In this case, arising out of an alleged false newspaper defamation of a private individual who was arrested but not formally charged for rape, it is necessary to determine the applicability of Michigan’s statutory "public and official proceedings” statute, MCL 600.2911(3); MSA 27A.2911(3), and the viability of its common-law qualified public-interest privilege. Because this case was decided on the basis of summary judgment, only these privilege questions are before us.
I. INTRODUCTION
The facts in this case are undisputed. On December 21, 1979, the Emmett Township police arrested the plaintiff, David J. Rouch, in connection with the rape of a woman in Bedford Township. At the time of the rape, the victim had been babysitting Mr. Rouch’s step-children at his ex-wife’s home. A standard incident report prepared by the Bedford Township Police Department indicated the name of the complaining party and victim, that Mr. Rouch was a suspect, that the "charge” was "esc in the 1st degree,” that the injury involved “penis/ vaginal penitration [sic],” and that a "knife with approx. 6 inch blade” was used as a weapon. Although he was arrested, plaintiff in fact was never formally charged with the crime, and ultimately, someone else was. The Calhoun County Prosecutor’s Office had apparently refused to issue a warrant after plaintiff’s arrest.
On December 22, 1979, the defendant newspaper published the following article:
Police arrest suspect in baby-sitter assault.
A 43-year-old man has been arrested and charged with the sexual assault of a 17-year-old-women [sic] who was baby-sitting with his children *161at his ex-wife’s house on North Finlay Avenue in Bedford Township.
The suspect has been identified by Bedford Township police as David J. Rouch of 631 Golden Ave. He is free on a $10,000 personal recognizance interim bond pending his arraignment in District 10 Court next week. Rouch is charged with first-degree criminal sexual conduct.
Police said Rouch allegedly entered the house about 4 a.m. Friday and attacked the young woman. He is said to have used a knife to cut the victim’s clothes off, police said.
The victim later called a relative, who took her to Community Hospital and then called police. The suspect was identified by his children, according to police.
Rouch was arrested at his home by Emmett Township police, who were informed where he lived by Bedford Township investigators.
The charge against Rouch was authorized Friday by the Calhoun County Prosecutor’s Office.
The defendant’s reporter had received the information contained in the article from the Bedford Township Police Department.
The reporter’s affidavit indicated that he customarily telephoned the police department in the morning to receive information about newsworthy police activities during the preceding twenty-four hours. He indicated that, on the occasion in question, he had spoken with one or two officers and that he was informed of the details that were contained in the article. The reporter also said that he spoke with the Emmett Township police who confirmed that the arrest had been made. A year later, plaintiff commenced this action for libel.
The plaintiff’s complaint alleged that the article was false and defamatory. In its motion for summary judgment, defendant argued that the article *162was entitled to a qualified privilege under Michigan law, and that, in the absence of proof of malice, it could not be the basis of an action for libel. The trial court agreed. On June 14, 1982, Calhoun Circuit Judge Stanley Everett granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment of no cause of action. The order indicated that unless the plaintiff, within thirty days, established a genuine issue of material fact on the question of malice on the part of the defendant, the order would stand.
The trial court relied on Schultz v Newsweek, Inc, 668 F2d 911 (CA 6, 1982), a federal case interpreting Michigan law, as support for its finding of a qualified privilege. The court indicated that the privilege covers "matters of general public interest” and that the "reporting of arrests on criminal proceedings involving charges is a matter of general public interest.”
The Court of Appeals reversed. Rouch v Enquirer & News of Battle Creek, 137 Mich App 39; 357 NW2d 794 (1984). Approaching the issue of privilege first from a constitutional perspective, the Court outlined the history of United States Supreme Court cases on the subject and concluded that
there is no federal constitutional privilege to report on matters of public interest. [Rouch, supra, p 46.]
The Court observed that the majority of states that have ruled on the issue have adopted a negligence standard for determining whether a defendant is liable to a private-figure plaintiff for a defamatory falsehood. See id., p 46, n 6.
Regarding the statutory qualified privilege contained in MCL 600.2911(3); MSA 27A.2911(3), the *163Court held that because no warrant was issued in this case, there were no "official proceedings” and the statute was inapplicable. Referring to the general privilege to report judicial proceedings, the Court found that that privilege is limited to the fact of the arrest only, and not the "particular details of the alleged crime.” Id., p 48 (citing 3 Restatement Torts, 2d, § 611, comment h).
Finally, the Court considered the application of a common-law privilege to report matters in the public interest. It assumed the existence of such a privilege in Michigan, but found that the details contained in the instant article did not fall within the privilege. The Court reasoned,
[T]here is an important distinction between matters which truly promote the public interest and matters which are merely interesting to the public. [Id., p 51 (citing 3 Restatement Torts, 2d, § 598, comment b).]
The Court of Appeals concluded,
[I]n Michigan, where, as here, the media defendants’ publication is not wrapped in a qualified privilege, a private-figure plaintiff need only prove negligence in order to prevail.
In the present case, the details of plaintiff’s alleged crime were merely matters that the public would find generally interesting and not matters "deserving of robust public debate.” The fact that plaintiff had been arrested for raping his ex-wife’s teenage baby sitter and cutting off the baby sitter’s clothes with a knife does not contribute to the public’s interest in reducing or detecting crime. Instead, it merely maximizes the damage to plaintiff’s reputation. Thus, considering the obvious harm to plaintiff’s reputation, we conclude that the balance should be struck in plaintiff’s favor. [Id., pp 58-59.]
*164Thus, the Court held
that the trial judge erred by ruling that plaintiff must show that defendant possessed malice when it printed its article. Instead, plaintiff need only show that defendant was negligent in printing the defamatory matter in order for plaintiff to recover his actual damages. [Id.]
Defendant appealed to this Court, and leave was granted on June 26, 1985. 422 Mich 937 (1985).
II. THE STATUTORY OFFICIAL PROCEEDINGS PRIVILEGE
Because, if it is applicable, it would determine the outcome of this case, we first discuss the "official proceedings privilege” statute, MCL 600.2911(3); MSA 27A.2911(3). The relevant provisions of that statute read:
No damages shall be awarded in any libel action brought against a reporter, editor, publisher, or proprietor of a newspaper for the publication in it of a fair and true report of any public and official proceeding ....
Although the statute was enacted in 1931, its origins may be traced to much earlier Michigan common law. In 1882, this Court summarized the various common-law privileges available at the time. We described what may be termed a privilege to report judicial proceedings:1
[T]he publication of judicial proceedings taken before magistrates is privileged to the same extent as the proceedings of the trial court .... [Miner *165v Detroit Post & Tribune Co, 49 Mich 358, 359; 13 NW 773 (1882).]
The privilege was invoked in Jastrzembski v Marxhausen, 120 Mich 677; 79 NW 935 (1899), which involved an article concerning the plaintiffs alleged elopement with a woman other than his wife. The newspaper claimed the privilege because the story was based on a verbal complaint made by the plaintiffs wife to a police officer. We noted that "[t]he only document filed in the justice’s court was a complaint made for nonsupport, and this was not known to the reporters or to defendant.” Id., p 680. Thus, we held that the privilege did not apply in that "[t]he statements published were not gathered from any proceedings in court, but the information was obtained from parties entirely outside of any court.” Id., p 682.
The common-law privilege to report judicial proceedings was again claimed in Sherwood v Evening News Ass’n, 256 Mich 318; 239 NW 305 (1931), but was held not to cover the facts of that case. In Sherwood, we noted,
It is well settled that a faithful and fair report of the proceedings in courts of justice [is] privileged, even though the reputation of individuals incidentally suffer[s] from [its] publication .... [Id., p 320.]
In Sherwood, defendant’s article had alleged that the plaintiff had participated in a gun fight with the police, had been wounded, had stolen a car to escape, and had been caught and put in jail. In the words of the Court,
Plaintiff was not the bandit, did not participate in the gun battle, was not shot, did not steal a car, was not arrested, or sent to jail. [Id., p 319.]
*166The issue was whether the defendant, absent malice, was "privileged in publishing a true, a fair, and accurate statement of information received from the sheriff and his deputies concerning the official acts of such public officers?” Id. Belying on applications of similar qualified privileges from other states, and on Davis v Marxhausen, 86 Mich 281; 49 NW 50 (1891), after remand 103 Mich 315; 61 NW 504 (1894), Clair v Battle Creek Journal Co, 168 Mich 467; 134 NW 443 (1912), and Jastrzembski, supra, we held that the jury instructions were "more favorable than defendant was entitled to.” Sherwood, p 325. The instructions had stated:
When a newspaper fairly and without malice or intent to harm, publishes the progress being made in a criminal matter upon the information received from peace officers in charge of the examination involving crime, the articles so published are qualifiedly privileged, and the newspaper would not be liable in damages. [Id.]
