Bloggers!

from baltimoresun.com

Maryland's Court of Appeals today issued a decision protecting the identity of three anonymous Internet posters and, for the first time, offering guidelines for state courts to follow in libel cases before unmasking online commenters.

The opinion and instructions stem from a defamation lawsuit filed by Eastern Shore developer Zebulon Brodie against three unknown Internet posters and Independent Newspapers Inc., which runs an online community forum.

The posters had written critical comments about the cleanliness of a Dunkin' Donuts that Brodie owns in Centreville.

The Appeals Court concluded that Brodie was not entitled to identifying information about the posters, even though they used the forum to criticize him and his business, because he misidentified which usernames made the offending statements.

The five-step process the court adopted for future cases was borrowed from a New Jersey court and outlined in today's 43-page majority opinion. It seeks to help trial courts "balance First Amendment rights with the right to seek protection for defamation" by suggesting they:

• Require that plaintiffs notify anonymous parties that their identities are sought.
• Give the posters time to reply with reasons why they should remain nameless.
• Require plaintiffs identify the defamatory statements and who made them.
• Determine whether the complaint has set forth a prima facie defamation, where the words are obviously libelous, or a per quod action, meaning it requires outside evidence.
• Weigh the poster's right to free speech against the strength of the case and the necessity of identity disclosure.

A five-page concurring opinion by three of the seven judges accepts steps one through three but asks for clarification on step four as to how prima facie nature should be shown and outright rejects step five as "unnecessary and needlessly complicated."

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

GOOD! I've been following this case. Too often developers or their government friends go after anyone who dares to critisize them. Citizens have so few ways to voice their opinions without the threat of lawsuits. Here on the Eastern Shore blogs like this one or the Salisbury News Blog or the Pokomoke Tattler are shining light on all kinds of problems that need to be fixed. The blogs and their commenters have already brought about all kinds of positive change here. Keep on blogging and commenting folks!

Anonymous said...

Hey, Toby, what ever happened about Joe's demand that you apologize? Hope you told him to pound sand.

Anonymous said...

Does that mean if he had not misidentified the usernames, they would have given him the right to know who the bloggers were?

Toby Gearhart said...

That is muddled language isn't it but the case wan't decided over a technicality. That was only another reason. The justices spent their time mostly on the the fundamental question. There are a number of cases nationwide where this and similar third party liability issues have been decided in favor of the blogs.