2023 IL App (1st) 211526
No. 1-21-1526
Opinion filed: May 8, 2023
First Division
____________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
____________________________________________________________________________
MAURO GLORIOSO, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of
) Cook County, Illinois
Plaintiff-Appellee, )
) No. 2021 L 000090
v. )
) The Honorable
SUN-TIMES MEDIA HOLDINGS, LLC, and ) Patricia O’Brien Sheahan,
TIM NOVAK, ) Judge Presiding.
)
Defendants-Appellants. )
JUSTICE PUCINSKI delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Hyman and Coghlan concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Plaintiff-appellee Mauro Glorioso filed a complaint alleging defamation per quod,
defamation per se, false light invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress
arising from two sets of articles published in print and online in the Chicago Sun-Times and written
by Tim Novak. Defendants-appellants Sun-Times Media Holdings, LLC, and Tim Novak
(collectively “Sun-Times”) filed what are essentially three pretrial motions: (1) a March 5, 2021,
motion to dismiss pursuant to section 2-619.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure 735 ILCS 5/2-619.1
and a July 28, 2021, combined motion to (2) reconsider the denial of their section 2-619.1 motion
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to dismiss, or (3) in the alternative, to dismiss pursuant to the Citizen Participation Act (Act) (735
ILCS 110/1 et seq. (West 2020)).
¶2 At issue in the (1) motion to dismiss and the (2) reconsideration argument of the subsequent
combined motion are Glorioso’s claims of defamation per quod, defamation per se, false light
invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
¶3 At issue in the (3) alternative motion to dismiss pursuant to the Act is whether Glorioso’s
defamation suit is an impermissible retaliatory “Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation”
or “SLAPP” as defined by the Act.
¶4 The circuit court dismissed Glorioso’s claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress
but denied all remaining portions of the Sun-Times’s motions.
¶5 For the reasons that follow, we affirm the circuit court’s May 25, 2021, denial of (1) the
motion to dismiss as to the defamation per quod, defamation per se, and false light invasion of
privacy and agree with the court that these issues have met the requirements to survive the pleading
stage. We remand those issues to the circuit court with no prediction or comment on the outcome.
¶6 For the reasons that follow, we also affirm the circuit court’s October 29, 2021, order
denying (2) the motion to reconsider or (3), in the alternative, to dismiss the lawsuit under the Act
and find that the underlying suit is not a SLAPP.
¶7 I. BACKGROUND
¶8 The underlying matter arises from a January 5, 2021, defamation suit filed by Glorioso
against the Sun-Times, alleging counts of defamation per quod, defamation per se¸ false light
invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress over two articles published by
the Chicago Sun-Times on their website and print newspaper on February 7, 2020; February 9,
2020; October 9, 2020; and October 11, 2020. The articles reported on an investigation by the
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Illinois Office of Executive Inspector General (OEIG) into the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board
(PTAB or Board) and its handling of the 2011 property tax appeal of the Trump International Hotel
and Tower (Trump Tower) in Cook County, Illinois. On November 13, 2019, an anonymous
whistleblower filed a complaint with the OEIG (OEIG Complaint), naming several individuals at
PTAB and alleging that the Trump Tower tax assessment was severely reduced for politically
motivated reasons.
¶9 A. The OEIG Complaint
¶ 10 The November 13, 2019, OEIG Complaint lists five individuals against whom the
complaint was brought: Steven Waggoner, Mauro Glorioso, Katherine Patti, Simeon Nockov, and
Jennifer Vesely. At the time of the activities alleged in the OEIG Complaint, Waggoner was the
acting executive director of PTAB and its chief administrative law judge (ALJ). Glorioso was the
chairman of PTAB and became the executive director of PTAB on March 27, 2019. The executive
director oversees the day-to-day operations of PTAB, including its ALJs, and may review appeals
and recommend decisions. Patti, Nockov, and Vesely were PTAB ALJs. ALJs conduct hearings
and prepare written decisions on property tax assessment appeals, but PTAB makes the final
determination based on a majority vote of its members.
¶ 11 According to the OEIG Complaint, ALJs Patti, Nockov, and Vesely worked together
handling the Trump Tower property tax appeal between 2017 and 2018. Nockov, with the help of
Patti and Vesely, wrote a decision finding that the property did not warrant a property tax
reduction. On January 31, 2018, he entered the decision into PTAB’s database, which meant that
the decision was ready for presentation to the appointed members of the Board for approval.
¶ 12 The OEIG complaint alleges that Nockov told various PTAB employees that shortly after
he entered his decision on the Trump Tower appeal, Glorioso told Waggoner that he wanted a
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large reduction in the assessment of Trump Tower because the owner of the property was the
president of the United States. Waggoner then allegedly told Nockov to withdraw his decision and
rewrite it to grant a large assessment reduction because the president was the owner and to “Make
America Great Again.” 1 Nockov withdrew his decision and, again with the assistance of Patti and
Vesely, rewrote the decision so that it granted a reduction in the property tax assessment. Nockov
entered the new decision into PTAB’s database on June 29, 2018. However, according to the
complaint, Waggoner had the decision withdrawn later the same day. Waggoner then allegedly
took over handling the appeal himself, entering a third draft of the decision into the PTAB database
on April 29, 2019, now granting a reduction of several million dollars on the Trump Tower
property tax assessment, which was allegedly more in line with what Glorioso sought from
Waggoner. However, Nockov allegedly confirmed that Glorioso had Waggoner pull this draft as
well because he felt it was not the right time to publish the decision; the decision was pulled from
the database on May 7, 2019. The OEIG Complaint concludes by stating that, as of the time of
filing the complaint, no written decision on the Trump Tower property tax assessment had been
issued.
¶ 13 The allegations specific to Glorioso accuse him of telling Chief ALJ Waggoner that he
wanted a large reduction in the Trump Tower assessment because the owner was the president;
Waggoner describing Glorioso’s justification as the owner being the president and to “Make
America Great Again”; Waggoner finding that the large reduction Glorioso sought was warranted;
and Glorioso deciding to pull the decision granting the reduction because he felt the timing was
not right.
It is unclear from the OEIG Complaint whether the “he” who wanted the reduction because it
1
was for the president and “to Make America Great Again” refers to Waggoner or Glorioso.
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¶ 14 The Sun-Times learned of the OEIG Complaint when an anonymous source delivered a
copy of the complaint to Sun-Times investigative reporter Tim Novak on or around December 23,
2019. Novak served PTAB with a request, pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) (5
ILCS 140/1 et seq. (West 2018)), to obtain all communications between PTAB and OEIG relating
to the 2011 Trump Tower property tax appeal; the request was denied on January 21, 2020.
Glorioso was named in the response from PTAB as one of the individuals who determined that the
documents requested were exempt from FOIA; he was identified as the PTAB executive director
and general counsel.
¶ 15 B. The OEIG Investigation
¶ 16 OEIG opened an investigation based on the allegations of the OEIG Complaint in 2019,
captioned In re: Mauro Glorioso, Case No. 19-02400. While he was unable to receive confirmation
of the investigation from his FOIA request, Novak received an e-mail statement from Emily
Bittner, the communications director for the governor of Illinois, which stated:
“The administration is determined to get to the bottom of what happened in this situation,
and will ensure that a thorough investigation is conducted. PTAB should take no action
until an investigation is complete. In general, it would be entirely inappropriate for a legal
decision on a property tax appeal to be impacted by any of the conduct alleged in this
complaint, including the allegations of political motivations improperly driving the
decision making.”
¶ 17 The Executive Ethics Commission of the State of Illinois published a redacted version of
the OEIG final report in In re: Mauro Glorioso (OEIG Final Report) on September 23, 2021. The
OEIG final report confirmed that Glorioso had been under investigation, but redacted all
information relating to the OEIG Complaint on the basis that OEIG found the allegations to be
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unfounded. However, it also included information about a second complaint, received on October
15, 2020, which alleged that on October 5, 2020, Glorioso improperly deleted all of his e-mails
relating to the 2011 Trump Tower property tax appeal, as well as additional related files on his
PTAB computer and from office-wide computer systems. OEIG found that Glorioso had been
notified through various means in February of 2020 about a document hold requiring him to retain
all documents and electronically stored information relating to the 2011 Trump Tower appeal until
instructed that the document hold was over.
¶ 18 Based on the investigation, OEIG Final Report found that Glorioso violated PTAB policy,
directives, and state law relating to the maintenance of records by deleting PTAB files and e-mails.