The statute, of course, is not limited to judicial proceedings, but refers to "any public and official proceeding.” Only one Michigan case has actually construed this language.
In McCracken v Evening News Ass’n, 3 Mich App 32; 141 NW2d 694 (1966), the Court of Appeals applied the statutory privilege in a case that is factually similar to the case at bar. It referred to the statutory privilege as a qualified one.
In McCracken, the plaintiff was a subcontractor on a building addition to a va hospital. An employee of the general contractor on the project had signed a complaint against the plaintiff, alleging felonious execution and delivery of an allegedly false certificate that certain materials were in *167plaintiffs possession. A warrant was issued and the defendant published an article about the affair, quoting the warrant and comments made by the assistant prosecutor.
The Court found the privilege applicable. It held that the slight inaccuracy in the article did not amount to an abuse of the statutory privilege and ruled in favor of the defendant.
However, the Court made the following observations:
The statute protects newspaper publishers if the article is a fair and true report of the public and official proceeding. The fact that the reporter herein relied on the word of another as to the nature of the complaint and warrant is immaterial. The statute does not command the reporter to obtain his information from the official court records. At his risk, and at the risk of his publisher, he may rely upon the word of another as to the contents of the complaint and warrant, and that it will be so issued if it has not already been. If the information thus obtained and published does not substantially represent the matter contained in the court records, then the question arises as to whether or not the publisher has abused his privilege. The abuse of the privilege is a question of. fact for the trier of fact to determine. Obviously, if a warrant is never issued, there are no oficial proceedings that can be reported and this statute is not applicable. [Id., pp 38-39. Emphasis added.]
The Court of Appeals in Rouch found the arrest privileged under the statute, but the supporting information from the police officers outside the privilege. We agree that the statute does not apply, but under a different analysis.
It has not been made known to us whether, in adopting this statute in 1931, the Legislature washed to codify the common-law privilege to re*168port judicial proceedings,2 and intended that the word "proceedings” refer only to judicial proceedings, or whether a broader scope was intended.
In support of its finding that the arrest was privileged, but that the supporting information was not, the Court of Appeals quoted three sources. See Rouch, supra, pp 48-49. The Restatement of Torts states:
The publication of defamatory matter concerning another in a report of an official action or proceedings or of a meeting open to the public that deals with a matter of public concern is privileged if the report is accurate and complete or a fair abridgement of the occurrence reported. [3 Restatement Torts, 2d, § 611. Emphasis added.]
The Court quoted comment h to that section:
An arrest by an officer is an official action, and a report of the fact of the arrest or of the charge of crime made by the officer in making or returning the arrest is therefore within the conditional privilege covered by this Section. On the other hand statements made by the police or by the complainant or other witnesses or by the prosecuting attorney as to the facts of the case or the evidence expected to be given are not yet part of the judicial proceeding or of the arrest itself and are not privileged under this Section. [Emphasis added.]_
*169It also cited Prosser, Torts (4th ed), § 118, pp 831-832:
Thus it is the prevailing view, with some few courts to the contrary, that a pleading or a deposition filed in a case but not yet acted upon may not be reported under the claim of privilege. . . .
The same is of course true of the preliminary statements of police, or any other evidence not yet given.
The Court also relied upon 1 Harper & James, Torts, § 5.24, p 433:
[T]he publication of a petition, an answer, a deposition or an affidavit before a hearing has been held, does not receive the protection of privilege. The same is true, as a general rule, of investigations and other activities of the police before a warrant is issued or any other official action taken. [Id., p 49, n 8.]
We cannot agree with the Court of Appeals use of these authorities.3 The Restatement deals with a privilege ("official action”) broader than either our common-law privilege to report judicial proceedings or the statutory "public and official proceedings” privilege. Accordingly, it is not helpful in our effort to interpret the statute.4 The quotations from Prosser and Harper & James do relate to *170judicial-proceedings privileges, but do not support the inclusion of either the arrest or the supporting "charge” under such a privilege.
Although we have not spoken on the question whether an arrest is a "judicial proceeding,” others have, and generally, they have not found it to be the case. See, e.g., Lancour v Herald & Globe Ass’n, 111 Vt 371, 384-386; 17 A2d 253 (1941); Turnbull v Herald Co, 459 SW2d 516, 520 (Mo App, 1970).
A few cases have construed the meaning of "official,” as opposed to "judicial,” proceeding as it relates to a privilege governing the reporting of the same. The rationale for a "public proceedings” privilege is basically the same as that offered in favor of the judicial-proceedings privilege.
The privilege rests upon the idea that any member of the public, if he were present, might see and hear for himself, so that the reporter is merely a substitute for the public eye — this, together with the obvious public interest in having public affairs made known to all. [Prosser & Keeton, Torts (5th ed), § 115, p 836.]
In Phillips v Evening Star Newspaper Co, 424 A2d 78 (DC App, 1980), cert den 451 US 989 (1981), the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, applying the privilege to report official actions or proceedings as enunciated in § 611 of the Restatement, held that it did not apply to information obtained from a police "hot line.” The court noted that
[t]his log' representing the oral police communica*171tion from which the [newspaper] composed its article does not carry the dignity and authoritative weight as a record for which the common law sought to provide the reporting privilege. [Id., p 89.]
Broader privileges have included arrests and information given to a law enforcement official. See Lotrich v Life Printing & Publishing Co, 117 Ill App 2d 89; 253 NE2d 899 (1969) (an official government proceedings and records privilege applies to police files). See also Lulay v Peoria Journal-Star, Inc, 34 Ill 2d 112; 214 NE2d 746 (1966) (governmental-affairs privilege applicable to a report of a health department inspection); Gawel v Chicago American Publishing Co, 1 Ill App 3d 481; 274 NE2d 628 (1971) (governmental-affairs privilege covered misidentification of arrestee based on information from police and jail officials).
We think a fair reading of the "public and official proceedings” language of the instant legislation would dictate that it is intended to cover at least the more limited common-law privilege to report judicial proceedings, but is not by its very language intended to be a "government action,” "arrest record,” or "public records” privilege.5 If *172such a broader scope had been intended, the necessary words could easily have been employed.
Black’s Law Dictionary (5th ed), defines "proceeding” in part as follows:
In a general sense, the form and manner of conducting juridical business before a court or judicial officer. Regular and orderly progress in form of law, including all possible steps in an action from its commencement to the execution of judgment. . . .
An act which is done by the authority or direction of the court, agency, or tribunal, express or implied; an act necessary to be done in order to obtain a given end; a prescribed mode of action for carrying into effect a legal right. . . . The proceedings of a suit embrace all matters that occur in its progress judicially. [Emphasis added.]
The words "official proceeding” evoke notions of adjudicatory action, rather than of government action generally. The term "official proceeding” may be broader than "judicial proceeding,”6 but does not in our view encompass all actions of all government officials.7
We conclude that an arrest that amounts to no more than an apprehension is not a "proceeding” *173under the statute. Accordingly, the information orally furnished to the defendant in support of it does not, as such, enjoy the privilege afforded by the "public and official proceedings” statute.8
III. THE PUBLIC-INTEREST PRIVILEGE
A. HISTORY
We next address the defendant’s contention that, in the absence of the application of the statutory privilege, Michigan’s long-recognized qualified public-interest privilege protects this publication and its alleged factual errors in the absence of malice. If such a privilege is applicable, plaintiff would be required to prove that defendants published the report with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard for the truth.9 Plaintiff would be required to show malice in addition to the elements necessary to demonstrate liability for defamation:
(a) a false and defamatory statement concerning plaintiff; (b) an unprivileged publication to a third party; (c) fault amounting at least to negligence on the part of the publisher; and (d) either actionabil*174ity of the statement irrespective of special harm (defamation per se) or the existence of special harm caused by the publication (defamation per quod). [3 Restatement Torts, 2d, § 558. Postill v Booth Newspapers, 118 Mich App 608, 618; 325 NW2d 511 (1982).]
In advance of this analysis, it is important to set forth what the lower courts have not found and as a result, what this case is not about. It has not been found that the newspaper report of the plaintiff’s arrest and the reasons for the arrest were false. Nor has it been found that, if false, there is liability resulting from negligence. Finally, were there a finding of falsity and negligence, there has been no finding that the plaintiff was damaged thereby.
