UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
TRITA PARSI and NATIONAL
IRANIAN AMERICAN COUNCIL,
Plaintiffs,
v. Civil Action No. 08-705 (JDB)
SEID HASSAN DAIOLESLAM,
Defendant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This is a defamation case filed by Trita Parsi and the National Iranian American Council
(collectively, "plaintiffs"). Plaintiffs allege that Seid Hassan Daioleslam ("defendant") published
numerous false and defamatory statements that characterize plaintiffs as agents of the Iranian
government. Now before the Court is [144] defendant's motion for summary judgment. For the
reasons discussed below, the motion will be granted.
BACKGROUND
As explained in this Court's prior opinions, Dr. Parsi is the president of the National
Iranian American Council ("NIAC"), a Washington, D.C.-based non-profit group that is
"dedicated to promoting Iranian American involvement in American civic life and relying on the
public for financial and human resource support." Compl. ¶¶ 9, 10. Defendant is an Arizona
resident who has published articles about Parsi and NIAC on various websites. Id. ¶¶ 5, 11.
Plaintiffs' complaint seeks damages and injunctive relief against defendant for common law
defamation and portrayal in a false light. Id. ¶ 11. The thrust of plaintiffs' complaint is that
1
defendant "has published false and defamatory statements indicating that [plaintiffs are]
member[s] of a subversive and illegal Iranian lobby colluding with the Islamic Republic of Iran
. . . ." Id. ¶ 13. Plaintiffs argue that these statements injured their reputations in the community,
thereby hampering NIAC's effectiveness as an advocacy group and damaging its ability to raise
funds. Id. ¶¶ 23, 42-43. Following contentious discovery, defendant filed [144] the instant
motion for summary judgment, arguing that there is no evidence that his statements were
published with actual malice.
LEGAL STANDARD
Under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment is appropriate
if the record evidence "shows that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the
movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). Material facts are
those that "might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law." Anderson v. Liberty
Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). "Summary procedures are of special importance in libel
suits brought with respect to reports on the activities of public figures and public officials. . . .
For the stake here, if harassment succeeds, is free debate." Secord v. Cockburn, 747 F. Supp.
779, 786 (D.D.C. 1990) (citations omitted).
This Court has previously held that NIAC and Parsi are limited public figures. See Parsi
v. Daioleslam, 595 F. Supp. 2d 99, 104-06 (D.D.C. 2009). As such, they must show by clear and
convincing evidence that defendant's statements were made with "actual malice" in order to
prevail on their claims. Id.; New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 280 (1964). "The
standard of actual malice is a daunting one." McFarlane v. Esquire Magazine, 74 F.3d 1296,
1308 (D.C. Cir. 1996). To establish actual malice, plaintiffs must show that defendant either
2
knew that the challenged publication was false, or that he "in fact entertained serious doubts as to
the truth of his publication." St. Amant v. Thompson, 390 U.S. 727, 731 (1968). Subjective ill-
will does not establish actual malice, nor does a malevolent motive for publication. Harte-Hanks
Commc'ns, Inc. v. Connaughton, 491 U.S. 657, 665 (1989). Even "highly unreasonable conduct
constituting an extreme departure from the standards of investigation and reporting ordinarily
adhered to by responsible publishers" does not establish actual malice. Id. at 666. But a plaintiff
can show actual malice if he can demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that defendant
was "subjectively aware that it was highly probable that the story was (1) fabricated; (2) so
inherently improbable that only a reckless person would have put it in circulation; or (3) based
wholly on an unverified anonymous telephone call or some other source that appellees had
obvious reasons to doubt." Lohrenz v. Donnelly, 350 F.3d 1272, 1283 (D.C. Cir. 2003)
(citations omitted).
In the summary judgment context, the movant bears the initial burden of demonstrating
the absence of a genuine issue of material fact. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322
(1986). The party opposing the motion for summary judgment, however, “may not rely merely
on allegations or denials in its own pleading; rather, its response must – by affidavits or as
otherwise provided in [Rule 56] – set out specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial.” Tate
v. Dist. of Colum., 627 F.3d 904, 908-09 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (citations omitted); Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(e). In the public figure defamation context, this means that the defendant's "burden in a
motion for summary judgment is simply showing – pointing out to this Court – that there is an
absence of evidence to support the element of actual malice in the plaintiff's [defamation] case."
Secord, 747 F. Supp. at 787. Hence, even though defendant has moved for summary judgment
3
here, the Court will focus on plaintiffs' evidence of actual malice.
ANALYSIS
One preliminary problem is that plaintiffs have failed to define the universe of allegedly
defamatory statements. Plaintiffs have attached several articles to their complaint and to other
pleadings, but they have for the most part failed to identify which statements they perceive as
defamatory and to put forth specific evidence of actual malice relating to those statements.
Moreover, plaintiffs implied at the motions hearing that the summary judgment record did not
contain all articles, videos, or other documents that might support their case. Tr. of Mot. Hrg.