Glorioso was terminated from his position on September 23, 2020. On October 5, 2020, PTAB
announced internally that Glorioso would leave the agency on October 23, 2020. However, due to
the aforementioned misconduct, that date was moved up to October 14, 2020. As Glorioso was no
longer employed by the State, OEIG recommended that a copy of its report be placed in his
employment file and that he not be rehired by the State.
¶ 19 On June 8, 2021, PTAB issued a unanimous Final Administrative Decision on the 2011
Trump Tower appeal, finding that a reduction of $2,167,996 in the valuation of the property was
warranted.
¶ 20 C. The Sun-Times’s Reporting on Glorioso
¶ 21 On February 7, 2020, the Chicago Sun-Times published on its website an article written by
Novak, titled “President’s Chicago Tax Appeal on Trump Tower Is Under Investigation,” with the
subheading of “State inspector general, Pritzker administration are looking into allegation a
Republican state agency head pressured staff to slash by $1M the $2.5M in property taxes Donald
Trump paid in 2012.” Tim Novak, President’s Chicago Tax Appeal on Trump Tower Is Under
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Investigation, Chicago Sun-Times (Feb. 7, 2020), https://chicago.suntimes.com/2020/2/7/
21126855/donald-trump-tower-chicago-property-tax-appeal-investigation [https://perma.cc/
5VEN-YCLQ]. The article states that OEIG was investigating Glorioso based on an anonymous
complaint that Glorioso pressured his staff to rule in Trump’s favor on his 2012 Trump Tower tax
appeal, rejecting his staff’s decision to deny Trump any refund. Id. It describes Glorioso as a
“Republican attorney from Westchester.” Id. The article further states that the Sun-Times filed a
public records request with PTAB for “correspondence among the inspector general, Glorioso,
chief PTAB administrative law judge Steven Waggoner and hearing officer Simeon Nockov.” Id.
The article also quotes Bittner’s statement to Novak, as well as stating that PTAB rejected the Sun-
Times’ FOIA request and Glorioso and Waggoner declined to comment. Id. It also states that OEIG
would not confirm whether it had received a complaint regarding Glorioso and Trump’s appeal
and that Governor Pritzker’s staff would not confirm that a complaint had been filed “against
Glorioso and four members of Glorioso’s staff.” On February 9, 2020, the Sun-Times republished
the article in its print edition.
¶ 22 On October 9, 2020, the Chicago Sun-Times published on its website another article by
Novak regarding Glorioso, this one titled “Pritzker Dumps Official Who Pushed for Trump to Get
$1 Million Refund on Chicago Tower’s Taxes.” Tim Novak, Pritzker Dumps Official Who Pushed
for Trump to Get $1 Million Refund on Chicago Tower’s Taxes, Chicago Sun-Times (Oct. 9, 2020)
https://chicago.suntimes.com/2020/10/9/21509933/trump-tower-chicago-property-tax-dispute-
pritzker-mauro-glorioso-illinois-property-tax-appeal-board [https://perma.cc/MSV5-UZ3M]. The
subheading reads, “Mauro Glorioso, a Westchester Republican the governor appointed to head the
Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board, is under a state investigation over his Trump Tower
recommendation.” Id. The article states that Glorioso was under investigation for “trying to force
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a state agency to give President Donald J. Trump a refund of more than $1 million on the property
taxes he paid on his Chicago skyscraper.” The article further states that the investigation was based
on an anonymous complaint claiming that Glorioso “ordered the agency to approve the $1 million
payout for Trump, rejecting a staff report that found no valid reason to support the refund.” Id.
Another quote from the article claims that “[a]ny tax refund for Trump would come out of property
taxes to the city of Chicago and eight other government agencies, the Chicago Public Schools
losing the biggest chunk of money: more than $540,000 if the president gets what Glorioso wants.”
Id. The article also describes Glorioso and his actions as follows: “The 64-year-old Westchester
resident and staunch Republican rejected a report from hearing officer Simeon Nockov, who found
that Trump didn’t merit a refund ***.” Id. The article also notes that Waggoner had found Trump
to be entitled to a refund because the Trump Tower property had been over-assessed in 2011 and
recommended a reduced valuation of the property, which would result in a reduction in property
taxes from $2.5 million to $1,031,350. The Sun-Times republished the article in its print edition
on October 11, 2020.
¶ 23 D. The Defamation Suit
¶ 24 Glorioso filed his defamation suit against the Sun-Times and Novak on January 5, 2021,
alleging, across nine counts, defamation per quod, defamation per se¸ false light invasion of
privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress against both parties. The two counts of
defamation per quod relate specifically to the February 7 and 9 articles, while the two counts of
defamation per se relate specifically to the October 9 and 11 articles. The remaining causes of
action relate to all of the articles.
¶ 25 Regarding the defamation per quod counts, Glorioso claims that Novak, having received a
copy of the OEIG Complaint, wrote the February 7, 2020, article, knowing that it was materially
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false, specifically because the complaint did not state that Glorioso “pressured his staff to cut the
president a break”; “pressured his staff to rule in the president’s favor” or “reject *** the [PTAB]
staff’s [and hearing officer’s] decision to deny Trump any refund”; or directed that the adjudication
of the Trump Tower property tax appeal be driven by political motivations, rather than the merits
of the case. Glorioso also claims that Novak knew that in 2018, when he allegedly told Waggoner
that he wanted the president to be awarded a refund, Glorioso had not yet been appointed executive
director and general counsel of PTAB, and, as then-chairman of the PTAB Board, he had no direct
authority over PTAB hearing officers. Glorioso further claims that Novak knowingly and falsely
depicted Glorioso as
“(i) taking wrongful action and using his authority solely for political purposes, unrelated
to the merits of the Trump Tower real estate tax appeal; (ii) preventing a hearing officer’s
decision from becoming finalized and published pursuant to those unethical motives; and
(iii) demanding a politically-based result in the PTAB appeal, unrelated to the merits of the
case.”
Glorioso further alleged that Novak knowingly and falsely depicted him as a corrupt political
official, lacking integrity in his profession. He denies having directed that the initial decision
submitted by ALJ Nockov on January 31, 2018, be rejected or that a finding in favor of Trump
Tower and refunding more than $1 million be substituted in its place. Glorioso claims that, as a
result of the publication of these false statements, he suffered special damages in the form of the
loss of his employment as executive director and general counsel of PTAB—and the salary and
benefits that came with the position—as well as damage to his reputation, humiliation, anxiety,
and other mental distress.
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¶ 26 Regarding the October 2020 articles, Glorioso alleges that they constitute defamation
per se because the statements contained in the online article and its reprint were published with
actual malice and portray Glorioso as lacking integrity in his profession. He cites specifically to
the articles’ stating that he “pushed for” and “tried to force a state agency to give” then-President
Trump a $1 million refund on the Trump Tower property tax and that he was under state
investigation for his Trump Tower recommendation, both of which Glorioso denies in his
complaint. He further claims that the articles falsely characterize the OEIG Complaint as having
alleged that Glorioso ordered PTAB to “approve the $1 million payout for Trump, rejecting a staff
report that found no valid reason to support the refund on the tax bill for the Trump International
Hotel and Tower’s hotel and commercial space” and that the Sun-Times and Novak knew that the
complaint did not make such allegations. He repeats the claims from counts I and II that the
defendants were aware that Glorioso did not have the authority to direct any result in the Trump
Tower appeal at the time of the alleged conduct and that the defendants distorted the contents of
the OEIG Complaint in order to falsely depict Glorioso as having directed a result in a property
tax appeal “solely for corrupt and political purposes, unrelated to the merit of the case.” He
similarly contends that the defendants used his anticipated termination and statements that he was
a “staunch Republican” to distort the actions alleged in the OEIG Complaint as having been
politically motivated and corrupt. Additionally, Glorioso claims that the articles’ false statements
that the money Glorioso wanted to save then-President Trump “would come out of property taxes
to the city of Chicago and eight other government agencies, the Chicago Public Schools losing the
biggest chunk of the money” implied that his actions jeopardized much-needed funding for
Chicago’s public schools.
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¶ 27 Glorioso next alleges four counts of false light invasion of privacy, for both online articles
and their reprints, on the basis that they falsely accused him of conduct showing a lack of integrity
as executive director and general counsel of PTAB, which publicly depicted him in a false light.
Finally, he alleges a count of intentional infliction of emotional distress, claiming that the
statements the defendants published about him were extreme and outrageous, that defendants knew
there was a high probability of him suffering extreme emotional distress over their publication,
and that he did in fact suffer such distress.