The question presented is whether the trial court was in error in denying the plaintiff an opportunity to prove that the publication was false, that the falsity resulted from a standard of fault less than malice, and that the plaintiff was damaged thereby.10 The Court of Appeals acknowledged the existence of a public-interest privilege, but it differentiated between matters that ”pro*175mote the public interest and matters which are merely interesting to the public,” finding the arrest in this case to fall within the latter category. It therefore declined to apply the privilege. We again arrive at the same result, but by way of a different analysis.
The qualified privilege to report on matters in the public interest is deeply rooted in Michigan jurisprudence. A qualified privilege, generally, provides
a conditional right to publish otherwise defamatory remarks because the defendant is advancing some interest of social importance. . . . Where a qualified privilege exists, plaintiff, in order to recover, must affirmatively prove actual malice on the part of the defendant. [Walker v Cahalan, 97 Mich App 346, 356; 296 NW2d 18 (1980), citing Lawrence v Fox, 357 Mich 134; 97 NW2d 719 (1959).]
In Miner v Detroit Post & Tribune Co, supra, this Court’s earliest expression on the subject, a public official ("police justice” of the City of Detroit) claimed to have been harmed by a newspaper article. Justice Cooley, in approving of the privilege that distinguishes matters of public interest from mere gossip, reasoned:
I know of nothing more likely to encourage the license of a dissolute press than to establish the principle that the discussion of matters of general concern involving public wrongs and the publication of personal scandal come under the same condemnation in the law; for this inevitably brings the law itself into contempt and creates public sentiment against its enforcement. [Miner, supra, p 364.]
Closely thereafter, in Bacon v Michigan Central *176R Co, 66 Mich 166; 33 NW 181 (1887), we said that a qualified privilege was held to
extend[] to all communications made bona ñde upon any subject-matter in which the party communicating has an interest, or in reference to which he has a duty, to a person having a corresponding interest or duty. And the privilege embraces cases where the duty is not a legal one, but where it is of a moral or social character of imperfect obligation. [Id., p 170.]
The "duty” in that case ran to the defendant railroad employee, who had published an internal report noting that the plaintiff had been discharged for stealing. The Court reasoned that the employee who made the communication owed a duty to the company in the capacity of personnel agent. We observed:
It is not only proper, but it is of the utmost importance to the company, and to the public having business transactions with it, that the servants employed by it shall be men of good character .... [Id., p 171.]
In applying the duty/interest privilege, somewhat different from the public-interest privilege, the Bacon Court noted that "[t]he occasion determines the question of privilege. The language is only proper to be considered in connection with the question of malice.” Id. Bacon also emphasized that "[t]he great underlying principle upon which the doctrine of privileged communication stands, is public policy.” Id., p 169.
In a line of cases following Bacon, we continued to adhere to those privileges. The latest discus*177sion11 of the public-interest privilege to emerge from this Court appears in Lawrence v Fox, 357 Mich 134; 97 NW2d 719 (1959).12
In Lawrence, the deputy superintendent of police in Detroit sued several newspapers for the publication of a series of articles charging him with fraud, corruption, and various other violations of the public trust. Plaintiff asserted the falsity of the charges and maintained that defendants had acted in bad faith and out of a desire to "ruin him.”
After tracing the historical roots of privilege in defamation law and noting that privilege necessarily "rests upon considerations of public policy,” id., p 137, we once again observed that
[t]he occasion determines the question of privilege. The language is only proper to be considered in connection with the question of malice. [Id., p 140.]
We further observed:
There is no need, at this date in our history, to urge that it is necessary to free institutions that the press itself be free. Today it is. The real issue before us is how free. Governmental interference is not the only threat to its freedom. On the contrary, a narrow or restrictive interpretation of the law of privilege in libel actions is equally dangerous. The publisher often faces a cruel dilemma: The more serious the charge of wróngdoing by a public official, more urgent the need for *178its airing. Yet, the more serious the charge, the greater the libel. It is in this uneasy and menacing situation that the law provides the publisher a sanctuary of sorts, the defense of privilege. [Id., p 137.]
Thus, at the time we decided Lawrence, in 1959, the public-interest privilege applied to an "occasion,” not to the status of the parties, even though the principle cases dealing with this privilege involved public official plaintiffs. The "policy” to be achieved was obvious, although not often articulated: encouragement of a free flow of information about public concerns. Also at that time, the constitutional dimensions of the law of defamation could be simply stated: "[L]ibelous utterances are not within the area of constitutionally protected speech.” Roth v United States, 354 US 476, 483; 77 S Ct 1304; 1 L Ed 2d 1498 (1957). As Justice White noted in 1974,
For some 200 years — from the very founding of the Nation — the law of defamation and right of the ordinary citizen to recover for false publication injurious to his reputation have been almost exclusively the business of state courts and legislatures. [Gertz v Robert Welch, Inc, 418 US 323, 369-370; 94 S Ct 2997; 41 L Ed 2d 789 (1974).]
In New York Times v Sullivan, 376 US 254; 84 S Ct 710; 11 L Ed 2d 686 (1964), the constitutionally dictated change in the state of libel law began when the United States Supreme Court held that the constitutional guarantees of the First and Fourteenth Amendments required a rule prohibiting "a public official from recovering damages for a defamatory falsehood relating to his official conduct unless he proves that the statement was made with 'actual malice,’ ” defined as knowledge *179of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth. Id., pp 279-280. Thus, the United States Supreme Court in New York Times focused on the status of the plaintiff when it created the constitutional standard.
Curtis Publishing Co v Butts, 388 US 130; 87 S Ct 1975; 18 L Ed 2d 1094, reh den 389 US 889 (1967), continued the focus on the status of the plaintiff when it extended application of the New York Times standard to cases involving public-figure plaintiffs. Public figures were defined by a concurring justice as nonpublic officials who "are nevertheless intimately involved in the resolution of important public questions or, by reason of their fame, shape events in areas of concern to society at large.” Id., p 164 (Warren, C.J., concurring in result).
In the next relevant case, Rosenbloom v Metromedia, Inc, 403 US 29; 91 S Ct 1811; 29 L Ed 2d 296 (1971), the Court, in a plurality opinion, departed, albeit briefly, from using the status of the plaintiff as a criterion for constitutional protection from libel in the absence of malice. Justice Brennan, writing for the plurality, noted:
If a matter is a subject of public or general interest, it cannot suddenly become less so merely because a private individual is involved, or because in some sense the individual did not "voluntarily” choose to become involved. The public’s primary interest is in the event; the public focus is on the conduct of the participant and the content, effect, and significance of the conduct, not the participant’s prior anonymity or notoriety. [Id., p 43.]
Although qualified privileges for the protection of mass-media defendants existed in some states prior to the New York Times case, they were "limited by numerous restrictions and were often *180narrowly construed.” AAFCO Heating & Air Conditioning Co v Northwest Publications, Inc, 162 Ind App 671; 321 NE2d 580 (1974), cert den 424 US 913 (1976). They "traditionally recognized only statements of opinion as privileged; false statements of fact were never privileged.” Id., p 675.
However, Michigan was one of those states that had more than a fair-comment privilege.13 It extended protection to nonmalicious errors of fact when they involved matters of public concern, at least when the case involved a public plaintiff.14 With the release of the Rosenbloom opinion, Michigan’s public-interest privilege was definitely subsumed within the constitutional ambit. In a case such as that before us, the only issue under Rosenbloom would have been whether the report of the arrest was within the public interest.
Our task in this case, however, has been compli*181cated by the Supreme Court’s withdrawal from Rosenbloom in Gertz, supra. Gertz held:
[S]o long as they do not impose liability without fault, the States may define for themselves the appropriate standard of liability for a publisher or broadcaster of defamatory falsehood injurious to a private individual. [Id., p 347.]
The Gertz Court also held "that the States may not permit recovery of presumed or punitive damages, at least when liability is not based on a showing of knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth.” Id., p 349.
In the most recent United States Supreme Court case on the subject, the constitutional privilege was further defined. Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc v Hepps, 475 US —; 106 S Ct 1558; 89 L Ed 2d 783 (1986), held that, in a defamation case involving a private-person plaintiff, but speech of public concern, the plaintiff must bear the burden of proving falsity. A Pennsylvania statute had required the defendant to bear the burden of proving truth in all cases. The Court clarified that "[w]hen the speech is of exclusively private concern and the plaintiff is a private figure, . . . the constitutional requirements do not necessarily force any change in at least some of the features of the common-law landscape.” Id., 89 L Ed 2d 792. In the area of burden of proof, then, the Court has shifted its focus somewhat from the status of the plaintiff to the subject of the speech.
Thus, in a relatively short period of time, during which we have not had an opportunity to revisit the qualified public-interest privilege question, the law of libel has been significantly altered. Much of what was the policy-based law of libel in Michigan prior to New York Times and its progeny, has now *182become constitutionally mandated. How much in the way of privilege remains outside of the constitutional ambit and what to do with it is the issue that now requires our attention.