(July 6, 2012) at 20-21 ("However, it bears noting that the defendant is moving for summary
judgment. We are not seeking summary judgment on this case. Therefore, we have not put
everything that we have gathered through discovery on the record as of yet. There are a ton of
other articles, YouTube [videos] . . . "). But defendant has filed a proper summary judgment
motion, so plaintiffs' choice to withhold articles or evidence of actual malice was made at their
own peril. Even a cursory review of defamation caselaw in the Supreme Court and this Circuit
shows that such cases are often resolved on a defendant's motion for summary judgment, and
that the resolution usually involves an extremely detailed analysis of specific defamatory
statements and the support for those statements. See, e.g., Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242, 245 (1986) (plaintiffs alleged that "some 28 statements and 2 illustrations in the 3
articles were false and derogatory"); Esquire Magazine, 74 F.3d at 1299 (focusing on support for
three paragraphs).
Only in one instance have plaintiffs offered the kind of granular analysis that is normally
necessary to prevail in this type of action. In a surreply in opposition to plaintiffs' motion for
4
summary judgment, plaintiffs argue that "a careful review of just one of defendant's publications
. . . provides clear indicia of his actual malice towards Plaintiffs, which is evident given the
number of misrepresentations, unsupported statements, and even falsifications the defendant
makes." Plaintiffs scrutinize a 2008 article entitled "Iran's 2003 Grand Bargain Offer: Secrets,
Lies, and Manipulation" to support their statement.1 Mot. for Leave to File Surreply to Def.'s
MSJ [ECF 164-1] ("Pls.' Surreply") at 3.2 The gist of the article is that the Iranian government,
through Trita Parsi, presented a top-secret offer to open negotiations to high-ranking U.S.
officials in 2003. According to the article, the Iranian government never actually intended to
conduct fruitful negotiations with the United States; in actuality, they only wanted to be able to
loudly criticize the United States for its anticipated refusal to agree to negotiate. The article is
several pages long and contains 25 endnotes.
Plaintiffs make several objections to the article that can be dismissed easily. First,
plaintiffs note that endnotes 13 and 16 (mistakenly referred to as 17) contain no link to the cited
source. Pls.' Surreply at 4-5. It appears, however, that endnotes 13 and 16 are not online
sources, so defendant could not be expected to provide a link to them. Second, plaintiffs point
out that endnotes 14, 15, 16, and 17 are in Farsi and no English translation is provided. Id. But
if the original source material is in Farsi and there is no English translation available, defendant
1
The article is available at
http://english.iranianlobby.com/page1.php?id=10&bakhsh=ARTICLES.
2
Although the Court initially denied leave to file a surreply, see 11/30/2011 Minute
Order, the Court concludes that the information contained in the proposed surreply is sufficiently
important that the Court must consider it in order to arrive at a fair decision. This conclusion,
however, is not meant to imply that plaintiffs had any justification for filing a surreply; they
could and should have included all of the information in the surreply in their original opposition
to defendant's summary judgment motion.
5
can hardly be faulted for citing the original sources. Indeed, he would be expected to do so.
Despite the fact that Parsi presumably speaks Farsi, plaintiffs have pointed to no substantive
problems with the underlying Farsi sources. Third, plaintiffs argue that defendant cites his own
articles as sources in endnotes 19 and 22. Id. at 5. But there is nothing untoward about this. In
both cases, defendant is simply summarizing a few facts from his earlier work and then referring
readers to that earlier work for more detailed analysis. Additionally, both of the underlying
articles are extensively cited. Fourth, plaintiffs state that endnote 23 “is simply an event
website.” Id. That is not true: endnote 23 cites both an event website and the text of the speech
given at the event, which is the source material for defendant’s article. Finally, plaintiffs point
out that “the source that supports endnote 20 is missing.” Id. The URL given in the endnote
does now redirect to an unrelated website, but a search of the Internet Archive shows that the
cited website did exist at the time defendant originally published his article and did support his
statement.3 See http://web.archive.org/web/20080511180832/http://www.downsizedc.org/blog/
2007/mar/08/no_war_with_iran_coalition.
Plaintiffs also point to several issues with endnotes that can be dismissed as simple
errors. Plaintiffs write that "the block quote relating to endnote 5" consists of several sentences
that are strung together from different portions of the underlying source in an allegedly
misleading way. Pls.' Surreply at 4. The three paragraphs in the block quotation do indeed come
from different portions of the underlying source. This is indicated with an ellipses between the
3
Defendant did misquote the underlying source. The original letter, signed by Parsi and
others, has a paragraph that begins “Given 26 years of US refusal to start a dialogue with Iran [a
different diplomatic strategy is needed]." Defendant's article says that “After denouncing US
policy toward Iran, [Parsi and his friends] declared: ‘The US has refused to start a dialogue with
Iran for the past 26 years.’” As discussed below, this mistake is careless but does not show actual
malice.