¶ 28 E. Sun-Times’s Pretrial Motions
¶ 29 1. March 5, 2021, Motion to Dismiss
¶ 30 On March 5, 2021, the Sun-Times moved to dismiss Glorioso’s complaint pursuant to
section 2-619.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-619.1 (West 2020)), arguing that
the statements contained in the articles were substantially true, as to both the factual assertions and
figurative or conditional language describing the gist of the investigation against Glorioso. The
Sun-Times further argued that Glorioso, as a public official, failed to plead actual malice with clear
and convincing evidence of the defendants’ deliberate or reckless disregard of the truth, or that the
Sun-Times’s reporting on a public official was highly offensive, extreme, and outrageous conduct.
With respect to the claims of defamation per quod and related derivative counts, they argued that
Glorioso had failed to make a prima facie showing of pecuniary special damages because there
was no causal connection between Glorioso’s firing and the Sun-Times’s reporting on an
investigation of which the governor was already aware. The Sun-Times further argued that the
counts relating to defamation per se should be dismissed because the Sun-Times’s reporting was
conditioned on the outcome of an official investigation, which subjected it to the innocent
construction rule. As to the derivative counts of false light invasion of property and intentional
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infliction of emotional distress, the Sun-Times argued that they failed because the defamation
claims failed.
¶ 31 Additionally, the Sun-Times attached a declaration from Timothy Novak (Novak
Declaration), the OEIG Complaint, the Bittner statement, and several e-mails. The e-mails, which
the Sun-Times received from Novak’s FOIA request, include a February 8, 2020, message from
Glorioso to PTAB where he referred to the OEIG Complaint as containing allegations that he had
sought a desired result in the Trump Tower appeal based on political bias. They also include e-
mails between, variously, Glorioso, Waggoner, Nockov, and others regarding the 2012 Trump
Tower appeal. Among those e-mails, the exchanges include: Waggoner telling Nockov on June
29, 2018, to wait on submitting his decision for review until Waggoner checked with Glorioso how
he wanted it to proceed; Glorioso telling Waggoner on November 12, 2019, that he had reviewed
the Trump Tower decision and agreed with the determination of value; and an e-mail from
Glorioso to himself on February 8, 2020, listing ideas for a “letter of support for staff by board of
directors” that included a denial of him having directed a particular result in the Trump Tower
appeal and of having political bias, assurances that the decision was decided on the merits, and the
allegations in the OEIG complaint that Glorioso sought a desired result based on political bias
lacked merit.
¶ 32 The Novak Declaration states that he received a copy of the OEIG complaint and read that
it accused Glorioso of telling Waggoner that he wanted a large reduction in the 2011 Trump Tower
assessment because the owner was the president, that Glorioso perpetrated acts of prohibited
political activities and conflicts of interest, that the reduction was for political reasons, and that
Glorioso participated in the scheme. Novak further wrote that he submitted a FOIA request to
PTAB and sought comment from PTAB, OEIG, the Office of the Governor, and Glorioso before
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reporting on the complaint, including the complaint’s request for an investigation. He received
only the Bittner statement, which came from the governor’s office. PTAB also issued an official
statement prior to the publication of the Sun-Times articles, which Novak quoted in the October
articles. The statement said that PTAB would continue the Trump Tower appeal until OEIG had
completed its investigation, and PTAB would not discuss the merits until such time. Novak also
noted that he reported in October that there was a potential explanation for PTAB staff replacing
Nockov’s original decision that was not politically motivated—that Waggoner based his
recommendation of a reduced assessment on vacant storefronts on the property and the fact that
interested agencies failed to object to the appeal. Novak further wrote that while he was writing
the articles, he did not receive any information that contradicted any of his reporting or that would
otherwise inform him that any factual statement he wrote was not true. Additionally, he stated that
the contents of e-mails and other documents he received from a second FOIA request to PTAB
after the publication of the articles were consistent with everything he had reported on the OEIG
Complaint and investigation.
¶ 33 The exhibits were submitted to support the Sun-Times’s argument that Glorioso’s
complaint should be dismissed pursuant to section 2-619 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS
5/2-619 (West 2020)) because the articles gave a fair summation of information obtained from
governmental and public proceedings on a matter of public interest, namely the OEIG Complaint
and investigation. The Sun-Times further argued that the exhibits negate actual malice because the
OEIG complaint that Novak based his reporting on did accuse Glorioso of prohibited politically
motivated activities, as described in the articles, and the governor’s office confirmed that there
was an investigation into those accusations.
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¶ 34 The circuit court granted in part and denied in part the motion to dismiss on May 25, 2021.
The only count that was dismissed was the claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress, as
the court agreed with the Sun-Times that Glorioso had failed to allege specific facts to support his
claim.
¶ 35 As to the defamation per quod counts, the circuit court found that a reasonable jury could
find that the statements from the February 2020 articles that Glorioso took issue with in his
complaint were not substantially true because the jury could find that the Sun-Times exaggerated
the scope of the investigation and the degree of Glorioso’s authority over PTAB’s deliberative
process, thus presenting the “gist” or “sting” of the OEIG Complaint’s accusations against
Glorioso, specifically, worse than they actually were. The circuit court also noted that the Sun-
Times presented the reporting not as opinion pieces, but as news. In particular, the court identified
three statements published in the Sun-Times that Glorioso claimed to be false and defamatory:
(1) that he was under investigation for pressuring his staff to give the president a break and rule in
his favor in his property tax appeal, (2) that he rejected the ALJ’s original decision to not award
any refund, and (3) that he directed that a legal decision in the Trump Tower appeal be driven by
political motivations, rather than the merits of the case.
¶ 36 The circuit court noted that Bittner’s statement on behalf of the governor, that his office
“will ensure that a thorough investigation” is conducted, did not confirm that Glorioso in particular
was being investigated, or the scope and subject of any investigation into the allegations in the
OEIG Complaint. The court took issue with what it deemed to be misleading statements in the
articles that exaggerated Glorioso’s alleged involvement in the purported scheme to reduce the
then-president’s property taxes because the actual OEIG Complaint merely stated that Glorioso
supposedly told Waggoner he wanted a large reduction in the assessment because the owner was
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the president, and that Nockov confirmed that Waggoner found the property to warrant a large,
multi-million assessment reduction, “consistent with Glorioso’s directive.” The complaint did not
accuse Glorioso of having been in charge of writing or revising a decision on the appeal, of
instructing or pressuring any PTAB employees to rewrite the initial decision, or of having any
administrative authority over PTAB employees, all of which were actually attributed to Waggoner.
Ultimately, the court denied the Sun-Times’s motion to dismiss the counts of defamation per quod
on the grounds of substantial truth because it found that the ordinary reader could interpret the
February 2020 articles as making factual assertions that Glorioso was specifically being
investigated for abusing his authority over PTAB staff, and a reasonable jury could find that this
was not an accurate reflection of the allegations in the OEIG Complaint.
¶ 37 As for the defamation per se counts, the circuit court similarly determined that a reasonable
jury could find that the October 2020 articles’ statements that Glorioso was “under investigation
over his Trump Tower recommendation” and “trying to force [PTAB] to give President Donald J.
Trump a refund of more than $1 million” and that he had “exerted pressure to force” and “ordered”
PTAB to give a refund of more than $1 million, rejecting a staff report that found no valid reason
to do so, were not substantially true because they exaggerated Glorioso’s alleged involvement in
the scheme. The court determined that it was clear that the defendants’ published statements about
the investigation were not consistent with the “gist” or “sting” of the allegations. The court further
found that an ordinary reader could reasonably interpret the October 2020 articles as a matter of
fact and infer that Glorioso was to blame for the outcome of the Trump Tower appeal, including
the resulting loss of money for various government agencies, in particular Chicago Public Schools,
even though, as Novak even reported, none of these government agencies challenged the appeal.
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¶ 38 Regarding the Sun-Times’s argument that Glorioso failed to sufficiently plead special
damages because he did not allege that the governor read the Sun-Times articles before deciding
to fire him, the circuit court stated that such pleading was not required, and Glorioso did not need
to prove that the articles were the cause of his termination from PTAB at the pleading stage. Having
determined that the articles exaggerated the allegations against Glorioso, the circuit court also
rejected the argument that the investigation itself, rather than the Sun-Times’s reporting on it, was
an intervening cause of Glorioso’s firing.