Although our pronouncements have never explicitly limited application of the public-interest privilege to a public official or a public figure, it is also true that we have never applied the privilege in a case involving a strictly private-person plaintiff. Miner v Detroit Post & Tribune Co, supra (plaintiff was a "police justice” of the City of Detroit; Fortney v Stephan, 237 Mich 603; 213 NW 172 (1927) (plaintiff was a sheriff); Timmis v Bennett, 352 Mich 355; 89 NW2d 748 (1958) (plaintiff was a police department employee); Lawrence v Fox, supra (plaintiff was a deputy superintendent of police).15
Also, in Lawrence and other cases, our analysis relied to some extent on the status of the plaintiff as a public official.
The immunity of the conditional privilege, then, fragile though it may be, is not without value to the defendant charged with defamation. The newspaper (or any) publisher, commenting upon the performance of duties by a public official, stands before the jury initially (unlike the malevolently officious fishwife) wearing his vulnerable cloak of privilege. It is the plaintiffs burden to destroy it, to prove such abuse that the privilege is lost. [Lawrence, supra, pp 143-144. Emphasis added.]
Likewise in Timmis, supra, p 369, we emphasized that the communication was one criticizing "the *183acts of members of the police department.” Thus, Miner, Fortney, Timmis, and Lawrence all involved persons who would now likely be considered "public officials or figures” under the constitutional standard. Those cases are arguably limited to situations involving public plaintiffs.
Such is not the case in the Michigan Court of Appeals, however. That Court has moved beyond Lawrence and the earlier cases discussed, and it has explicitly recognized a qualified privilege to report on matters of public interest in cases involving private-figure plaintiffs. See Peisner v Detroit Free Press, 82 Mich App 153; 266 NW2d 693 (1978) (interlocutory appeal) (Peisner I). The federal courts, applying Michigan law, have accepted Peisner I as the law of Michigan. See Bichler v Union Bank & Trust Co, 745 F2d 1006, 1011 (CA 6, 1984) (en banc); Schultz v Reader’s Digest Ass’n, 468 F Supp 551, 561 (ED Mich, 1979); Apostle v Booth Newspapers, Inc, 577 F Supp 962 (WD Mich, 1984). However, the same courts were careful to note that this Court had not spoken on the privilege since either New York Times or Gertz.
In Peisner, the plaintiff lawyer sued the defendant newspaper for libel on the basis of an article dealing with court-appointed lawyers that had accused the plaintiff of "inadequate representation of an indigent criminal defendant in appellate proceedings and with unethical conduct.” Peisner v Detroit Free Press, 104 Mich App 59, 62-63; 304 NW2d 814 (1981), aff'd but modified 421 Mich 125; 364 NW2d 600 (1984) ("malice” and damages issues) (Peisner II).
In Peisner I, which is the decision most relevant to the issue presented in the instant case, the defendant had claimed both the constitutional privilege, alleging that plaintiff was a "public figure,” and the qualified privilege "on the grounds *184that the controversy was a matter of widespread public interest . . . Peisner I, p 156. The defendant had further claimed that the plaintiff had not shown abuse of the privilege, in that he had not alleged facts from which malice could be inferred.
The Court of Appeals held that plaintiff Peisner was not a public figure as defined in Gertz, supra. It found the trial court’s reason for finding him to be a public figure — the fact that "he was appointed to handle a criminal appeal” — to be an insufficient basis for that finding. Id., p 160.
As to the qualified privilege, the Court of Appeals cited the leeway granted to state courts in Gertz, and relied upon our earlier cases of Bacon, Timmis, and Lawrence in finding the privilege applicable to a private-figure plaintiff.16 It noted:
Although [Lawrence] involved an article charging a public official with fraud and corruption, it is clear that it was not limited to publications concerning public officials .... [Id., p 161.]
The Court approved of the trial judge’s holding
that the public’s interest in the administration of justice gave rise to a qualified privilege to report on events affecting a judicial proceeding. [Id., p 163.]
The panel in Peisner I found that a question of fact remained regarding the existence of malice, however, and it remanded for a trial on that issue. The definition of malice and the damages issue were appealed in Peisner II, which reached this Court.
Thus, it was Peisner I that expressly expanded *185the scope of the qualified privilege to encompass cases involving private-figure plaintiffs such as Mr. Rouch. The question of privilege was not appealed in Peisner II, and therefore, the instant case represents this Court’s first opportunity to approve or disapprove of the privilege, interpreted by the Court of Appeals and by the federal courts applying Michigan law, as applicable in cases involving nonpublic plaintiffs.
As noted above, if one were to consider only the cases of this Court, there would be very little evidence of a public-interest privilege applicable in cases involving private-defamation plaintiffs. However, in Peisner II, we acknowledged the privilege as enunciated by the Court of Appeals.
Peisner II held that exemplary and punitive damages for libel may be awarded only upon a finding that defendant acted with common-law malice, defined as ill will or bad faith. However, in the process of deciding the issues presented in that case, this Court
[r]ecognize[d] that a private defamation plaintiff must face an imposing array of barriers to recover exemplary and punitive damages. In this case, for example, plaintiffs were required to prove constitutional "actual malice” — i.e., knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth — simply to defeat defendants’ qualiñed privilege to report on matters in the public interest and thereby establish liability for actual damages. [Id., 421 Mich 137.]
The defendant points to our language in Peisner as an implicit acceptance of the Rosenbloom standard as a matter of Michigan common law.
Other Court of Appeals cases have also recognized the private-person public-interest privilege. However, some, like the panel in this case, found *186the subject matter to be outside the scope of the public-interest privilege.
In Weeren v Evening News Ass’n, 2 Mich App 74; 138 NW2d 526 (1965), rev’d on other grounds 379 Mich 475; 152 NW2d 676 (1967), the Court of Appeals applied the privilege in a case involving the defendant television station’s airing of a documentary about the circumstances surrounding plaintiffs donation of a bell to a leper colony. The Court also recognized the privilege in Postill v Booth Newspapers, supra, however, because that case was brought by a public-official plaintiff (the Washtenaw County Sheriff), it comports with this Court’s narrower definition of the privilege. Gaynes v Allen, 128 Mich App 42; 339 NW2d 678 (1983), represents an expansive interpretation of the privilege. In that case, the Court of Appeals applied it to a case involving a publication about the private plaintiffs alleged incompetency in the profession of optometry. Likewise, in Dienes v Associated Newspapers, Inc, 137 Mich App 272; 358 NW2d 562 (1984), a Court of Appeals panel applied the privilege in a case involving a news report about the health of a private-person plaintiffs cows. In Nabkey v Booth Newspapers, 140 Mich App 507; 364 NW2d 363 (1985), the panel recognized the privilege, but cited Rouch and declined to apply it to the defendant newspaper’s alleged false report of the details of the plaintiffs arrest and arraignment: "[T]he report of plaintiffs alleged activity did not contribute to the public’s interest in reducing or detecting crime, but merely provided interesting or amusing reading for the public.” Id., p 513. Finally, in Kurz v Evening News Ass’n, 144 Mich App 205; 375 NW2d 391 (1985), another panel applied the privilege to a case involving a newspaper report about the plain*187tiff’s (a Detroit attorney) arraignment on charges of assaulting a police officer.
Whether the Court of Appeals is correct in interpreting our pre-New York Times public-interest privilege decisions as covering nonpublic persons is less important than what the state of the law ought to be in the wake of a veritable revolution in First Amendment defamation law. It is from this broader perspective that we consider the issue presented.
B. ANALYSIS OF THE PUBLIC-INTEREST PRIVILEGE
In this section, we address the fundamental question after Gertz: Should there be a qualified public-interest privilege applicable in cases involving nonpublic plaintiffs that is more protective than the constitutional minimum requirements now in place for publications involving both private and public persons? We answer that question in the negative and hereby adopt the Gertz negligence standard in such cases. We decline the opportunity to create further tests and standards to be applied in libel cases involving claims of a public-interest privilege, when the constitutional standard more than adequately addresses the policy concerns that prompted our formulation of the common-law privilege in the nineteenth century and that would militate in favor of one at this time were there inadequate constitutional protection. Our decision is in keeping with the majority of states that have considered this question, and comports with a careful balancing of the very weighty policy concerns that necessarily influence a decision in the area of libel privilege.