6
first and second paragraphs, but there is no ellipses between the second and third paragraphs.
Nonetheless, having carefully reviewed the underlying article, the Court is confident that the
pieced-together block quote does not in any way misconstrue or misrepresent the underlying
source. Excerpting from a source can be a way to mislead the reader, but it can also simply be a
way to condense relevant information, and there is no problem with doing the latter. See Esquire
Magazine, 74 F.3d at 1306 ("Nonetheless, we think the explanation by Esquire – that they
deleted the clause because of space considerations and because of its ambiguity – altogether
plausible."). And while there should be an ellipses between the second and third paragraphs of
the block quote, the lack of one hardly indicates that defendant "in fact entertained serious
doubts as to the truth of his publication." St. Amant v. Thompson, 390 U.S. 727, 731 (1968).
As will become clear in the discussion below, defendant was often sloppy in his
reporting, either omitting ellipses, slightly misquoting the underlying source, or failing to put a
citation in the appropriate place. But none of the errors misrepresent the substance of the source
material or mislead the reader. As many courts considering public figure defamation cases have
concluded, sloppiness is not evidence of actual malice. Esquire Magazine, 74 F.3d at 1306 ("this
. . . seems as consistent with linguistic muddle as with reckless disregard, and in context not
enough, even in conjunction with other evidence, to show actual malice by Esquire editors");
McFarlane v. Sheridan Square Press, 91 F.3d 1501, 1515 (D.C. Cir. 1996) ("the conflict is so
narrow that it appears to reflect only sloppiness and a slight over-generalization, not deceit, on
the part of Schaap"); Lohrenz v. Donnelly, 223 F. Supp. 2d 25, 55 (D.D.C. 2002), aff’d 350 F.3d
1272 (D.C. Cir. 2003) ("The Court will not impose liability for mere factual error – an everyday
occurrence in journalism – unless those errors rise to the level of circumstantial evidence of
7
'actual malice.'"). Here, for the reasons explained below, none of defendant's errors "rise to the
level of circumstantial evidence of 'actual malice.'"
Plaintiffs also contend that the block quote that begins "Kharazi told me . . . " is
unsupported by any citation. Pls.' Surreply at 4. The preceding paragraph, however, also
contains a block quote and a citation to a document published in the Washington Post. The
"Kharazi told me . . . " block quote comes from that same document.4 Hence, defendant merely
failed to insert an "Id." citation after the second block quote. But he did not invent the quotation
out of thin air, rely on an unverifiable anonymous source, or misleadingly doctor an underlying
source. Hence, the lack of an "id." does not indicate actual malice. Similarly, plaintiffs argue
that the sentence "Then, [in 2006], the Iranian regime gave a fresh copy of the offer to Trita
Parsi" is not cited. Pls.' Surreply at 5. But that statement merely repeats an earlier sentence in
the article, and the earlier sentence is properly cited. Indeed, defendant actually quotes the
source article in support of the earlier sentence. Not repeating the citation a second time may be
careless, but it is not evidence of actual malice.
Plaintiffs' remaining issues are more substantive, but no more persuasive. Their first
substantive objection runs as follows:
[T]he defendant states that in a 1999 joint paper, Dr. Parsi and Siamak Namazi set
4
Defendant does misquote and leave out portions of the underlying the document, but
not in a way that alters the meaning. The original document said: "On May 2, I met with
[Kharazi] again for three hours. He told me that he had two long discussions with the Leader on
the roadmap. In these meetings, which both lasted almost two hours, only President Khatami
and FM Kharrazi [sic] were present; 'we both went through every word of the this [sic] paper'.
(He additionally had a series of separat [sic] meetings with both). -- The question is dealt with in
high secrecy, therefore no one else has been informed." Defendant's article says: "Kharazi told
me that he had two long discussions with the leader on the roadmap. In those meetings which
both lasted two hours, only president Khatami and foreign minister Kamal Kharazi were present.
The question is dealt with in high secrecy. Therefore no one else has been informed."
8
forth their strategy to “beat up” the U.S. administration as a way to prevent harsh
policy toward the Iranian regime. The defendant is saying that NIAC was created
to bash U.S. policy, while the quote that immediately follows, which begins ‘An
Iranian-American lobby is indeed,’ is saying a very different thing – that an
Iranian-American lobby is needed to prevent bashing of Iran.
Pls.' Surreply at 5. Plaintiffs appear to miss the point of this passage from defendant's article (in
addition to slightly mischaracterizing it). Defendant is arguing that Parsi is among those who
believe that pressuring the United States on foreign policy issues is a way to ensure better
treatment of Iran. In other words, to use plaintiffs’ phrasing, defendant's article argues that
"NIAC was created to bash U.S. policy" as a means of "prevent[ing] bashing of Iran." Plaintiffs
draw a false distinction between (1) "bash[ing] U.S. policy" and (2) "prevent[ing] bashing of
Iran," but defendant contends that these two concepts are, in fact, directly related. This is a
reasonable reading of the underlying source document, not a willful effort to distort Parsi's
words.