¶ 39 Finally, the circuit court addressed the Sun-Times’s argument, pursuant to section 2-619
and the supporting Novak declaration, OEIG complaint, and PTAB e-mails. The court rejected the
Sun-Times’s attempt to apply the fair report privilege because it did not apply to statements that
conveyed an erroneous impression to the ordinary reader of the allegations against and
investigation into Glorioso. The court further rejected the Sun-Times’s argument, pursuant to
section 2-619, that the entire complaint should be dismissed because Glorioso failed to plead any
facts supporting the defendants’ actual malice because his pleading that the defendants knew the
statements they published were false or, alternatively, published them with reckless disregard as
to whether they were true or false was sufficient to survive the pleading stage, particularly since
the Sun-Times had failed to convince the court that the fair report privilege or substantial truth
defense applied.
¶ 40 2. July 28, 2021, Motion to Reconsider
¶ 41 On July 28, 2021, the Sun-Times filed a combined motion, part of which contained an
argument for reconsideration of the court’s denial of Sun-Times’s earlier motion to dismiss based
on misapplications of the relevant law. The Sun-Times contended that its reporting was
substantially true, conveying the underlying gist or sting of the contents of the OEIG complaint
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and the resulting investigation, and the Sun-Times did not need to report with perfect accuracy and
exact detail in order to properly argue true and fair reporting as a defense. The Sun-Times argued
that the statements made regarding the investigation and OEIG complaint accurately characterized
the allegations against Glorioso, based on specific quotes from the OEIG Complaint—namely, that
Glorioso personally gave a “directive” to Waggoner to award a reduction for “political reasons”
that constituted “prohibited unethical political activities and conflicts of interest” and that PTAB
staff rewrote Nockov’s original decision “consistent with Glorioso’s directive.” The Sun-Times
contended that the circuit court took the fact that Glorioso, by necessity of how PTAB functions,
needed to direct other PTAB employees to write and enter the opinion granting the reduction as
evidence that Glorioso personally was not as involved in the alleged scheme, as Novak’s reporting
suggested.
¶ 42 The Sun-Times further noted that it used statements of conjecture—that there was an
investigation into whether the allegations in the OEIG Complaint were true—and subjective terms
such as “pushed” and “pressured” to describe the actions attributed to Glorioso. Because of its
argument that its reporting was fair and substantially true, the Sun-Times contended that Glorioso
could not claim actual malice.
¶ 43 Additionally, the Sun-Times asserted that Glorioso could not argue special damages
because the decision to terminate his employment, as well as PTAB’s announcement that he would
be leaving the agency, occurred prior to the Sun-Times publishing any reporting on the OEIG
complaint and the investigation. The Sun-Times further argued that the innocent construction rule
protected even defamatory statements in the articles because (a) reporting on a pending
investigation into whether any misconduct had occurred did not amount to stating that Glorioso
actually did everything attributed to him in the OEIG complaint, (b) the articles offer alternative
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explanations for the tax reduction, that no agencies objected to the appeal and vacant rental spaces
on the property, and (c) statements that Glorioso might have acted with politically biased
motivations did not accuse him of lacking qualifications or competency as executive director and
general counsel of PTAB.
¶ 44 The circuit court denied the motion to reconsider on October 29, 2021, reaffirming its
reasoning from the denial of the Sun-Times’s previous motion to dismiss. In reaffirming that
reasoning, the court identified that the Sun-Times’s underlying reasoning for its arguments that
the articles were substantially true, subject to an innocent construction, and privileged as fair
reports and that the court identified that Glorioso failed to plead special damages with particularity
was that Glorioso could not show falsity because the record showed that he was in fact under
investigation. Addressing the inclusion of the OEIG final report, the circuit court stated that
Glorioso was not alleging that he had not been under investigation over the Trump Tower appeal
and evidence confirming that he had been was not relevant to the Sun-Times’s defenses. Rather,
the court characterized Glorioso’s concern with the articles as pertaining to the implication that
could be drawn from them—that he had specifically been the architect of the scheme or the primary
target of the investigation. To that end, the circuit court again found that a reasonable jury could
find that the gist of the articles was not substantially true and that the articles could not be subject
to an innocent construction because the Sun-Times overstated Glorioso’s involvement in and
authority over PTAB’s deliberative process, pointing to the articles’ singling out of Glorioso by
name, publishing his photo with the reporting, discussing his background and career history, and
implying he was fired for his involvement in the scheme. By contrast, the court continued, the
articles refer to others named in the OEIG complaint as “four members of Glorioso’s staff.” In
reviewing the OEIG complaint, the court determined that the allegations did not suggest that
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Glorioso was the architect of the alleged scheme or highlight Glorioso’s culpability relative to
other named individuals. The court noted that whether the publications were substantially true is a
question of fact and Glorioso’s pleadings were sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss at the
pleading stage. Similarly, the court found that the Sun-Times had not established that the articles
could not be found to convey an erroneous impression to readers and were a fair and accurate
summary of proceedings, thus defeating the Sun-Times’s invocation of the fair report privilege.
The circuit court concluded that the erroneous message of the articles was “a combined product of
Novak’s omission of certain information and Novak’s addition of his own assumption regarding
Glorioso’s relative culpability.”
¶ 45 Regarding whether Glorioso sufficiently pled special damages, the circuit court stated that
the Sun-Times was mistaken that he had to plead that the governor read the articles and decided to
fire Glorioso. Rather, the court reiterated from its prior order that he did not need to prove this at
the pleading stage. It was sufficient that he alleged that he lost his employment as a direct
consequence of the publication of the alleged defamatory articles, which the court again held that
he had.
¶ 46 3. July 28, 2021, Alternative Motion to Dismiss Under the Act
¶ 47 In support of its alternative argument that Glorioso’s complaint should be dismissed
pursuant to the Act, the Sun-Times argued that it was a meritless and retaliatory SLAPP, filed in
retaliation for protected speech on public affairs. The Sun-Times claimed that Glorioso’s suit met
the SLAPP criteria because the same arguments for substantial truth, as well as evidence in the
form of Glorioso’s e-mails showing that he was aware of the contents of the OEIG complaint and
characterized the accusations in line with how the Sun-Times reported on them was proof that
Glorioso knowingly filed a meritless claim. The Sun-Times’s other arguments were that Glorioso
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filed the suit within three months of the publication of the later articles, and before the investigation
concluded, and sought punitive damages for the allegedly meritless claims.
¶ 48 Shortly after briefing on the motion to reconsider or dismiss had closed, on September 23,
2021, the state’s Executive Ethics Commission published the redacted final report of the
investigation, stating that OEIG had found Glorioso to have violated PTAB policies and state law
by deleting PTAB files and e-mails in October 2020, and recommending that he not be rehired by
the State of Illinois. The Sun-Times moved to supplement the record with the OEIG final report,
as further evidence that Glorioso’s suit was a meritless and retaliatory SLAPP, and that the Sun-
Times’s reporting on the investigation as to whether Glorioso had directed a large reduction in the
2011 Trump Tower property tax appeal was true and accurate characterization of events.
¶ 49 In the same October 29, 2021, order denying the motion to reconsider, the circuit court
denied the motion to dismiss the suit as a SLAPP. The court determined that the defendants had
not met their burden of showing that the suit was meritless, beginning with the fact that the court
had previously found Glorioso’s pleadings to be sufficient, when it denied the Sun-Times’s motion
to dismiss. The court reiterated its rejection of the arguments the Sun-Times raised in that motion
and went on to analyze whether the suit was retaliatory, finding that the facts did not reflect
retaliatory intent either.
¶ 50 II. THE PRESENT APPEAL
¶ 51 The Sun-Times now appeals from the denial of its (1) motion to dismiss and combined
motion (2) to reconsider the circuit court’s initial order denying its motion to dismiss, or (3) in the
alternative, to dismiss the suit pursuant to the Act. 2 In its (1) original motion to dismiss, the Sun-
2
The Sun-Times does not discuss the alternative motion to reconsider in its appellants’ brief,
focusing instead on the other argument of its combined motion, the motion to dismiss pursuant to the Act.
The Sun-Times asks this court to reverse the circuit court’s order. However, the arguments that the Sun-
Times made in support of reconsideration in their July 2021 motion, as well as their original arguments to
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Times argues that its reporting was substantially true and subject to an innocent construction and
that Glorioso failed to plead actual malice or special damages.