1. FOREIGN JURISDICTIONS
Our survey of states that have responded to the *188Gertz challenge indicate that twenty-three states and the District of Columbia have expressly adopted the Gertz negligence standard as a matter of state law.17 Eight states have assumed without *189discussion that Gertz represents the proper standard in cases involving private plaintiffs, and, in two states, federal courts have interpreted state law as having adopted Gertz.18 By contrast, only *190four states have expressly adopted the Rosenbloom public-interest standard,19 and one of those cases was a federal court’s interpretation of state law.20 New York has adopted neither the Gertz nor the Rosenbloom standard, opting instead for a gross-negligence standard. See Chapadeau v Utica Observer-Dispatch, Inc, 38 NY2d 196; 379 NYS2d 61; 341 NE2d 569 (1975).
The rationale most often given for adoption of a negligence standard is that first enunciated in *191Gertz, supra: "[P]rivate individuals are more deserving of protection because, as a class, they are less likely to seek public attention and comment.” Foster v Laredo Newspapers, Inc, 541 SW2d 809, 819 (Tex, 1976). The Supreme Court of Tennessee reasoned that only the Gertz negligence standard " 'recognizes that the special needs of the private plaintiff require a more stringent standard of liability than is imposed when the plaintiff is a public figure or official who has ready media access and has voluntarily assumed the risk of defamatory comment by placing himself in the public eye.’ ” Memphis Publishing Co v Nichols, 569 SW2d 412, 418 (Tenn, 1978), quoting Note, State court reactions to Gertz v Robert Welch, Inc, 29 Vand L R 1431, 1444 (1976).
State courts that have adopted a negligence standard also rely heavily on their own state constitutions as support for their decisions.21 The state constitutions have been used most often as support for placing greater emphasis on privacy rights. See, e.g., Troman v Wood, 62 Ill 2d 184; 340 NE2d 292 (1975); Gobin v Globe Publishing Co, 216 Kan 223; 531 P2d 76 (1975); McCall v Courier-Journal & Louisville Times Co, 623 SW2d 882 (Ky, 1981), cert den 456 US 975 (1982); Martin v Griffin Television, Inc, 549 P2d 85 (Okla, 1976); Gazette, Inc v Harris, 229 Va 1, 15; 325 SE2d 713 (1985); Denny v Mertz, 106 Wis 2d 636; 318 NW2d 141 (1982).
In Troman, supra, p 195, the Illinois Supreme Court observed:
*192The freedom of speech provisions . . . recognize the interest of the individual in the protection of his reputation, for they provide that the exercise of the right to speak freely shall not relieve the speaker from responsibility for his abuse of that right. [See also Gobin, supra, pp 231-233.]
The Kentucky Constitution was also found to mandate "a standard which adequately protects the private individual from defamation.” McCall, supra, p 886. In Martin, supra, p 92, the Oklahoma Supreme Court explicitly distinguished the language of the Oklahoma Constitution from that of the federal constitution. Like the previously mentioned state constitutions and our own, the free speech provision of the Oklahoma Constitution requires " '[e]very person ... [to be] responsible for the abuse of that right ....’” Okla Const, art II, § 22. The Martin court thus found the negligence standard to be "more parallel with” the Oklahoma Constitution. The Wisconsin Supreme Court also concluded that its state constitution does not provide for broader free press rights than does the federal constitution. Denny, supra, p 655, n 27.22
Other state courts relied on state statutes or the common law as justification for adopting the negligence standard for private-person-plaintiff cases. See Phillips v Evening Star Newspaper Co, supra; Troman, supra, pp 194-196; Denny, supra, p 656. At least one state court perceived practical advantages in adopting the negligence standard.
The application of the negligence standard in tort cases is so well established that juries can safely be expected to comprehend the term when applied in defamation cases. Nor is the negligence *193standard unknown to common law defamation. [Jacron Sales Co, Inc v Sindorf, 276 Md 580, 596; 350 A2d 688 (1976).]
A final, and perhaps most significant, reason for state court rejection of anything but a negligence standard emanates from the courts’ understanding and interpretation of public policy. See Miami Herald Publishing Co v Ane, 423 So 2d 376, 387 (Fla App, 1982); Cahill v Hawaiian Paradise Park Corp, 56 Hawaii 522, 533-534; 543 P2d 1356 (1975); Troman, supra, pp 194-196 (Illinois); Gobin, supra, pp 231-233 (Kansas); Stone v Essex Co Newspapers, Inc, 367 Mass 849, 856-857; 330 NE2d 161 (1975); Seegmiller v KSL, Inc, 626 P2d 968, 973 (Utah, 1981); Taskett v King Broadcasting Co, 86 Wash 2d 439, 448-450; 546 P2d 81 (1976); Denny, supra, p 656 (Wisconsin). The nonconstitutional policies cited by state courts are numerous, but, generally, the courts tend to focus on the seriousness of the injury to the allegedly defamed party.
The Florida Supreme Court, for example, stressed the important role that the defamation action plays in a free society.
[It] represents the individual’s sole remedy against the occasional excesses of the print and electronic media which often have vast resources to inflict untoward damage upon an individual. Surely, a decent, open society cannot, in the name of press and speech freedom, so thoroughly undermine this remedy as to render it useless to those people who have been damaged by a defamatory falsehood negligently uttered in the mass media and have not in any way sought the public limelight. [Miami Herald, supra, p 387.]
The Massachusetts Supreme Court likewise emphasized the state’s interest in the individual’s reputational protection, "for this 'reflects no more *194than our basic concept of the essential dignity and worth of every human being — a concept at the root of any decent system of ordered liberty.’ ” Stone, supra, p 858, quoting Rosenblatt v Baer, 383 US 75, 92; 86 S Ct 669; 15 L Ed 2d 597 (1966) (Stewart, J., concurring). The Utah court equated freedom from defamation with freedom from physical violence.
[W]e recognize that the integrity of an individual’s reputation is essential to his standing in society, in his vocation, and even in his family. It may indeed be indispensable to one’s sense of self-worth. The dignity of virtually every human being depends in part upon his right to be known as the person he truly is. For centuries it has been recognized that an assault upon a person’s character may be far more damaging and long-lasting than an assault upon his person. Indeed, freedom from false attacks on one’s personality may be viewed as at least as essential to ordered liberty as freedom from physical abuse. [Seegmiller, supra, p 973.]
The courts employed these policies and reasons for distinguishing between public and private individuals. Olfering the protection of privilege to all matters of public interest is often said to be too broad an extension of a "free press” privilege. The Illinois court noted the infrequency of recoveries for actual malice and the fact that
[w]hether a matter is one of public interest, . . . depends to some degree on whether the media themselves have chosen to make it one. [Troman, supra, p 196.]
The Hawaii court envisioned the negligence standard as one way "to make defaming publishers less willing to speak due to the risk of being found negligent.” Cahill, supra, p 533.
*195Those states adopting a Rosenbloom public interest-related standard relied most heavily on the constitutional arguments advanced by the Rosenbloom plurality, striking the balance in favor of free speech. See, e.g., Walker v Colorado Springs Sun, Inc, 188 Colo 86; 538 P2d 450 (1975), cert den sub nom Woestendiek v Walker, 423 US 1025 (1975); Diversified Management, Inc v Denver Post, Inc, 653 P2d 1103 (Colo, 1982); AAFCO Heating & Air Conditioning Co v Northwest Publications, Inc, supra. While we appreciate the concerns articulated by the courts adopting the Rosenbloom standard, we find the balance struck by the United States Supreme Court in its development of the constitutional privilege to be sufficiently protective of free speech and provides the publisher with more than adequate "sanctuary” from the "cruel dilemma” we referred to in Lawrence, supra, p 137.
2. UNITED STATES CONSTITUTIONAL POLICY
There are several tension lines along which, to some extent, the original tort-law qualified privileges were developed and along which the United States Supreme Court struggled in developing the latter-day First Amendment privileges. They are basically: the need to balance a free flow of information and ideas necessary to our concept of freedom and democracy with the traditional right of the individual to redress harm to reputation, and the effect of privilege on public versus private figures.
These fundamental principles and the conflicts between them have been eloquently expressed in New York Times and its progeny.
Thus we consider this case against the back*196ground of a profound commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open .... [New York Times, supra, p 270.]
"The protection of the public requires not merely discussion, but information.” [Id., p 272.]
The right of free public discussion of the stewardship of public officials was thus, in Madison’s view, a fundamental principle of the American form of government. [Id., pp 274-275.]
The First Amendment requires that we protect some falsehood in order to protect speech that matters. [Philadelphia Newspapers, supra, 89 L Ed 2d 794 (quoting Gertz).]