Plaintiffs next take issue with this sentence: "Why did Iran decide to ask Bob Ney and
Trita Parsi to 'manage this issue' (as Parsi stated) and send the proposal to the White House?"
Pls.' Surreply at 4. Plaintiffs argue that the thrust of this statement – that the Iranian regime
directly put Ney and Parsi in charge of conveying the proposal to the appropriate U.S. officials –
is unsupported by defendant's own source, which says that the Swiss ambassador to Iran, not
"Iran," asked Ney and Parsi to send the proposal to the White House. Id. Plaintiffs also point
out that defendant's source says that Parsi stated that he was "managing the issue" for Ney, but
not that the Iranian government asked him to do so. Id.
While this discrepancy is troubling at first glance, it is much less so in context.
Defendant’s article first explains that Foreign Minister Kharazi gave a copy of the "Grand
9
Bargain" proposal to the Swiss ambassador to Iran and asked him to "present the enclosed
roadmap very confidentially to someone high in the DoS in order to know the US reaction to it."
This sentence is appropriately cited. The Swiss ambassador gave the proposal to then-
Representative Ney and Parsi, then his staffer. These facts are also cited. The article then says:
Obviously, the Swiss ambassador did not intend to put at risk such a
historical event by turning to Bob Ney's group. He was surely instructed by his
Iranian contacts to do so. . . .
It is hard to explain why Iran did not use its usual channel of diplomacy,
which was leading the negotiation with the US to send the grand bargain offer. . .
. Why did Iran decide to ask Bob Ney and Trita Parsi to “manage this issue” (as
Parsi stated) and send the proposal to the White House? What could this team
achieve that the Iranian Foreign minister and other diplomats were unable to do?
Put simply, couldn't the Swiss ambassador deliver the message directly to the
White House without asking for Ney and Parsi’s help?
There are no citations in this paragraph. As the Court reads the article, however,
defendant is simply drawing an inference, based on his own long experience with Iranian and
American politics, that the Swiss ambassador must have received instructions from Iran to
present the proposal to Parsi. In other words, defendant is making a logical argument – namely,
that it would have made no sense for the Swiss ambassador to make an independent decision to
introduce Ney and Parsi as intermediaries – not a strict factual assertion. Given both the
phrasing of the paragraph that begins "Obviously . . . " and the fact that it is not cited (in a
heavily cited article), it would be clear to any reasonable reader that the first paragraph, from
which the next paragraph flows, offers the author's conclusion rather than a fact that has been
established independently.
If defendant had simply written that "the Swiss ambassador was instructed to give the
proposal to Bob Ney and Trita Parsi and did so," plaintiffs would have an argument that he
willfully misrepresented the facts. But as it stands, the "Obviously . . . " paragraph is effectively
10
a statement of opinion, and there is no reason to suspect that defendant did not sincerely believe
it. Defamation law cannot be used to prevent an author from drawing any inferences or making
any arguments, especially when the author makes clear to the reader that he is doing so.
Plaintiffs’ final argument is that the last sentence in the article is unsubstantiated. Pls.'
Surreply at 5. But that sentence merely sums up the rest of the article, and the Court has found
no serious problems in the underlying factual support for the rest of the article. In the end, then,
plaintiffs' close examination of one article – presumably the one that they felt best supported
their case – indicates no problems that would allow a jury to find actual malice by clear and
convincing evidence.
Setting aside the dissection of this article, plaintiffs advance several more general
arguments on actual malice. First, they argue that defendant made various statements implying
that plaintiffs were agents for the Iranian regime – calling Parsi and NIAC "the Mullahs' lobby,"
"the Ayatollahs' Lobby," "key players in the lobby enterprise of Tehran's ayatollahs in the United
States," and "an active and disguised Washington-based lobbying enterprise for the Iranian
theocratic regime" – but ignored Parsi's many statements that criticized the regime. Pls.' Opp. to
Def.'s Mot. for Summ. J. [ECF 153] ("Pls.' Opp.") at 43. Examples of such statements are listed
in an affidavit filed by Parsi. Id., Ex. N ("Parsi Aff.") ¶ 15. There are several problems with this
argument. Most importantly, with one exception, there is no evidence that defendant was aware
of any of the statements cited in Parsi's affidavit. Although defendant is obviously familiar with
much of Parsi's work, there is no requirement that he track down every interview given, op-ed
written, or conference attended before writing about Parsi. Hence, the existence of these
scattered statements cannot prove actual malice.
11
Moreover, many of the statements listed in Parsi's affidavit are not strongly anti-regime.