¶ 52 In arguing for (2) reconsideration, the Sun-Times asserts that the circuit court ignored the
OEIG final report, the Novak declaration, Bittner’s e-mailed statement, and the e-mails received
from Novak’s FOIA request, particularly the e-mail from Glorioso where he characterized the
complaint as alleging that he directed his desired result in the Trump Tower appeal because of
political motivations. The Sun-Times again emphasizes the contents of the OEIG complaint
compared to the statements published by the Sun-Times, arguing that it accurately described the
complaint and investigation. It states that the OEIG complaint did claim that Glorioso, specifically,
directed a politically motivated refund, that Glorioso was investigated based on those allegations,
that Glorioso was fired because he violated state law by deleting records and e-mails, and that the
circuit court ignored all of this in order to find that the Sun-Times should have published a take
that was fairer to Glorioso and focused more on other PTAB staff members who were also
mentioned in the OEIG complaint. This, the Sun-Times argued, amounted to ignoring the facts,
holding the Sun-Times’s reporting to an improperly high degree of scrutiny, and infringing on its
editorial control and judgment in deciding what to publish. Furthermore, the Sun-Times notes that
the articles do report on the involvement of other PTAB staff, notably Waggoner, and do not
impute the entirety of the alleged unethical behavior in the OEIG complaint to Glorioso as the
circuit court claims.
¶ 53 In its (3) motion to dismiss pursuant to the Act, the Sun-Times alternately argues, relying
on the same assertions summarized above, that the articles satisfy the criteria required for
immunity under the Act, and Glorioso’s suit should be dismissed as a SLAPP.
dismiss made in their March 2021 motion to dismiss, overlap with their arguments in support of the Act
immunity. Accordingly we discuss all three motions here.
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¶ 54 III. ANALYSIS
¶ 55 A. Standard of Review
¶ 56 1. Motion to Dismiss
¶ 57 In the Sun-Times’s (1) initial section 2-619.1 motion to dismiss, defendants raised the
arguments that the articles were substantially true and capable of an innocent construction and that
Glorioso failed to plead malice, special damages, or highly offensive, extreme, and outrageous
conduct. A section 2-619.1 motion allows for a combined motion to dismiss under sections 2-615
and 2-619, as well as motions for summary judgment under section 2-1005 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. Johnson v. Matrix Financial Services Corp., 354 Ill. App. 3d 684, 688 (2004); see 735
ILCS 5/2-615, 2-619, 2-1005 (West 2020).
¶ 58 A section 2-615 motion to dismiss presents the question of whether the plaintiff has pled
sufficient facts in the complaint to entitle him to relief if proven. Powell v. American Service
Insurance Co., 2014 IL App (1st) 123643, ¶ 13. In reviewing a dismissal pursuant to section 2-
615, all well-pleaded facts in the complaint are taken as true and are construed in the light most
favorable to the plaintiff. Id. A dismissal pursuant to section 2-615 is only proper where it clearly
appears that no set of facts could be proved under the pleadings that would entitle the plaintiff to
relief. Id.; Casualty Insurance Co. v. Hill Mechanical Group, 323 Ill. App. 3d 1028, 1033 (2001).
A plaintiff cannot simply rely upon conclusions of law or fact unsupported by specific factual
allegations. Powell, 2014 IL App (1st) 123643, ¶ 13; Grund v. Donegan, 298 Ill. App. 3d 1034,
1039 (1998). However, the complaint is to be liberally construed, viewed in the light most
favorable to the plaintiffs. Fox v. Seiden, 382 Ill. App. 3d 288, 294 (2008). The standard of review
for a dismissal under section 2-615 is de novo. Powell, 2014 IL App (1st) 123643, ¶ 13.
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¶ 59 A section 2-619 motion to dismiss admits the legal sufficiency of the complaint but asserts
certain defects or defenses outside the pleadings which defeat the claims. See Porter v. Decatur
Memorial Hospital, 227 Ill. 2d 343, 352 (2008). The section 2-619 motion admits as true all well-
pleaded facts, all reasonable inferences to be drawn from the facts, and the legal sufficiency of the
claim. Id. In addition, all pleadings and supporting documents must be construed in the light most
favorable to the non-moving party. Id. When ruling on a section 2-619 motion to dismiss, the court
may consider pleadings, depositions, and affidavits; facts contained in supporting affidavits that
are not challenged by counter-affidavits are deemed to be true. Goral v. Kulys, 2014 IL App (1st)
133236, ¶ 30. At issue on appeal is the question of “ ‘whether the existence of a genuine issue of
material fact should have precluded the dismissal or, absent such an issue of fact, whether dismissal
is proper as a matter of law.’ ” Sandholm v. Kuecker, 2012 IL 111443, ¶ 55 (quoting Kedzie &
103rd Currency Exchange, Inc. v. Hodge, 156 Ill. 2d 112, 116-17 (1993)). The dismissal of a
section 2-619 motion to dismiss is reviewed de novo. Porter, 227 Ill. 2d at 352.
¶ 60 2. Motion to Reconsider
¶ 61 In their combined motion following the circuit court’s denial of this motion to dismiss,
Defendants sought (2) reconsideration of that denial or, in the alternative, (3) dismissal based on
the Act.
¶ 62 The purpose of a motion to reconsider is to bring to a court’s attention (1) newly discovered
evidence, (2) changes in the law, or (3) errors in the court’s previous application of existing law.
River Plaza Homeowner’s Ass’n v. Healey, 389 Ill. App. 3d 268, 280 (2009). It is not proper to
use a motion to reconsider to raise a new legal theory or factual argument that was available prior
to the hearing on the motion from which the motion to reconsider arises. Id. We use an abuse of
discretion standard for reviewing a trial court’s denial of a motion to reconsider that is based on
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new matters, including additional facts or new legal theories that were not presented during the
prior course of proceedings. Muhammad v. Muhammad-Rahmah, 363 Ill. App. 3d 407, 415 (2006).
When the denial is based only on the trial court’s application of existing law, the standard is
de novo. Id. Here, the Sun-Times’s motion was based on a misapplication of the law, and we
review the court’s denial of the motion to reconsider under the de novo standard.
¶ 63 3. Dismissal Pursuant to the Act
¶ 64 A motion to dismiss a suit as a SLAPP under the Act is raised as a motion pursuant to
section 2-619(a)(9) of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(9) (West 2020)), which
seeks dismissal where the claim is “ ‘barred by other affirmative matter avoiding the legal effect
of or defeating the claim.’ ” Sandholm, 2012 IL 111443 ¶ 54; see also Van Meter v. Darien Park
District, 207 Ill. 2d 359, 367 (2003) (Immunity from tort liability pursuant to statute is an
affirmative matter properly raised in a section 2-619 motion to dismiss.) The question of whether
the suit should have been dismissed pursuant to the Act is a question of statutory construction; as
such, we review the circuit court’s interpretation of the statute de novo. Sandholm, 2012 IL
111443, ¶ 41; Goral, 2014 IL App (1st) 133236 ¶ 31.
¶ 65 B. Sun-Times’s Section 2-619.1 Motion to Dismiss
¶ 66 In its initial section 2-619.1 motion to dismiss, the Sun-Times argued that Glorioso’s counts
of defamation per quod and per se, as well as the related false light invasion of privacy counts,
should be dismissed pursuant to section 2-615 because the articles are substantially true and
because Glorioso failed to plead actual malice or, on the counts of defamation per quod, special
damages.
¶ 67 1. Substantial Truth
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¶ 68 In all of the motions on appeal, the Sun-Times argues that its statements are substantially
true. A defendant who asserts that his statements were substantially true bears the burden of
showing that the “gist” or “sting” of the allegedly defamatory content is true. Ryan v. Fox
Television Stations, Inc., 2012 IL App (1st) 120005, ¶ 28 (citing Gist v. Macon County Sheriff’s
Department, 284 Ill. App. 3d 367, 371 (1996)). When determining the “gist” or “sting” of the
allegedly defamatory statements, the trial court must “ ‘look at the highlight of the article, the
pertinent angle of it, and not to items of secondary importance which are inoffensive details,
immaterial to the truth of the defamatory statement.’ ” Gist, 284 Ill. App. 3d at 371 (quoting Vachet
v. Central Newspapers, Inc., 816 F.2d 313, 316 (7th Cir. 1987)). A statement need not be
“technically accurate in every detail” in order to be substantially true and nonactionable as
defamatory content. Id. While substantial truth is normally a question of fact for the jury, it may
properly be decided as a matter of law if no reasonable jury could find that the statements were
not substantially true. This court reviews such a decision de novo. Id.