These concerns are similar to those that we articulated in Lawrence:
There is no need, at this date in our history, to urge that it is necessary to free institutions that the press itself be free. Today it is. The real issue before us is how free. Governmental interference is not the only threat to its freedom. On the contrary, a narrow or restrictive interpretation of the law of privilege in libel actions is equally dangerous. [Id., p 137.]
We find that the constitutional privilege that has evolved in the time period since Lawrence is neither narrow nor restrictive. Rather, it has equitably balanced the public’s need to know with the individual’s right to privacy.
As the Court noted in Gertz:
[T]here is no constitutional value in false statements of fact. Neither the intentional lie nor the careless error materially advances society’s inter*197est in "uninhibited, robust, and wide-open” debate on public issues. [New York Times, p 270.] They belong to that category of utterances which "are no essential part of any exposition of ideas, and are of such slight social value as a step to truth that any benefit that may be derived from them is clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and morality.” [Gertz, supra, p 340.]
Especially in cases involving the interests of private individuals, the balancing process must not abandon the legitimate need to redress reputational injuries. As Justice Marshall expressed it,
The protection of the reputation of such anonymous persons "from unjustified invasion and wrongful hurt reflects no more than our basic concept of the essential dignity and worth of every human being — a concept at the root of any decent system of ordered liberty.” . . . But the concept of a citizenry informed by a free and unfettered press is also basic to our system of ordered liberty. Here these two essential and fundamental values conflict. [Rosenbloom, supra, p 78 (dissent).]
In concurrence in Rosenbloom, Justice White emphasized that the policies supporting the New York Times standard were much less applicable in cases involving private persons.23 Similarly, the Gertz majority concluded_
*198that the state interest in compensating injury to the reputation of private individuals requires that a different rule should obtain with respect to them. [Id., p 343.]
The conflicting values debated in these watershed United States Supreme Court cases finally came to rest in a five-justice majority opinion in Gertz, in which it was said:
The legitimate state interest underlying the law of libel is the compensation of individuals for the harm inflicted on them by defamatory falsehood. We would not lightly require the State to abandon this purpose .... In our continuing effort to define the proper accommodation between these competing concerns, we have been especially anxious to assure to the freedoms of speech and press that "breathing space” essential to their fruitful exercise. ... To that end, this Court has extended a measure of strategic protection to defamatory falsehood. [Gertz, pp 341-342.]
We believe that the United States Supreme Court has ably defined and provided for the protection necessary to ensure free and open debate of public issues. It should be remembered that, since Gertz, that Court has granted defamation defendants even greater protection by shifting the burden of proof of falsity when speech involving issues of public interest is at stake. Philadelphia Newspapers, supra._
*199 3. THE MICHIGAN RULE
In defining the constitutional limits to the law of libel, it is understandable that the balancing scales tip in favor of constitutional interests rather than the individual reputational interests entrusted to tort law. Now that the constitutional limits have been clearly established, however, our task is to enunciate a tort-law policy that should be based on something less than the sacred ground of First Amendment rights. It is from that perspective that we find it unnecessary and unwise to extend a public-interest qualified privilege beyond what is constitutionally required.
Historically, libel law favored plaintiffs. Malice was presumed, see, e.g., Bacon, supra, p 172, truth was often the only defense, and punitive damages were commonly employed. See Peisner II, supra, 421 Mich 132. See, generally, Justice White’s historical summary of libel law in Gertz, supra, pp 371-376. Privileges evolved in response to the perceived harshness of the law of libel. As Prosser & Keeton note:
The courts developed a complex structure of privileges to protect and advance the societal and individual interests in the free flow of ideas and information. Much of the structure would have been unnecessary and much of the complexity resulting from the development of qualified privileges discussed hereafter could have been obviated if negligence, or something worse, with respect to truth or falsity of the matter published had been a prerequisite to recovery in any case. [Prosser & Keeton, supra, § 114, p 815.]
Since that time, then, constitutional law developments have changed most of the conditions that compelled the early tort-law privileges.
Under the New York Times standard, as it has *200developed, a publication about a public official or public figure is privileged in the absence of malice. Under Gertz, a communication is not constitutionally privileged if its subject involves a private person in the context of a matter of public interest; however, states are not permitted to impose liability without fault; nor can there be presumed or punitive damages without a showing of malice. In addition, when the speech is of public concern, a private-person plaintiff in a defamation suit has the burden of proving falsity. Philadelphia Newspapers. Thus, the Michigan common-law public-interest privilege has been constitutionally subsumed almost in its entirety.24
The "policy” behind the public-interest privilege has now been largely engrafted onto the penumbra of our First Amendment rights. The United States Supreme Court has chosen to formulate a constitutional privilege that is intended to advance "robust and wide-open debate” by measuring the "public” status of the injured parties, rather than the content of the publication. Speech content is considered only as it regards the burden of proof of falsity.25 Ours is not a constitutional mission, and it is not given to us to redesign that standard. We do not think we ought to fashion our state’s tort law in a manner that would only fine tune the United States constitutional standard in one respect.
In summarizing our tort-law analysis of this *201issue, we first announce our value judgment that reputational interests are as important today, if not more so, as when the common law first recognized defamation as a tort. In an organized and centralized society, where at least economic relationships are likely to be based on an impersonal or reputational level as opposed to the more decentralized and personal approach characteristic of a bygone era, how we are perceived takes on greater significance. For better or worse, in today’s world, most of us are known by our images.26
Secondly, it is obvious that the policy imperatives that led to the adoption of many of the qualified privileges, including the public-interest privilege, resulted from the then-existing harshness of the law of libel and the absence of any constitutionally based privilege. As described above, that harshness has been removed.
Finally, while reliance on rhetorical pronouncements and speculation about "self-censorship” and "breathing room” are necessary to protect First Amendment freedoms, we look more to empirical evidence in search of a justification for sacrificing the tort-law protection for one defamed. We would not be adverse to upholding a public-interest privilege that would apply irrespective of the status of the defamed party if a strong societal interest, similar to the interest that compelled this privilege a century ago, were indicated. We are not convinced such is the case. It has not, for instance, been brought to our attention that in the over thirty states now applying a Gertz standard there has been any diminution in the volume or quality of the reporting of arrests or, for that matter, any other subject.27_
*202The policy question then, as we see it, is whether, in a time when the media has developed the technology, expertise, and resources to bring to our eyes and ears, on an hourly basis, detailed information on almost any subject from anywhere in the world, it is too much to ask or too detrimental to the liberalizing influence of such a free flow of information that the task be exercised with reasonable care. We think not.
Other institutions have in recent years been subjected to increased pressures either from evolving principles of tort law or from increased use of that law, and, while in some cases it has been suggested that the availability of the product involved would be lessened, that has not always been shown to be the case. Although adherence to a standard of care in the publishing business could certainly involve costs, in our view such costs would not necessarily result in the restriction of a free flow of nonlibelous information. The raison d’étre of the media is to report news — as much and as quickly as possible. It is not likely that the exercise of such responsibility would shrink in the face of a reasonable-person standard of care.
The compelling reasons for the qualified public-interest privilege are now being served by heightened constitutional standards. The need to further sacrifice tort recovery for false defamation of a private person resulting from negligence has not been shown. Thus, we adopt the Gertz standard in place of the former public-interest privilege, and hold that this plaintiff was not required to show *203malice on the part of the defendant. We, therefore, affirm the Court of Appeals reversal of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment.
Although we find that the former common-law public-interest privilege has been subsumed in the constitutional privilege, on remand, it will nevertheless be necessary to determine the "public interest” status of the communication in question in order to apply the Philadelphia Newspapers gloss on the constitutional rule. In the interest of judicial economy, and because the issue has been briefed, albeit in a slightly different context, we address this public interest question in order to facilitate the trial judge’s and the parties’ understanding of the proper burden of proof of falsity.
IV. BURDEN OF PROOF OF FALSITY
In applying the latest aspect of the constitutional law of libel, it is necessary to make the determination that defendants would have us make under the guise of state tort-law privilege: Namely, does the communication in question amount to "speech ... of public concern”? Philadelphia Newspapers, supra, 89 L Ed 2d 787. If so, then the plaintiff, even though a private person, must bear the burden of proving the falsity of the communication, as he would have been required to do under the common-law qualified public-interest privilege. See Bonkowski v Arlan’s Dep’t Store, 383 Mich 90; 174 NW2d 765 (1970) (when qualified privilege applies, plaintiff must prove untruth). He need not go so far as to prove malice, however, as he would be required to do if we were to recognize that privilege and find it applicable. Justice O’Con-nor described the applicable constitutional standard in Philadelphia Newspapers:
When the speech is of public concern but the *204plaintiff is a private figure . . . the Constitution still supplants the standards of the common law, but the constitutional requirements are, in at least some of their range, less forbidding than when the plaintiff is a public figure and the speech is of public concern. [Id., 89 L Ed 2d 792.]