The one statement plaintiffs do allege that defendant was aware of, for instance, reads:
"Diplomacy is falling victim to an endless cycle of provocations right now and those
provocations obviously come from both sides. I think from the Iranian side it's been extremely
provocative to [hold] this conference regarding the Holocaust in Tehran." Parsi Aff. ¶ 15(a)
(alteration in original). That Parsi occasionally made statements reflecting a balanced, shared-
blame approach is not inconsistent with the idea that he was first and foremost an advocate for
the regime. Given the other evidence defendant amassed to support his views, the Court sees no
"actual malice" in defendant's decision to disregard occasional contrary statements and assume
that they were made largely to burnish Parsi and NIAC's image in the United States. After all,
any moderately intelligent agent for the Iranian regime would not want to be seen as
unremittingly pro-regime, given the regime’s reputation in the United States.
Similarly, plaintiffs protest that defendant accused NIAC and Parsi of refusing to speak
up on human rights abuses in Iran despite evidence that plaintiffs had in fact done so. Pls.' Opp.
at 45. For the most part, again, plaintiffs have put forth no evidence that defendant ever saw the
statements related to human rights that are cited in Parsi's affidavit. Plaintiffs' best argument
relies on defendant's article "Ayatollahs' Lobby in Iran Offering Human Rights as a Negotiating
Item."5 There, defendant severely criticized one of Parsi's publications for "paint[ing] a rosy
picture of the human rights situation in Iran" and for condemning UCLA students who had
protested Foreign Minister Kharazi's talk at UCLA. Id. ("For Mr. Parsi, 'noisy opposition' at the
speech of the envoy of an oppressive regime is a 'quite disturbing' violation of 'fundamental
5
The article is available at
http://english.iranianlobby.com/page1.php?id=2&bakhsh=ARTICLES.
12
human rights' which 'undermines the very idea' of human rights. He refrains from offering
similar condemnation of the torture, mass executions, rapes of women in prison, and stoning that
is consistently carried out by Tehran’s mullahs.") Plaintiffs argue that Parsi condemns Iran's
human rights violations in the very article on which defendant relies, and that defendant's refusal
to acknowledge this suggests willful blindness. Pls.' Opp. at 45.
The Court disagrees. While Parsi does criticize Iran's human rights record in the
underlying article, his criticisms are tepid. A representative example is the following statement:
"Even in long isolated Iran, a country known for its less than flattering Human Rights record,
there is a trend toward the improvement of the human rights situation, although it remains far
from being satisfactory."6 In this article Parsi does not come close to specifically condemning –
or even mentioning – the "torture, mass executions, rapes of women in prison, and stoning" that
defendant accuses him of ignoring. Moreover, the vast majority of the article is devoted to Parsi
expressing his disappointment with the UCLA students who protested Kharazi's speech, not to
discussing the regime's abuses. Hence, while defendant's article is certainly a strongly-worded
and one-sided take on Parsi's underlying publication, it is not a distortion of the underlying
publication that amounts to willful blindness or actual malice.
Plaintiffs’ next argument is that defendant ignored several editors and others who
questioned the factual bases for his articles. Pls.' Opp. at 40-42. Here again, the Court is
required to examine the record closely to determine whether plaintiffs' allegation is supported.
This effort is hampered by the fact that the parties have provided only incomplete excerpts of
defendant’s deposition. See Pls.' Opp. Exs. E, J; Def's. Reply in Supp. of Mot. for Summ. J.
6
Parsi’s article is available at
http://www.iranian.com/News/2000/September/rights.html.
13
[ECF 158] ("Def.'s Reply") Exs. A, L, M. It is often difficult to tell which article is being
discussed, and the Court rarely has access to defendant's complete testimony about any given
article. Nonetheless, virtually nothing in the truncated record relied on by the parties supports
the proposition that defendant avoided his editors' questions and willfully avoided learning the
truth. To the contrary, the record suggests that defendant and his editors were careful to
substantiate his articles and that defendant engaged with those who questioned him.
Plaintiffs' first charge is that defendant published an article claiming that Bob Ney, Roy
Coffee, and David DiStefano were the founders of NIAC even though defendant "wasn't sure at
the time" whether this was true. Pls.' Opp. at 41. Plaintiffs point to an email by Ken
Timmerman (whom plaintiffs mistakenly refer to as Tim Timmerman), who eventually published
defendant's article, asking for proof of defendant's allegations against Ney, Coffee, and
DiStefano. Id. While the Court does not have the complete correspondence between
Timmerman and defendant, the available excerpts refute any notion that Timmerman disbelieved
defendant's argument or that defendant willfully ignored Timmerman's questions. Timmerman
asked a number of probing questions to ensure that there was sufficient factual support for
specific assertions in the article, but he also noted that the article was a "[t]errific, terrific piece
of work." Def.'s Reply, Ex. S-1. When defendant indicated that he could simply take out
allegations against Bob Ney to make the article immediately publishable, Timmerman pushed
him to instead muster more factual support for his allegations and suggested several avenues of
research that might turn up such factual support. Id. The Court does not have either defendant's
final emails to Timmerman about the article or a copy of the final article, but the natural
conclusion from the earlier correspondence is that defendant was able to come up with sufficient
14
factual support to convince both himself and Timmerman the article should be published. In
other words, Timmerman asked precisely the sorts of questions that an editor should, and
defendant apparently responded to them appropriately.
