Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-cand-3_15-cv-03522/USCOURTS-cand-3_15-cv-03522-19/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 470
Nature of Suit: Civil (Rico)
Cause of Action: 18:1961 Racketeering (RICO) Act

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Northern District of California

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

NATIONAL ABORTION FEDERATION, 

et al.,

Plaintiffs,

v.

CENTER FOR MEDICAL PROGRESS, et 

al.,

Defendants.

Case No. 15-cv-03522-WHO 

ORDER GRANTING MOTION FOR 

PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

Re: Dkt. Nos. 3, 109, 222, 225, 287, 298, 

310, 320, 322, 346, 352

On July 31, 2015, plaintiff National Abortion Federation (NAF) filed this lawsuit and 

sought a Temporary Restraining Order to prohibit defendants David Daleiden, Troy Newman, and 

the Center for Medical Progress from publishing recordings taken at NAF Annual Meetings. NAF 

alleged, and it has turned out to be true, that defendants secured false identification and set up a 

phony corporation to obtain surreptitious recordings in violation of agreements they had signed 

that acknowledge that the NAF information is confidential and agreed that they could be enjoined 

in the event of a breach. In light of those facts, because the subjects of videos that defendants had 

released in the previous two weeks had become victims of death threats and severe harassment, 

and in light of the well-documented history of violence against abortion providers, I issued the 

TRO.

The defendants’ principal arguments against injunctive relief rest on their rights under the 

First Amendment, a keystone of our Constitution and our democracy. It ensures that the 

government may not – without compelling reasons in rare circumstances – restrict the free flow of 

information to the public. It provides that “debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, 

and wide-open.” New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270 (1964). But Constitutional 

rights are not absolute. In rare circumstances, freedom of speech must be balanced against and

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give way to the protection of other compelling Constitutional rights, such as the First 

Amendment’s right to freedom of association, the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments’ protection 

of liberty interests, and the right to privacy. After fully considering the record before me, I 

conclude that NAF has made such a showing here.

Discovery has proven that defendants and their agents created a fake company and lied to 

gain access to NAF’s Annual Meetings in order to secretly record NAF members for their Human 

Capital Project. In furtherance of that Project, defendants released confidential information 

gathered at NAF’s meetings and intend to release more in contravention of the confidentiality 

agreements required by NAF. Critical to my decision are that the defendants agreed to injunctive 

relief if they breached the agreements and that, after the release of defendants’ first set of Human 

Capital Project videos and related information in July 2015, there has been a documented,

dramatic increase in the volume and extent of threats to and harassment of NAF and its members.

Balanced against these facts are defendants’ allegations that their video and audio 

recordings show criminal activity by NAF members in profiteering from the sale of fetal tissue. I 

have reviewed the recordings relied on by defendants and find no evidence of criminal activity. 

And I am skeptical that exposing criminal activity was really defendants’ purpose, since they did 

not provide recordings to law enforcement following the NAF 2014 Annual Meeting and only 

provided a bit of information to law enforcement beginning in May, 2015. But I have not 

interfered with the Congressional committee’s subpoena to obtain the recordings to make its own 

evaluation, nor with the subpoenas from the states of Arizona and Louisiana (although I have 

approved a process to insure that only subpoenaed material is turned over). 

Defendants also claim that the injunction is an unconstitutional prior restraint. They ignore 

that they agreed to keep the information secret and agreed to the remedy of an injunction if they 

breached the agreement. Confidentiality agreements are common to protect trade secrets and other 

sensitive information, and individuals who sign such agreements are not free to ignore them 

because they think the public would be interested in the protected information. 

There is no doubt that members of the public have a serious and passionate interest in the 

debate over abortion rights and the right to life, and thus in the contents of defendants’ recordings. 

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It should be said that the majority of the recordings lack much public interest, and despite the 

misleading contentions of defendants, there is little that is new in the remainder of the recordings. 

Weighed against that public interest are NAF’s and its members’ legitimate interests in their rights 

to privacy, security, and association by maintaining the confidentiality of their presentations and 

conversations at NAF Annual Meetings. The balance is strongly in NAF’s favor. 

Having fully reviewed the record before me, I GRANT NAF’s motion for a preliminary 

injunction to protect the confidentiality of the information at issue pending a final judgment in this 

case.