¶ 69 The Sun-Times argues that the articles do not deviate from fairly and accurately describing
the accusations made in the OEIG complaint—namely, that Glorioso told Waggoner that he
wanted a reduction in the Trump Tower appeal because the property owner was the president,
Waggoner complied with Glorioso’s directive, Glorioso’s ALJs followed his orders, and
Glorioso’s staff and Waggoner authored a revised report granting the reduction. It claims that the
circuit court erred in finding that the reporting created an implication that Glorioso played a greater
role in the alleged scheme than what was actually written in the OEIG complaint and the “gist” or
“sting” of the statements actually softened the accusations of the whistleblower against Glorioso
by offering potentially legitimate reasons for replacing the original ALJ decision and granting the
appeal, including the vacant storefronts at Trump Tower.
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¶ 70 The key factor upon which the court based both of its denials of the Sun-Times’s substantial
truth and fair report arguments is the articles’ focus on Glorioso, specifically, as the predominant
player in the alleged scheme to grant the Trump Tower property tax appeal for politically
motivated reasons. The court recognized that the articles did not need to be accurate in every single
detail but noted that the reporting must be fair and could not create an erroneous impression to
readers or add the comments or insinuations of the reporter. See Kurczaba v. Pollock, 318 Ill. App.
3d 686, 707-08 (2000).
¶ 71 We agree with the circuit court that the articles’ description of the alleged scheme and the
investigation rose above being merely “not technically accurate in every detail” to containing a
series of omissions and/or misplaced statements that rendered the reporting an unfair summary of
events that downplayed the involvement of anyone besides Glorioso. The articles not only
repeatedly mention Glorioso by name, despite the inclusion of four other individuals in the OEIG
Complaint, but also focus on him in how they frame the reporting on the investigation, including
but not limited to the use of his name in headlines and of his photo alongside the reporting. It is
true that Glorioso was, at the time of the reporting, the executive director and general counsel of
PTAB. However, he did not have the same degree of authority during the alleged events in the
OEIG Complaint, and it could be argued that Waggoner’s role, as chief ALJ, held more authority
for directing a result on a property tax appeal. We note that there is a basis for the circuit court’s
finding that a reasonable reader could believe that Glorioso held more authority, and therefore
bears greater culpability, than he actually did. The gist or sting of these articles could validly be
read as implying that Glorioso had a great deal of authority over the ALJs, beyond what his position
at PTAB at the time actually entailed. The circuit court properly found a number of questions of
fact for the jury to decide.
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¶ 72 As noted above, a reasonable reading of the articles could leave a reader believing that
Glorioso forced the ALJs to act according to his wishes, which goes beyond the accusations against
Glorioso in the OEIG complaint. The circuit court also commented that the October articles in
particular implied that Glorioso was fired for his involvement in the alleged scheme, which the
record shows was not the case. We find that the circuit court’s proposed interpretation of the
articles is one that a finder of fact could reasonably draw from the gist or sting of the Sun-Times’s
statements. At this stage of the litigation, the question of substantial truth is a question of fact,
which should be determined by the jury. Harrison v. Chicago Sun-Times, Inc., 341 Ill. App. 3d
555, 563 (2003).
¶ 73 2. Actual Malice
¶ 74 Regarding actual malice, Sun-Times argued that, as a public official, Glorioso was required
to plead with clear and convincing evidence that the defendants acted with actual malice in
publishing its statements, meaning that they knew the statements were false or made them with a
reckless disregard for the truth. See Kessler v. Zekman, 250 Ill. App. 3d 172, 187-88 (1993).
¶ 75 The circuit court referred to the same reasoning it stated as to why the Sun-Times’s
substantial truth and fair report privilege arguments failed and held that Glorioso sufficiently pled
actual malice and the question of whether the defendants acted with actual malice remained a
factual question that should survive the pleading stage.
¶ 76 3. Special Damages
¶ 77 Finally, the circuit court found that Glorioso sufficiently pled special damages in his
defamation per quod counts by stating that he suffered the loss of his employment as a direct
consequence of the publication of the articles. See Bryson v. News America Publications, Inc., 174
Ill. 2d 77, 104 (1996) (To plead defamation per quod, plaintiff must plead with particularity actual
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pecuniary damages resulting from the defamatory statement.) The Sun-Times argued that Glorioso
could not show that the governor made the decision to fire him after reading the articles. The circuit
court rejected this argument, stating that, at the pleading stage, Glorioso did not need to prove his
claims and that his pleading of the loss of his employment sufficed.
¶ 78 4. Fair Report Privilege
¶ 79 The Sun-Times also argued, pursuant to section 2-619, that the suit should be dismissed
because the Novak declaration and related exhibits supported a defense under the fair report
privilege.
¶ 80 The fair report privilege requires two conditions to be met: (1) the report must be of an
official proceeding and (2) the report must be complete and accurate or a fair abridgement of the
official proceeding. Solaia Technology, LLC v. Specialty Publishing Co., 221 Ill. 2d 558, 588
(2006) (discussing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 611 cmt. a, b (1977).) In order for the privilege
to apply, the report need not be accurate in every single detail, but it cannot omit or misplace any
information in a way that creates an erroneous impression to readers, report on events unfairly and
inaccurately, or add the comments or insinuations of the reporter. See Restatement (Second) of
Torts § 611 cmt. f (1977); Kurczaba, 318 Ill. App. 3d at 707-08 (“The privilege can be lost if the
report is inaccurate or unfair, where the ‘account is discolored or garbled,’ or where comments or
insinuations are added.”)
¶ 81 The parties do not dispute whether the subject matter of the articles involves official
proceedings, and the second factor of the fair report analysis folds into the discussion of whether
the gist or sting of the Sun-Times’s statements constitute fair and accurate reporting on the Trump
Tower appeal and the OEIG Investigation. The court restated its reasoning for determining that the
articles could reasonably be read as substantially true, and we similarly affirm its decision here.
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¶ 82 C. Motion for Reconsideration
¶ 83 In its motion for reconsideration, the Sun-Times argues that the circuit court failed to apply
the rigorous standard required for reviewing defamation cases in its analysis of the Sun-Times’s
arguments as to falsity, actual malice, and special damages. Its arguments are substantially the
same as those discussed above, regarding its initial motion to dismiss. Without making any finding
the merits of the defamation claims, we agree with the circuit court’s dismissal of the Sun-Times’s
motion to dismiss and denial of reconsideration of its decision.
¶ 84 We agree with the circuit court’s rejection of the Sun-Times’s second attempt at invoking
the defenses of substantial truth and the fair report privilege, Sun-Times’s repeated assertion that
Glorioso failed to plead actual malice, and the Sun-Times’s argument that the circuit court
improperly engaged in speculation regarding the pleading of special damages. We find that the
record supports the circuit court’s denial of the original motion to dismiss, thereby allowing
Glorioso’s complaint to survive the pleading stage on the defamation per quod, defamation per se,
and false light invasions of privacy. We affirm its denial of the motion to reconsider.
¶ 85 D. Section 2-619 Motion to Dismiss Pursuant to the Act
¶ 86 The second portion of the Sun-Times’s combined motion presents a section 2-619 motion
to dismiss that raised for the first time an argument under the Act. The legislature enacted the Act
to combat the rise of meritless lawsuits used to retaliate against the defendants’ attempt to
participate in government through exercising their first amendment rights. Ryan, 2012 IL App (1st)
120005 ¶ 12; Sandholm, 2012 IL 111443, ¶¶ 33-34. In the Act, the guiding public policy is
articulated as an interest in “strik[ing] a balance between the rights of persons to file lawsuits for
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injury and the constitutional rights of persons to petition, speak freely, associate freely, and
otherwise participate in government” and “protect[ing] and encourag[ing] public participation in
government to the maximum extent permitted by law.” 735 ILCS 110/5 (West 2020). The Act
provides a defense against such “Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation,” or SLAPPs,
where a defendant engages in “ ‘[a]cts in furtherance of the constitutional rights to petition, speech,
association, and participation in government ***, regardless of intent or purpose, except when not
genuinely aimed at procuring favorable government action, result, or outcome.’ ” Goral¸ 2014 IL
App (1st) 133236 ¶ 32 (quoting 735 ILCS 110/15 (West 2010)). The legislature intended that the
Act “shall be construed liberally to effectuate its purposes and intent fully.” 735 ILCS 110/30(b)
(West 2020). In deciding whether a lawsuit should be dismissed pursuant to the Act, a court must
first determine whether the suit is the type of suit the Act was intended to address. Sandholm, 2012
IL 111443, ¶ 43.
¶ 87 The circuit court, after noting that the Sun-Times should have raised this argument in its
initial section 2-619.1 motion to dismiss, determined that defendants had failed to meet their
burden of showing that the suit should be dismissed as a SLAPP. We agree with the circuit court.