Moreover, contrary to plaintiffs' suggestion, defendant unequivocally rejected the idea
that he had any subjective doubt about his story at the time he published it. During his
deposition, defendant explained that he received and reviewed some of the discovery documents
in this case after the article was published, and those documents caused him to question the
article's conclusions. Def.'s Reply, Ex. L at 69-71, 185. But defendant reaffirmed several times
that he would have stood by his 2007 conclusions based on the material available to him in 2007.
Id. at 186 ("Oh I can tell you that having in my possession what I had in 2006 and 7 I would
have – I will write it again in the same manner[.]"); id. at 70 (same). See Bose Corp. v.
Consumers Union of U.S., Inc., 466 U.S. 485, 512 (1984) (a plaintiff must show defendant
"realized the inaccuracy at the time of publication") (emphasis added). Moreover, after
receiving the discovery documents, defendant posted NIAC's response to his original article on
his website and "shared his doubts" about his original conclusions with his readers. Def.'s
Reply, Ex. L at 185-86. This openness is inconsistent with actual malice. See Esquire
Magazine, 74 F.3d at 1304 ("[F]ull (or pretty full) publication of the grounds for doubting a
source tends to rebut a claim of malice, not to establish one.").
Plaintiffs' next argument is similar. They point to an email from Timmerman to
defendant suggesting that "one thing I'd tone down in the article below . . . is the anti-Semitism
label. [The subject] could actually sue you on that and you don't establish anti-Semitism in that
section. You establish a pattern of anti-Israel acts[.]" Pls.' Opp, Ex. J at 126-27. The problem is
15
that plaintiffs offer no evidence about whether defendant heeded Timmerman's warning or
ignored it. This is a relatively easy matter to establish; it requires only comparing the article
draft to the article ultimately published, but plaintiffs never do so. Defendant was not certain at
his deposition whether he had made any edits in response to Timmerman's suggestion, but
thought that he might have done so as part of larger edits to the article. Id. at 127. That an editor
made a suggestion to defendant, without any proof of what the response to that suggestion was,
certainly cannot establish actual malice.
The next issue plaintiffs raise concerns the reaction of another editor, Jed Babbin, to
defendant's article. This is a somewhat closer case than the Timmerman edits. Defendant
submitted an article to Babbin and received a reply noting that it was far too long for Babbin's
magazine and that the allegations needed to be "supported by credible references." Babbin
added that he would "be glad to take another look at if you can cut and bolster." Pls.' Opp., Ex. J
at 102. Because the article was "urgent" and defendant "did not want to go through the whole
discussion about a broad and vast subject of the Iranian regime's lobby in the U.S.," he submitted
the article to another publication that accepted it. Id. at 103. Defendant could not remember
whether he had made any specific changes to the article in response to Babbin's concerns, but he
did testify that he always took steps to ensure that his publications were supported and not
libelous. Id. at 105.
Later in the deposition, defendant testified further about Babbin's critiques of his work.
Id. at 130-32. Although it is a little difficult to tell whether the later testimony relates to the
same article as the earlier testimony, it appears that it does.7 Specifically, the defendant testified
7
In the earlier discussion, defendant testified that he believed the article he sent to
Babbin was "about the Congressman Kucinich relationship with NIAC and Mr. Trita Parsi."
16
that he sent Babbin a copy of Ney's plea deal as support for some of his allegations. Babin
rejected defendant's understanding of the plea deal, writing that: "You say he was convicted of
conspiracy related to the sales of commercial aircraft parts in Iran. That's not what the charges
were. I am a lawyer and I can read what it says. Ney's convictions had to do with Abramoff, not
with the Iran matter." Id. at 131. But in a part of the deposition that is unfortunately cut off,
defendant appears to point out that the plea deal, in fact, also contains a paragraph stating that
Ney "took thousands of dollars in free gambling chips from a foreign businessman [who] was
seeking an exemption to the U.S. export laws prohibiting the sale of his goods to a foreign
country, and a visa to the United States."8 Other publications have identified the foreign
businessman as one who was seeking to "sell U.S.-made airliners parts to the Iranian
government."9 In other words, assuming the same article is under discussion, defendant did in
fact have support for allegations that Babbin thought were unsubstantiated. Even if the second
discussion relates to a different article, the mere fact that Babbin and defendant disagreed to
some extent about the factual support for the article does not indicate actual malice.
Pls.' Opp., Ex. J at 102. The only article that fits this description is "Congressman Kucinich
Must Find a Better Role Model than Bob Ney," which is available at
http://english.iranianlobby.com/page1.php?id=5& bakhsh=ARTICLES. The later discussion
focuses on Ney's plea agreement, which is the subject of the first paragraph of the article about
Congressman Kucinich. Hence, it appears that although defendant ultimately did not publish the
article with Jed Babbin, he did send Babbin some factual information to show that the article was
not unsubstantiated.