BACKGROUND

I. THE CENTER FOR MEDICAL PROGRESS AND THE HUMAN CAPITAL 

PROJECT

In 2013, defendant David Daleiden founded the Center for Medical Progress (“CMP”) for 

the purpose of monitoring and reporting on medical ethics, with a focus on bioethical issues 

related to induced abortions and fetal tissue harvesting. Declaration of David Daleiden (Dkt. No. 

265-3, “Daleiden PI Decl.”) ¶ 2. CMP is incorporated in California as a nonprofit public benefit 

corporation, with a stated purpose “to monitor and report on medical ethics and advances.” NAF 

Appendix of Exhibits in Support of Motion for Preliminary Injunction (“Pl. Ex.”) 9 (at 

NAF0000533).

1

 In order to obtain CMP’s tax-exempt status, in its registration with the California 

Attorney General and in its application with the Internal Revenue Service Daleiden certified,

among other things, that “[n]o substantial part of the activities of this corporation shall consist of 

carrying on propaganda, or otherwise attempting to influence legislation, and this corporation shall 

 

1

 Defendants raise a number of objections to NAF’s evidence. See Dkt. No. 265-7. These 

evidentiary objections were submitted as a separate document in violation of this Court’s Local 

Rules. Civ. L. R. 7-3(a). Recognizing that error, defendants filed a motion asking for leave to file 

an amended Opposition or for relief therefrom. Dkt. No. 298. That motion is GRANTED and I 

will consider defendants’ evidentiary objections. See also Dkt. No. 301. To the extent I rely on 

evidence to which defendants object, I will address the specific objection, bearing in mind that on 

a motion for preliminary injunction evidence is not subject to the same formal procedures as on a 

motion for summary judgment or at trial and that a court may consider hearsay evidence. See, 

e.g., Flynt Distrib. Co. v. Harvey, 734 F.2d 1389, 1394 (9th Cir. 1984). To the extent I do not rely 

on specific pieces of evidence, defendants’ objections to that evidence are overruled as moot. 

These evidentiary rulings apply only to the admissibility of evidence for purposes of determining 

the motion for a preliminary injunction.

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not participate or intervene in any political campaign.” Pl. Ex. 9 (at NAF0000535); Pl. Ex. 10 (at 

NAF0001789).

As part of CMP’s work, Daleiden created the “Human Capital Project” (“Project”) to 

“investigate, document, and report on the procurement, transfer, and sale of fetal tissue.” Daleiden 

PI Decl. ¶ 3. The Project’s goal is to uncover evidence regarding violations of state and/or federal 

law due to the sale of fetal tissue, the alteration of abortion procedures to obtain fetal tissue for 

research, and the commission of partial birth abortions. Id. Putting the Project into action, 

Daleiden created a fake front company that purportedly supplies researchers with human 

biological specimens and specifically secured funding from supporters in order to infiltrate NAF’s 

2014 Annual Meeting. Pl. Ex. 26. The express aim of that infiltration was to: “1) network with 

the upper echelons of the abortion industry to identify the best targets for further investigation and 

ultimate prosecution, and 2) gather video and documentary evidence of the fetal body parts trade 

and other shocking activities in the abortion industry.” Id.

Defendant Troy Newman was, until January 2016, a board member and the secretary of 

CMP. He counseled Daleiden on the efforts to set up the fake company, to infiltrate meetings, and

to secure recordings in support of the Project. Pl. Ex. 14 (at NAF0004475-76); Pl. Ex. 16 (at 

NAF0004493-94); see also Dkt. No. 344.2 The result of the Project, Newman hoped, would be 

prosecution of abortion providers, state and Congressional investigations, the defunding of 

Planned Parenthood by the government, and the closure of abortion clinics. Pl. Ex. 16 (at 

NAF0004494, 4496); Pl. Ex. 136 at 16.

3

 Defendant Newman is President of Operation Rescue, an 

anti-abortion group that posts the names and work addresses of abortion providers on its website 

and manages another website that lists every abortion facility and all known abortion providers. 

Pl. Exs. 18, 20, 21, 22.4

 

2 Defendants object to Exhibits 14 and 16 for lack of foundation and authentication. Defendants 

do not contend these transcripts do not accurately represent the contents of the recordings attached 

as Exhibits 15 and 17. Defendants’ objections are overruled.