¶ 88 1. SLAPP Elements and Analysis
¶ 89 In Sandholm, our supreme court limited the Act’s application to SLAPPs, which it defined
as lawsuits “solely based on, relating to, or in response to ‘any act or acts of the moving party in
furtherance of the moving party’s rights of petition, speech, association, or to otherwise participate
in government.’ ” (Emphasis in original.) Sandholm, 2012 IL 111443, ¶ 45 (quoting 735 ILCS
110/15 (West 2008)); see also Goral, 2014 IL App (1st) 133236 ¶ 33. If the plaintiff genuinely
seeks “relief for damages for the alleged defamation or intentionally tortious acts of defendants,”
it is not a SLAPP and not subject to dismissal under the Act. Sandholm, 2012 IL 111443, ¶ 45.
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¶ 90 A court considers three factors in determining whether a suit is subject to dismissal under
the Act: (1) whether the defendants’ acts were “ ‘in furtherance of their right to petition, speak,
associate, or otherwise participate in government to obtain favorable government action’ ”;
(2) whether the plaintiff’s claims are solely based on the aforementioned acts; and (3) whether the
plaintiff has shown by clear and convincing evidence that “ ‘the defendants’ acts were not
genuinely aimed at solely procuring favorable government action.’ ” Goral, 2014 IL App (1st)
133236, ¶ 34 (quoting Hammons v. Society of Permanent Cosmetic Professionals, 2012 IL App
(1st) 102644, ¶ 18.) The defendants bear the burden of proving the first two factors in the
affirmative, after which the burden shifts to the plaintiff to establish the third factor. Id. (citing
Garrido v. Arena, 2013 IL App (1st) 120466, ¶ 16.) The second factor has been further broken
down into two prongs, requiring the defendants to show that the suit was both meritless and
retaliatory. Id. ¶ 38.
¶ 91 a. Whether Defendants’ Reporting Was Solely in
Furtherance of Government Participation
¶ 92 The first factor the court considers in analyzing whether a lawsuit is a SLAPP is whether
the actions alleged in the complaint are of the kind protected by the Act. This is the most
straightforward prong. See Garrido, 2013 IL App (1st) 120466, ¶ 17. However, the parties here
dispute whether the Sun-Times’s articles constitute acts in furtherance of government
participation, seeking to procure favorable government action. Both sides draw comparisons to the
facts in Goral in arguing whether the Sun-Times’s reporting on Glorioso was in furtherance of a
right to speak on and participate in government. In that case, the defendant was a blogger who
wrote articles questioning a former political candidate’s eligibility and qualifications in her run for
aldermanic office. Goral, 2014 IL App (1st) 133236, ¶¶ 3-4. The plaintiff conceded that the first
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prong had been met, and we did not find otherwise. Id. ¶ 36; see also Garrido, 2013 IL App (1st)
120466, ¶¶ 5-6, 17 (Defendant’s ads and mailers, accusing a political candidate of corrupt
behavior—of receiving money from a controversial parking meter privatization deal and of
standing to draw two city pensions—were protected speech under the Act.)
¶ 93 i. Sun-Times’s Argument
¶ 94 The Sun-Times equates its critical articles about Glorioso to the critical comments made in
the blog posts in Goral, which we found to be protected political speech that would have been
aimed at procuring favorable government action, even if the action sought was to encourage the
electorate not to elect the plaintiff. Goral, 2014 IL App (1st) 133236, ¶ 63.
¶ 95 The Sun-Times also relies on Ryan. In Ryan, we found that it was “indisputable” that the
defendants’ investigatory reporting fell within protected activity under the Act. Ryan, 2012 IL App
(1st) 120005, ¶ 19. In that case, the defendants aired a four-part investigative series accusing
several Cook County circuit court judges, including the plaintiff, of leaving work early and
generally shirking their judicial duties. Id. ¶¶ 2-8. The Sun-Times compares its reporting on an
official investigation into the acts of PTAB executive director and general counsel Glorioso and
administrative law judges like Waggoner to the reporting on the behavior of judges in Ryan.
¶ 96 ii. Glorioso’s Argument
¶ 97 Glorioso distinguishes both cases, arguing that the statements at issue in Goral merely
questioned the plaintiff’s eligibility and qualifications. It is true that we found in Goral that the
defendant’s statements were reasonably capable of an innocent construction because they were
conditioned on the existence of other facts and did not actually accuse the plaintiff of committing
a crime, thus holding that his statements were not defamatory per se. Goral, 2014 IL App (1st)
133236, ¶ 48. However, here, that is in question due to Glorioso’s argument, with which the circuit
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court agreed, that defendants’ statements could be reasonably construed as going beyond any
innocent reporting on the investigation to defaming Glorioso because the articles are written
around him, specifically, rather than about the investigation more broadly.
¶ 98 Glorioso next distinguishes Ryan on the basis that, in that case, we held that the reports
communicated the findings of the investigation to the public and to the local government and
sought comment and action from the Illinois Supreme Court and the chief judge of the circuit
court. Ryan, 2012 IL App (1st) 120005, ¶ 19. We further quoted from the Act’s public policy
statement to note that it was the legislature’s position that “ ‘[t]he information, reports, opinions,
claims, arguments, and other expressions provided by citizens are vital to effective law
enforcement, the operation of government, *** and the continuation of representative
democracy.’ ” Id. (quoting 735 ILCS 110/5 (West 2010)).
¶ 99 iii. Circuit Court’s Findings
¶ 100 The circuit court did not substantively address this prong in its decision. However, we note
that it previously found, in its May 25, 2021, order on the Sun-Times’s section 2-619.1 motion to
dismiss, that the misrepresentations about the investigation and about Glorioso’s actions,
intentions, and authority—all presented as news rather than opinion—prevented the court from
accepting the Sun-Times’s substantial truth and fair report defenses. This is relevant to the
discussion of whether defendants have established the first prong of the SLAPP analysis as well.
¶ 101 iv. Analysis
¶ 102 There is support in Ryan for the premise that reporting on the actions of a government
agency in order to inform the voting public has value in maintaining a functioning democracy and
operational government. However, the present matter is distinguishable, given the existence of a
genuine question of fact as to whether the articles solely alert the public to the investigation into
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PTAB. The articles were published as news articles—factual reporting on the events of the
investigation, the alleged PTAB scheme, and Glorioso’s firing—as they occurred, rather than
editorial or opinion pieces that present the thoughts and stance of the writer. While news reporting
could include the goal of favorable government action, as we found in Ryan, the facts of this case
do not unquestionably lead us to the same finding. There is, for example, no way for voters to
remove Glorioso, since he was already fired and the head of PTAB is not an elected position. The
articles do not seek comment from the governor’s office or any other government body on the
matters in the reporting. We cannot conclude that the Sun-Times has sufficiently established that
the articles were solely in furtherance of their right to participate in government to obtain favorable
government action.
¶ 103 b. Whether Glorioso’s Claims Are Solely Based on Sun-Times’s Protected Speech
¶ 104 Turning to the second prong, we must establish whether the Sun-Times has met its burden
of showing that Glorioso’s suit was solely based on their exercise of political rights. Goral, 2014
IL App (1st) 133236, ¶ 38. In order to do so, defendants must show that the suit was “ ‘meritless
and was filed in retaliation against the [defendants’] protected activities in order to deter the
[defendants] from further engaging in those activities.’ ” Garrido, 2013 IL App (1st) 120466, ¶ 18
(quoting Ryan, 2012 IL App (1st) 120005, ¶ 21).
¶ 105 As our supreme court explained in Sandholm, where it originated the “meritless and
retaliatory” standard, SLAPPS are by definition meritless, as the plaintiffs’ goal is to chill the
defendants’ speech and “discourage opposition by others through delay, expense, and distraction.”