8
See Statement of Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division
Regarding Congressman Robert W. Ney, Sept. 15, 2006, available at
http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2006/September/06_crm_626.html.
9
See Mark Hosenball, Holly Bailey, & Michael Isikoff, Ney's Gambles, NEWSWEEK,
Sept. 20, 2006, available at http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2006/09/20/
ney-s-gambles.html
17
Plaintiffs' next two critiques can be lumped together. First, they write that "Vahin
Alaghband told the defendant that his writing should be based on facts not conjecture." Pls.'
Opp. at 42. Alaghband was the subject of the article he criticized. See Pls.' Opp., Ex. J at 169-
70. That Alaghband would criticize an article criticizing him is hardly surprising, and does not
prove actual malice. See Lohrenz, 350 F.3d at 1285 ("[P]ublishers need not accept 'denials,
however vehement; such denials are so commonplace in the world of polemical charge and
countercharge that, in themselves, they hardly alert the conscientious reporter to the likelihood of
error.'") (quoting Harte-Hanks Commn'cs, Inc. v. Connaughton, 491 U.S. 657, 691 n.37 (1989)).
Defendant testified at his deposition about the factual basis for that article, which plaintiffs do
not question here. Pls.' Opp., Ex. J at 169-70, 173. Plaintiffs also write that "Jamie Glazor
raised a concern about the defendant's journalistic integrity since he was writing negative things
about a Mr. Namazi without contacting him or anyone in his family for comment." Pls.' Opp. at
42. First, failure to contact one of the subjects of an article does not establish actual malice.
Secord, 747 F. Supp. at 788. More importantly, Glazor, the editor of Front Page magazine, see
Pls.' Opp., Ex. J at 193, did not remotely question defendant's "journalistic integrity." Rather,
Glazor merely forwarded two emails from Ali Mostashari – the subject of one of defendant’s
articles – and wrote "Ok Hassan, this time I am not touching or taking down or removing
anything until I hear from you :-)." Def.'s Reply, Ex. N-2. Mostashari did vigorously question
defendant's journalistic integrity, id., but again, protests from the subject of an article do not
prove actual malice. Moreover, defendant actually sent Mostashari a lengthy, point-by-point
response to one of his emails, and he published both Mostashari's email and his own response on
his website. Def.'s Reply, Exs. O, P. This is the opposite of evidence of actual malice. See
18
Esquire Magazine, 74 F.3d at 1304.
Plaintiffs' weakest complaint is that defendant criticized another journalist, Sohrab
Sobhani, for claiming that defendant was a member of MEK/MKO (a militant organization)
without contacting him for comment. Pls.' Opp. at 42. Plaintiffs infer that defendant knows that
it is imperative to contact the subject of the story, and that his failure to contact NIAC and Parsi
for comment on every story concerning them indicates actual malice. But the deposition
excerpts plaintiffs provide contain no support for the proposition that defendant believes it is
customary or required to contact subjects of stories. Pls.' Opp., Ex. E at 31. ("Q: Do you think it
was wrong for [Sobhani] not to contact you before publishing that information? A. I didn't
expect him – I don't know if it's wrong or right. I didn't expect him to contact me[.]") Moreover,
whatever defendant believed about the appropriateness of contacting the subject of a story for
comment, "if caselaw is clear on any point it is that an author is under no duty to . . . provide the
subject an opportunity to reply." Secord, 747 F. Supp. at 788.
In sum, none of the communications from editors or other journalists provide any
evidence that defendant had subjective doubts about his articles or willfully avoided the truth.
Defendant’s next argument is that actual malice exists because defendant is biased against Parsi
due to his own ideological sympathies. Plaintiffs contend that defendant is a member of the
MEK/MKO, “a militant organization that advocates the overthrow of the Islamic Republic of
Iran through violence,” Pls.' Opp. at 39. Hence, plaintiffs argue, defendant’s anti-regime views
motivate him to falsely attack Parsi. Id. Defendant vigorously denies that he is a member of
MEK/MKO. See Def.'s Reply at 7-8. But even if he were, caselaw resoundingly rejects the
proposition that a motive to disparage someone is evidence of actual malice. Harte-Hanks, 491
19
U.S. at 665 ("Petitioner is plainly correct in recognizing that . . . a newspaper's motive in
publishing a story – whether to promote an opponent's candidacy or to increase its circulation –
canot provide a sufficient basis for finding actual malice"); Lohrenz, 350 F.3d at 1284
("Evidence that the publishers of the allegedly defamatory statements were on a mission to
reinstate the ban against women being assigned to combat positions in the military does not
suffice to show actual malice" in their publication of articles claiming that a female pilot was
unqualified). This rule makes sense: authors will often want to write about those who they
strongly ideologically oppose, but such ideological opposition does not ipso facto make their
writings untrustworthy. If ideological opposition alone showed actual malice, valuable
investigative journalism would be threatened by defamation laws, a result completely contrary to
New York Times and its progeny.