3 Defendants object to Exhibit 136 on the grounds of relevance, lack of foundation, and lack of 

authentication. Defendants to not contend the transcript does not accurately represent the contents 

of the recording identified. Defendants’ objections are overruled.

4 After the public launch of the Project on July 15, 2015, counsel for CMP and Daleiden, Life 

Legal Defense Foundation, explained that it had also been involved in the Project as a legal 

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II. THE CREATION OF BIOMAX AND INFILTRATION OF NAF’S 2014 AND 2015 

ANNUAL MEETINGS

In September 2013, Daleiden directed “investigators” on the Project (known by the aliases

Susan Tennebaum and Brianna Allen) to attend a conference of the Association of Reproductive 

Health Professionals (ARHP) as a representative of a fake business, BioMax Procurement 

Services. That business did not exist, other than to be a “front” for the Project. Daleiden PI Decl. 

¶ 8; Pl. Ex. 26. Daleiden’s associates spoke with representatives from NAF, and BioMax was 

invited to apply to attend the NAF Annual Meeting in San Francisco, California the following 

April. Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 10. 

In February 2014, defendant CMP received a grant to fund the “infiltration of the . . . NAF 

Annual Meeting.” Pl. Exs. 26, 36; Deposition Transcript of David Daleiden (Dkt. No. 187-3) 

213:14-214:6. To that end, Daleiden followed up with the NAF representatives – posing as 

Brianna Allen on behalf Tennenbaum and BioMax – and received a copy of the 2014 NAF Annual 

Meeting Exhibitor Prospectus and Exhibitor Application for the upcoming meeting. Daleiden PI 

Decl. ¶ 11; Pl. Ex. 43. Daleiden filled out the Exhibitor Application packet – comprised of the 

“Exhibit Rules and Regulations” (“Exhibit Agreement” or “EA”), the “Application and Agreement 

for Exhibit Space,” and the “Annual Meeting Registration Form.” Daleiden signed Susan 

Tennenbaum’s name to the EA, and returned the Application packet. Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 11; PL. 

Ex. 3; Daleiden Depo. at 160:8-18.

In February 2015, Daleiden contacted NAF seeking information about BioMax exhibiting 

at NAF’s 2015 Annual Meeting in Baltimore, Maryland. Pl. Ex. 47. Daleiden again filled out the 

“Application Agreement for Exhibit Space,” “Exhibit Rules and Regulations,” and “Registration 

Form,” signing Susan Tennenbaum’s name to the EA. Pl. Exs. 4, 47; Daleiden Depo. at 287:5-

22.5

 

advisor “since its inception” and were committed to defunding “contract killer” Planned 

Parenthood. Pl. Ex. 24. Defendants object to Exhibits 18, 20, 21 and 22 as irrelevant and 

inadmissible hearsay. Those objections are overruled. 

5 On the 2014 EA, Daleiden listed the “exhibitor representatives” as Brianna Allen a Procurement 

Assistant, Susan Tennenbaum the C.E.O., and Robert Sarkis a V.P. Operations. Pl. Ex. 3. On the 

2015 EA, Daleiden listed the exhibitor representatives as Susan Tennenbaum the C.E.O., Robert 

Sarkis the Procurement Manager, and Adrian Lopez the Procurement Technician. Pl. Ex. 4.

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Both the 2014 and 2015 EAs contain confidentiality clauses:

In connection with NAF’s Annual Meeting, Exhibitor understands 

that any information NAF may furnish is confidential and not 

available to the public. Exhibitor agrees that all written information 

provided by NAF, or any information which is disclosed orally or 

visually to Exhibitor, or any other exhibitor or attendee, will be used 

solely in conjunction with Exhibitor’s business and will be made 

available only to Exhibitor’s officers, employees, and agents. 

Unless authorized in writing by NAF, all information is confidential 

and should not be disclosed to any other individual or third parties.

Pl. Exs. 3 & 4 at ¶ 17. Above the signature line, the EAs provide: “I also agree to hold in trust 

and confidence any confidential information received in the course of exhibiting at the NAF 

Annual Meeting and agree not to reproduce or disclose confidential information without express 

permission from NAF.” Pl. Exs. 3, 4 (emphasis in originals).