We find that the newspaper report of plaintiff’s arrest that is at issue in this case is speech of public concern, and that, therefore, under the constitutional rule, defendant is not required to prove the truth of the article as its defense. Rather, plaintiff must prove as part of his case, in addition to defendant’s fault, that the statements at issue are false.
Although "public interest” is an elusive term, and may be said to include any matter reported on by the media,28 we do not undertake here to establish the parameters of a term, the origins of which emanate from constitutional law and which will undoubtedly be further defined by the United States Supreme Court. Rather, we merely hold that the subject matter of the communication at issue here surely falls well within those parameters. In so holding, we decline to distinguish, as did the Court of Appeals, the essence of the article from its supporting facts or details.29
The subject deemed to be a matter of public concern in Philadelphia Newspapers was organized crime. The articles in question in that case had alleged that plaintiffs had links to organized crime *205and that they used those links to influence state government. Other "public interest” cases, although in the context of privilege, also involved organized crime or law enforcement activities. See Rosenbloom (article regarding plaintiffs arrest "on charges of possession of obscene literature”); Gertz (article dealing with prosecution of a Chicago policeman for second-degree murder portrayed the plaintiff lawyer as the architect of a "frame-up”);30 Gay v Williams, 486 F Supp 12, 13 (Alas, 1979) (ap release about plaintiff, an "Alaska bush pilot accused in Arizona drug trafficking”); Orr v Argus-Press Co, 586 F2d 1108, 1110 (CA 6, 1978) (article reporting that plaintiff had been "charged in [a] shopping mall fraud”); Schultz v Reader’s Digest, and Schultz v Newsweek (organized crime and the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa); Walker v Colorado Springs (articles about plaintiffs alleged purchase of stolen goods).
As the plurality in Rosenbloom observed:
The community has a vital interest in the proper enforcement of its criminal laws, . . . : the public has an interest both in seeing that the criminal law is adequately enforced and in assuring that the law is not used unconstitutionally to suppress free expression^ id., p 43,]
or, we would add, to harass innocent persons. The court in Gay, supra, p 16, n 14, noted that "[criminal activities have consistently been recognized as matters of public interest.”
Our own cases of Fortney, supra, and Timmis, supra, emphasized the fact that the published statements "concerned] acts of members of a law *206enforcement agency.” Id., p 370. The article in Miner, supra, reported on "the official conduct of those who fill offices of public trust and confidence, in the administration of which the whole community has an interest . . . .” Id., p 360.
The rule of Philadelphia Newspapers does not impose an onerous burden on the private-person plaintiff, who must already show some degree of fault on the defendant’s part. See Gertz. Thus, the possible effects of a broad interpretation of "public interest” are not nearly as serious as they would be in the context of a public-interest privilege. In any case, at this point, we adopt a relatively narrow reading of that term for purposes of applying the constitutional rule.
We hold that a report of an arrest and of the facts used to establish the probable cause for the arrest amount to speech of public concern and that the rule of Philadelphia Newspapers applies. Because of the importance of this type of information in a free society, plaintiffs who choose to bring actions in libel on the basis of such reports must first prove that the statements were false in addition to proving that defendants were negligent in so reporting.
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Williams, C.J., and Levin and Archer, JJ., concurred with Brickley, J.This privilege is qualified, and should be distinguished from the absolute privilege that covers what is said during the course of judicial proceedings. The latter privilege is obviously not claimed in this case, nor is it applicable.
Justice Boyle would apply a much broader common-law privilege to this case to cover the reporting of official actions. See post, p 220, n 15. Such a general reporting privilege may have been adopted by other states, but has never been recognized in Michigan. In addition, there is no indication, either from the words of the statute or the legislative history, that our Legislature intended to enact a broad reporting privilege.
Even if the common-law privilege that existed prior to the enactment of MCL 600.2911(3); MSA 27A.2911(3) may be characterized as a privilege to report on official or public proceedings, that assumption does not alter our basic conclusion that an arrest without a warrant does not amount to an official or public proceeding.
Justice Boyle also relies on these authorities, but cites no Michigan case indicating that this state has adopted their version of this privilege.
Because we find the privilege described in § 611 of the Restatement to be broader than contained in MCL 600.2911(3); MSA 27A.2911(3), we likewise do not find comment d to that section helpful in construing the statute. Comment d notes:
The filing of a report by an officer or agency of the government is an action bringing a reporting of the governmental report within the scope of the privilege. [3 Restatement Torts, 2d, § 611, comment d.]
*170If our statutory privilege covered "official action,” then this comment might be used to include the standard-incident report filed in this case within the meaning of official action, and thereby render privileged defendant’s report of that action. Such is not the case, however.
The Phillips court contrasted the "hotline” with an actual arrest record.
Not being an arrest record nor a record required by statute or some other authority, but instead merely constituting a hearsay statement by police of facts of a case, the hot line will not qualify as an official record for purposes of this privilege. [Id., p 89.]
We do not read MCL 600.2911(3); MSA 27A.2911(3) as including a "public records” privilege within its reference to "public and official proceedings.”
Other states hold that reports of arrests are privileged, but they do so pursuant to specific privileges governing arrest reports or "public reports,” generally. See, e.g., Commercial Publishing Co v Smith, 149 F 704, 706 (CA 6, 1907); François v Capitol City Press, 166 So 2d 84, *17289 (La App, 1964); Piracci v Hearst Corp, 263 F Supp 511, 513 (D Md, 1966). It is not suggested by the parties, nor has our research indicated, that Michigan has such a privilege. Moreover, the language of the official proceedings statute is not broad enough to include such a privilege within its meaning.
The defendant claims that the information at issue here was part of the police report, even though it was received orally from the officers, and therefore privileged. For the same reason that an arrest is not covered, neither is the police record of the arrest. We are not dealing here with a public-record privilege.
Administrative and quasi-judicial proceedings may be included, but we do not find it necessary to make that determination in this case.
We note that such a broad reading of the statute to cover all government actions would have largely duplicated the scope of the common-law public-interest privilege discussed below.
Defendant’s argument that "accurate reporting of public records ... is constitutionally protected” is based on Cox Broadcasting Corp v Cohn, 420 US 469; 95 S Ct 1029; 43 L Ed 2d 328 (1975), in which the accurate identity of a victim of a sexual assault was secured from an official report and was, therefore, privileged from invasion of privacy liability. This argument is misplaced because the authority supports a constitutional defense of truth and absence of fault, rather than, as alleged here, a defense of privilege in the face of an alleged defamatory publication.
In Arber v Stahlin, 382 Mich 300; 170 NW2d 45 (1969), we held that the existence of "actual malice,” defined as knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard of the truth, is a question of fact. Since we are abandoning the former common-law qualified public-interest privilege, it is unnecessary in this case to make any distinction between the constitutional and common-law definitions of malice. See Peisner v Detroit Free Press, 421 Mich 125, 137, n 12; 364 NW2d 600 (1984) (Peisner II).
We take special care to articulate the exact questions before us in response to hyperbolical statements of defendant and amicus curiae as to the effect of the judgment of the Court of Appeals. (E.g., "Rather, the plaintiffs libel case is ultimately premised on the theory that the Enquirer & News may be held liable to the plaintiff for accurately reporting his arrest because the plaintiff was not ultimately found guilty of the crimes for which he was arrested.”)
In short, the Court of Appeals held that a news organization that accurately reports on a person’s arrest, the felony charges brought against that person, and the reasons for the arrest and charge is subject to a defamation action over that accurate reporting unless the person is ultimately proven to be guilty of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. [Amicus brief in support of defendant-appellant by the Evening News Association, Detroit Free Press, Inc., and WXYZ, Inc.]
It was our last treatment of the subject, except for a brief reference to it in Peisner v Detroit Free Press, 421 Mich 125; 364 NW2d 600 (1984) (Peisner II), discussed below.
In Lawrence, only three justices signed the majority opinion. The remaining three participating justices concurred in the result only.
In contrast to Justice Boyle, we do not believe that Lawrence applied the fair-comment privilege. Lawrence is generally cited as, and we also find it to be, the most recent articulation of the public-interest privilege by this Court.
The "fair comment” privilege must be distinguished from the public-interest privilege at issue here. Although federal courts applying Michigan law have sometimes confused the fair-comment privilege with the qualified public-interest privilege, see, e.g., Schultz v Reader’s Digest Ass’n, 468 F Supp 551, 562 (ED Mich, 1979); Orr v Argus-Press Co, 586 F2d 1108, 1111 (CA 6, 1978), the fair-comment privilege "is involved only where the matter complained of is comment, as distinguished from statement of fact.” Harper & James, supra, § 5.26, p 449.