Plaintiffs bolster their motive argument by pointing to one of defendant's emails, which
reads: "I strongly believe that Trita Parsi is the weakest part of the Iranian web because he is
related to Siamak Namazi and Bob Ney. I believe that destroying him will be the start of
attacking the whole web." Pls.' Opp., Ex. K. Plaintiffs argue that this email shows that
defendant just wants to "destroy[]" Parsi, regardless of whether he really is advocating for or on
behalf of the Iranian regime. Pls.' Opp. at 40. What plaintiffs have overlooked is the possibility
that defendant wants to discredit Parsi and "attack[] the whole web" because he genuinely
believes that Parsi and his associates are advocating for or on behalf of a regime that he strongly
opposes. That possibility is, in the Court's view, much more plausible than the idea that
defendant's personal dislike of Parsi has motivated him to concoct dozens of elaborate articles
discussing Parsi and the Iranian regime. This email, then, is not enough to bring the case before
20
a jury that must find actual malice by clear and convincing evidence.
Plaintiffs' next argument is that defendant conceded in his deposition that he did not
subjectively believe that Parsi was an agent for the Iranian regime. See, e.g., Pls.' Opp. at 10.
The deposition testimony on which plaintiffs focus is the italicized part of the following
exchange:
Q: Do you consider Dr. Parsi to be a political activist?
A. I think so.
Q: Do you consider him to be part of the Iranian regime?
A: I believe that he has worked, he has lobbied in favor of the Iranian regime.
Q: So based upon your prior testimony it would be fair to say that you believe
because he is a part of the Iranian regime that you have no obligation to verify the
truth of the statement that you make about him?
A: My belief is that of course I would prefer to go to Mr. Parsi and NIAC and ask
for help and clarification about what I thought in 2006 when I was working to
investigate about them for many questions I had. The thing is that honestly I did
not expect the truth from them. Mostly because I thought the first aspect of their
work was deception and lie. . . . I mean that mistrust was so that I believed and I
still believe for the relation and trust that existed between Mr. Parsi and the inner
circle of the Iranian regime.
Pls.' Opp., Ex. E at 35-36.
Plaintiffs conclude that by testifying that he believed that Parsi "had lobbied in favor of
the Iranian regime," defendant was conceding that he did not believe Parsi was actually an agent
of the regime. That is a serious overreading of a cautious answer at a deposition. Indeed, Parsi’s
attorney’s next question assumes that defendant believed Parsi was "a part of the Iranian
regime," and defendant's answer fully supports that assumption. Plaintiffs cannot hang their case
on one sentence that is, at best, ambiguous.
Plaintiffs' final argument is that defendant ignored a cease and desist letter that put him
on notice his stories were false. Again, an author's knowledge of "denials, however vehement"
does not show actual malice. Harte-Hanks, 491 U.S. at 691 n.37. Moreover, the letter in
21
question is not one that could prove actual malice. See Pls.' Opp., Ex. D. This letter is addressed
to employees of the Voice of America radio program and concerns a broadcast on which
defendant and several others were guests. Id. Defendant, along with others, is listed in the "cc"
field. Id. The letter focuses on Voice of America's alleged violations of its own Journalistic
Code, but it offers virtually no facts that would suggest anything said during the program was
inaccurate. Id. In other words, it is a textbook substance-free vehement denial. Assuming
defendant actually received a copy of the letter, nothing in it could have alerted him to any
factual inaccuracies in his writings about NIAC and Parsi.
Because plaintiffs have mustered no evidence that defendant actually harbored any
doubts about the correctness of his writings, or willfully blinded himself to the truth, their
defamation claim must fail. Their false light claim must also fail. "[A] plaintiff may not avoid
the strictures of the burdens of proof associated with defamation by resorting to a claim of false
light invasion." Moldea v. New York Times Co., 22 F.3d 310, 319 (D.C. Cir. 1994). A false
light claim involving a public figure, like a defamation claim, requires proof of actual malice.
See Time, Inc. v. Hill, 385 U.S. 374, 387-88 (1967); Lohrenz, 223 F. Supp. 2d at 40.10 Hence,
plaintiffs' failure to prove actual malice disposes of all counts in their complaint.11
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, defendant's motion for summary judgment will be granted, and
10
In the District of Columbia, "whether the defendant is properly characterized as a
member of the media" is irrelevant to the analysis. Ayala v. Washington, 679 A.2d 1057, 1063
n.2 (D.C. 1996)
11
Nothing in this opinion should be construed as a finding that defendant’s articles were
true. Defendant did not move for summary judgment on that ground, and it has not been
addressed here.
22
all counts of plaintiffs' complaint will be dismissed. Given this disposition of the case, several
other pending motions will be denied as moot. A separate order accompanies this opinion.
/s/ John D. Bates
JOHN D. BATES
United States District Judge
Dated: September 13, 2012
23