Sandholm, 2012 IL 111443, ¶ 34. In Garrido, we articulated how to determine whether a suit is
meritless or not, stating that a claim is not meritless if, for example, it was subject to dismissal
under section 2-615, as immunity based on the Act is an affirmative defense that is properly
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brought under a section 2-619 motion to dismiss. Garrido, 2013 IL App (1st) 120466, ¶ 19; see
also Ryan, 2012 IL App (1st) 120005, ¶ 26 (rejecting defendants’ argument that the claims were
meritless because plaintiff failed to sufficiently plead a cause of action under the standard of
section 2-615); Hammons, 2012 IL App (1st) 102644, ¶ 21. However, a suit is meritless if the
defendant can disprove some element of the plaintiff’s claim. Garrido, 2013 IL App (1st) 120466,
¶ 19; see also Wright Development Group, LLC v. Walsh, 238 Ill. 2d 620, 638 (2010) (Plaintiff’s
defamation claim was meritless because defendant showed that allegedly defamatory statement
was actually true.) We further explained that a SLAPP does not seek to make the plaintiff whole
but, rather, only serves to punish or deter the defendant’s legitimate exercise of first amendment
rights. Garrido, 2013 IL App (1st) 120466, ¶ 20. Because we cannot determine whether a lawsuit
is a SLAPP based solely on the pleadings, we must accept all well-pled facts as true and analyze
whether the Sun-Times has affirmatively disproven some essential element of Glorioso’s
complaint, which they attempt to do by arguing that the articles only contain statements that are
substantially true and fair reporting or figurative speech that is nonactionable as defamatory
content. See id. ¶ 23.
¶ 106 i. Whether Sun-Times Has Established the Suit Is Meritless
¶ 107 The Sun-Times challenges all of the counts of Glorioso’s complaint by arguing that (1) the
articles were substantially true, (2) an innocent construction of the articles precludes judgment,
(3) the articles are privileged as fair reports, and (4) the claims failed to plead special damages
with particularity. 3 The circuit court relied on its prior denial of the Sun-Times’s first motion to
dismiss, based on the same arguments but not invoking the Act, as well as its findings that Novak,
through a combination of omissions (of mentions in the OEIG Complaint of others’ alleged
We address the special damages argument in section B(3), regarding Sun-Times’ initial section
3
2-619.1 motion to dismiss.
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involvement in the scheme to reduce the property tax assessment) and additions (of statements
assuming Glorioso’s personal involvement and culpability) left it a question of fact whether the
articles were substantially true, or whether they overstated Glorioso’s role and motivations in the
alleged scheme beyond the actual allegations made by the whistleblower.
¶ 108 For the reasons previously explained in section B(1) and (4), we agree with the circuit court
that the Sun-Times’s reporting could reasonably be read as not fair, accurate, or truthful by creating
the implication that Glorioso was more culpable in the alleged scheme than the OEIG Complaint
claimed, both in terms of his supposed actions and his supposed authority over PTAB employees.
¶ 109 We find that the record supports the circuit court’s proffered defamatory reading of the
articles as a reasonable one, that allows Glorioso’s complaint to survive the pleading stage.
Defendants have failed to meet their burden of proving that his lawsuit was meritless.
¶ 110 However, we take no position on the merits of the defamation claims or the Sun-Times’s
defenses; we limit our decision to affirming the circuit court’s determination that these issues
should have been presented to the jury.
¶ 111 ii. Whether the Sun-Times Has Established the Suit Is Retaliatory
¶ 112 The next question is whether Glorioso’s lawsuit was filed with the goal of seeking damages
for the harm that the Sun-Times’s articles caused to Glorioso’s reputation and character, or whether
it was “solely based on, related to, or in response to the acts of defendants in furtherance of the
rights of petition and speech,” intended to chill the Sun-Times’s “participation in government or
to stifle political expression.” See Sandholm, 2012 IL 111443, ¶ 57. The courts look to two factors
to conduct this analysis: “(1) the proximity in time between the protected activity and the filing of
the complaint, and (2) whether the damages requested are reasonably related to the facts alleged
in the complaint and are a ‘good-faith estimate of the extent of the injury sustained.’ ” Ryan, 2012
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IL App (1st) 120005, ¶ 23 (quoting Hytel Group, Inc. v. Butler, 405 Ill. App. 3d 113, 126 (2010)).
These factors are not exclusive “and there may well be other factors that are relevant.” Id. It is the
defendants’ burden to show that the lawsuit was retaliatory. Sandholm, 2012 IL 111443, ¶ 57.
¶ 113 Regarding the timing of the lawsuit, Glorioso sued for defamation approximately 11
months after the publication of the first of the Sun-Times articles at issue. Glorioso argues that the
length of time between publication and his suit supports a finding that the suit was not retaliatory,
as it did not stifle the defendants’ rights to petition, to speak, or to participate in government. See
Ryan, 2012 IL App (1st) 120005, ¶ 23 (plaintiff filed complaint less than three days after the first
segment of defendant’s reporting aired; proximity in time was “not necessarily dispositive
evidence of retaliatory intent,” but was “a probative fact” made more plausible by the fact that
plaintiff filed suit before the last segment aired). It is true that waiting until shortly before the
running of the statute of limitations on the first set of articles does not indicate an attempt to silence
the Sun-Times’s future reporting on Glorioso or PTAB. The approximately three months between
the lawsuit and the October articles also does not suggest retaliation. Similarly, unlike instances
where plaintiffs attempted to sue for punitively and disproportionally large sums of money,
Glorioso seeks $50,000; regardless of his intentions in suing, this does not provide evidence that
the lawsuit was retaliatory. See id. ¶ 24 (damages of $7 million in addition to punitive damages
suggested retaliation; “[d]emanding damages in the millions for alleged defamation is a classic
SLAPP scenario”); see also Hytel, 405 Ill. App. 3d at 126 (evidence of retaliation where
extraordinarily high damages sought were not supported by the facts pled) We agree with the
circuit court that the timing and amount of damages sought does not indicate retaliatory behavior.
However, these are not the only factors to consider, as we may also look to other relevant matters
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specific to the facts of this case. We will address the other points raised in Defendants’ petition
below.
¶ 114 The Sun-Times points to the emails it received through a FOIA request to PTAB that reveal
that Glorioso was aware of the allegations of the OEIG complaint prior to filing his defamation
suit, and, more notably, he acknowledged that the complaint accused him of having directed a
particular result in the Trump Tower appeal based on his political bias rather than the merits of the
appeal. In his complaint against the Sun-Times and Novak, he takes issue with the articles’
characterization of the OEIG Complaint allegations as accusing him of precisely that. We
emphasize again that the defamation suit is not based on the existence of an investigation, which
Glorioso concedes. Rather, he argues that the portrayal of the investigation unfairly centers on and
inflates his actions and malintent. Furthermore, if he discussed the allegations against him, none
of the emails the Sun-Times obtained amount to an admission to the whistleblower’s claims.
Therefore, Glorioso’s knowledge of the complaint’s allegations does not indicate that his suit was
retaliatory.
¶ 115 In determining whether the defendants have sufficiently shown that a purported SLAPP
was retaliatory, the court applies the Act on a case-by-case basis. See Hytel, 405 Ill. App. 3d at
126. Considering the timing of the lawsuit and the amount of damages sought, as well as other
factors raised by Defendants, we cannot conclude that Defendants have met their burden of proving
that Glorioso’s defamation suit was retaliatory in nature.
¶ 116 2. SLAPP Determination
¶ 117 Sun-Times has not established that its articles were solely in furtherance of their right to
participate in government to obtain favorable government action. Furthermore, there is sufficient
evidence that a reasonable finder of fact could read the Sun-Times’s articles and determine that
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they do not constitute fair, accurate, and truthful reporting, for the reasons articulated by the circuit
court. We find that the Sun-Times has not sufficiently established that Glorioso’s suit was
meritless. Finally, the Sun-Times has failed to meet their burden of showing that the suit was
retaliatory, based on the facts and circumstances in this matter, including the timing of the suit and
amount of damages sought.
¶ 118 We affirm the circuit court’s order denying the motion to dismiss on the basis of the Act
and find that the plaintiff’s lawsuit is not a SLAPP under the Act.
¶ 119 IV. CONCLUSION
¶ 120 For the reasons stated above, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court, denying the
defendants’ motion to dismiss pursuant to section 2-619.1 and their motion to reconsider that
dismissal or, in the alternative, to dismiss pursuant to section 2-619 and the Act, finding that this
lawsuit is not a SLAPP.
¶ 121 Affirmed and remanded.
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Glorioso v. Sun-Times Media Holdings, LLC, 2023 IL App (1st) 211526
Decision Under Review: Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 2021-L-
00090; the Hon. Patricia O’Brien Sheahan, Judge, presiding.
Attorneys Damon E. Dunn and Seth A. Stern, of Funkhouser Vegosen
for Liebman & Dunn Ltd., of Chicago, for appellants.
Appellant:
Attorneys Phillip J. Zisook and William R. Klein, of Schoenberg Finkel
for Beederman Bell Glazer, LLC, of Chicago, for appellee.
Appellee:
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