The principle of "fair comment” affords legal immunity for the honest expression of opinion on matters of legitimate public interest when based upon a true or privileged statement of fact. [Id., § 5.28, p 456.]
The defendant’s article about Mr. Rouch was a factual report, not an expression of opinion.
We obviously disagree with Justice Boyle’s belief that the fair-comment privilege is somehow part of the public-interest privilege. See post, p 210. It is a completely separate privilege which is inapplicable to this case and is unaffected by the analysis advanced here. Our finding that the public-interest privilege has been partially subsumed in the constitutional privilege, and is no longer necessary in Michigan, has no bearing on the continuing viability of other common-law privileges not addressed here.
Whether the Michigan public-interest cases were limited to public-official plaintiffs is discussed below.
Although Bacon, supra, involved a private-person plaintiff, it is questionable whether in that case a "public interest” privilege was applied. Rather, the privilege that protected the defendant personnel agent in Bacon may be termed a "shared interest” privilege, which is founded on the need to share information about private persons in commercial or other relationships.
But see the text at n 11: plaintiffs in the cited cases were all public persons.
Arizona:
Peagler v Phoenix Newspapers, Inc, 114 Ariz 309; 560 P2d 1216 (1977);
Arkansas:
Dodrill v Arkansas Democrat Co, 265 Ark 628; 590 SW2d 840 (1979), cert den 444 US 1076 (1980);
District of Columbia:
Phillips v Evening Star Newspaper Co, 424 A2d 78 (DC App, 1980), cert den 451 US 989 (1981);
Florida:
Miami Herald Publishing Co v Ane, 423 So 2d 376 (Fla App, 1982);
Hawaii:
Cahill v Hawaiian Paradise Park Corp, 56 Hawaii 522; 543 P2d 1356 (1975);
Illinois:
Troman v Wood, 62 Ill 2d 184; 340 NE2d 292 (1975);
Kansas:
Gobin v Globe Publishing Co, 216 Kan 223; 531 P2d 76 (1975);
Kentucky:
McCall v Courier-Journal & Louisville Times Co, 623 SW2d 882 (Ky, 1981), cert den 456 US 975 (1982);
Louisiana:
Wilson v Capital City Press, 315 So 2d 393 (La App, 1975);
Maryland:
Jacron Sales Co, Inc v Sindorf, 276 Md 580; 350 A2d 688 (1976);
Massachusetts:
Stone v Essex Co Newspapers, Inc, 367 Mass 849; 330 NE2d 161 (1975);
New Hampshire:
McCusker v Valley News, 121 NH 258; 428 A2d 493 (1981), cert den 454 US 1017 (1981);
New Mexico:
Marchiondo v Brown, 98 NM 394; 649 P2d 462 (1982);
*189Ohio:
Thomas H Maloney & Sons, Inc v E W Scripps Co, 43 Ohio App 2d 105; 334 NE2d 494 (1974), cert den 423 US 883 (1975);
Oklahoma:
Martin v Griffin Television, Inc, 549 P2d 85 (Okla, 1976);
South Carolina:
Jones v Sun Publishing Co, 278 SC 12; 292 SE2d 23 (1982), cert den 459 US 944 (1982);
Tennessee:
Memphis Publishing Co v Nichols, 569 SW2d 412 (Tenn, 1978);
Texas:
Foster v Laredo Newspapers, Inc, 541 SW2d 809 (Tex, 1976), cert den 429 US 1123 (1977);
Utah:
Seegmiller v KSL, Inc, 626 P2d 968 (Utah, 1981);
Virginia:
Gazette, Inc v Harris, 229 Va 1; 325 SE2d 713 (1985), cert den sub nom Fleming v Moore, 472 US 1032 (1985), sub nom Port Packet Corp v Lewis, 473 US 905 (1985);
Washington:
Taskett v King Broadcasting Co, 86 Wash 2d 439; 546 P2d 81 (1976);
West Virginia:
Havalunch, Inc v Mazza, 294 SE2d 70 (W Va App, 1982);
Wisconsin:
Denny v Mertz, 106 Wis 2d 636; 318 NW2d 141 (1982), cert den 459 US 883 (1982).
Mississippi:
Brewer v Memphis Publishing Co, 626 F2d 1238 (CA 5, 1980), cert den 452 US 962 (1981);
Pennsylvania:
Mathis v Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc, 455 F Supp 406 (ED Pa, 1978).
Alaska:
Gay v Williams, 486 F Supp 12 (Alas, 1979) (construing Alaska law);
California:
Rollenhagen v City of Orange, 116 Cal App 3d 414; 172 Cal Rptr 49 (1981);
Colorado:
Diversified Management, Inc v Denver Post, Inc, 653 P2d 1103 (Colo, 1982);
Walker v Colorado Springs Sun, Inc, 188 Colo 86; 538 P2d 450 (1975);
Indiana:
AAFCO Heating & Air Conditioning Co v Northwest Publications, Inc, 162 Ind App 671; 321 NE2d 580 (1974), cert den 424 US 913 (1976).
See Anno: State constitutional protection of allegedly defamatory statements regarding private individuals, 33 ALR4th 212, for a detailed discussion of the states’ application of the various fault standards.
Section 580B of 3 Restatement of Torts, 2d, is in keeping with the majority rule. It provides:
580B. Defamation of Private Person
One who publishes a false and defamatory communication concerning a private person, or concerning a public official or public figure in relation to a purely private matter not affecting his conduct, fitness or role in his public capacity, is subject to liability, if, but only if, he
(a) knows that the statement is false and that it defames the other,
(b) acts in reckless disregard of these matters, or
(c) acts negligently in failing to ascertain them. [Emphasis added.]
The Michigan Constitution provides:
Every person may freely speak, write, express and publish his views on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of such right; and no law shall be enacted to restrain or abridge the liberty of speech or of the press. [Const 1963, art 1, § 5. Emphasis added.]
We have not been asked to find a standard under the Michigan Constitution higher than that provided in Gertz.
One of those policies was the perceived threat of self-censorship by the media. However, Justice White has observed that that threat is much less a potential cause for concern when the reputation of private citizens is at stake.
Some members of the Court seem haunted by fears of self-censorship by the press and of damage judgments that will threaten its financial health. But technology has immeasurably increased the power of the press to do both good and evil. Vast communication combines have been built into profitable ventures. My interest is not in protecting the treasuries of communicators but in implementing the First Amendment by insuring that effective communication which is essential to the continued functioning of our free society. I am not aware that self-*198censorship has caused the press to tread too gingerly in reporting "news” concerning private citizens and private affairs or that the reputation of private citizens has received inordinate protection from falsehood. I am not convinced that we must fashion a constitutional rule protecting a whole range of damaging falsehoods and so shift the burden from those who publish to those who are injured. [Rosenbloom, supra, p 60 (White J., concurring).]
As noted supra, in n 13, this conclusion has no effect on other recognized common-law privileges in Michigan.
If We were writing on a clean slate and ours were a constitutional mission, we might well be persuaded by the logic of the Rosenbloom standard. We note, for instance, that under the Gertz standard a public person receives no protection from a defamation relative to the person’s private life, but a private person may be able to take advantage of the protective law of libel when there may be a public issue at stake. See Smolla, Let the author beware: The rejuvenation of the American law of libel, 132 U Pa L R l (1983).
See Boorstin, The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America (Magnolia, Mass: Peter Smith, Inc, 1984), for analysis of this modern phenomenon.
One author has lamented the fact that as the courts have placed *202more barriers to tort recovery for publications there nonetheless has been an increase in the number of libel actions brought against media defendants and a corresponding increase in the number and value of verdicts. See Smolla, supra. We would only observe that while such a phenomenon could indicate a lack of adequate protection in the law, we also know that litigants and juries often send warning signals regarding a need to redress grievances or injuries not otherwise tended to in society.
The late Theodore H. White, reporter and historian, in his book, In Search of History: A Personal Adventure (New York: Harper & Row, Inc, 1978), p 206, spoke of "the power of the press to set the agenda of public discussion.”
As defendant points out, the "details” given in the instant article were those which formed the probable cause necessary for making the arrest. Since the constitutional rule regarding burden of falsity emanates from First Amendment policies favoring a free and open society, the basis of an arrest would clearly fall within the definition of public interest.
Although Gertz rejects the public-interest privilege of Rosenbloom, it did not address the burden of proof of falsity issue. Philadelphia Newspapers, 89 L Ed 2d 792, characterized Gertz as a "private person/issue of public concern” case.