The EAs required Exhibitor representatives to “be registered” for the NAF Annual Meeting 

and wear badges in order to gain entry into exhibit halls and meeting rooms. Id. ¶ 8. The EAs 

also provide that “[p]hotography of exhibits by anyone other than NAF or the assigned Exhibitor 

of the space being photographed is strictly prohibited.” Id. ¶ 13. The EAs required an 

affirmation: “[b]y signing this Agreement, the Exhibitor affirms that all information contained 

herein, contained in any past and future correspondence with either NAF and/or in any 

publication, advertisements, and/or exhibits displayed at, or in connection with, NAF’s Annual 

Meeting, is truthful, accurate, complete, and not misleading.” Id. ¶ 19. Finally, the EAs provide 

that breach of the EA can be enforced by “specific performance and injunctive relief” in addition 

to all other remedies available at law or equity. Id. ¶ 18.

In order to gain access to the NAF Annual Meetings, Exhibitor representatives also had to 

show identification and sign a “Confidentiality Agreement” (“CA”). Declaration of Mark Mellor 

(Dkt. No. 3-33) ¶ 11.6 For the 2014, Annual Meeting Daleiden (as Sarkis) and the individuals 

 

6 NAF has identified copies of two drivers licenses it claims were used by Daleiden and 

Tennenbaum to access the NAF meetings. Pl. Exs. 49-50. During his deposition, Daleiden 

asserted his Fifth Amendment rights and refused to testify about the licenses. Foran PI Decl. ¶¶ 

31-32. Defendants object to Exhibits 49 and 50 for lack of personal knowledge. Those objections 

are overruled.

Relatedly, NAF filed a motion to supplement the Preliminary Injunction record, to include 

a press release from the Harris County District Attorney’s office in Houston Texas. Dkt. No. 346. 

That motion is GRANTED. In the press release, the District Attorney explained that a grand jury 

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pretending to be Tennenbaum and Allen, each signed a CA. Pl. Exs. 5, 6; Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 13. 

For the 2015 Annual Meeting, the individual pretending to be Adrian Lopez, signed the CA. Pl. 

Ex. 8.7 Daleiden (as Sarkis), Tennenbaum, and Allen did not sign the 2015 CAs. When Daleiden, 

Tennenbaum, and Allen were at the registration table, they were met by a NAF representative. A 

NAF representative asked Daleiden to confirm that the sign-in staff had checked their 

identifications and that they had signed the confidentiality forms. Daleiden responded “Yeah yeah 

yeah. Excellent. Thank you so much . . . .” Declaration of Derek Foran in Support of Preliminary 

Injunction (Dkt. No. 228-6) ¶ 79C8; Daleiden Decl. ¶ 17; Daleiden Depo. 290:2 -291:14. Daleiden 

testified that it was his “preference” to avoid signing the 2015 CA. Daleiden Depo. at 291:15-25. 

The CAs provide:

It is NAF policy that all people attending its conferences (Attendees) 

sign this confidentiality agreement. The terms of attendance are as 

follows:

1. Videotaping or Other Recording Prohibited: Attendees are 

prohibited from making video, audio, photographic, or other 

recordings of the meetings or discussions at this conference.

2. Use of NAF Conference Information: NAF Conference 

Information includes all information distributed or otherwise 

made available at this conference by NAF or any conference 

participants through all written materials, discussions, 

workshops, or other means. . . . 

3. Disclosure of NAF Materials to Third Parties: Attendees may 

not disclose any NAF Conference Information to third parties 

without first obtaining NAF’s express written consent . . . .

Pl. Exs. 5-8. 

 

had cleared a local Planned Parenthood affiliate of wrongdoing, but indicted Daleiden and the 

person posing as Susan Tennenbaum for tampering with governmental records, presumably 

related to their use of false identification to gain access to meetings in Texas. Id. 

In his deposition, Daleiden testified that he created false business cards to use at the ARHP 

meeting and the NAF Meetings for Susan Tennenbaum, Robert Daoud Sarkis, and Brianna Allen. 

Pl. Ex. 51; Daleiden Depo. at 200:2 – 201:6 (business cards used at the 2014 Meeting); see also

Pl. Exs. 51, 52 & Daleiden Depo. at 315:23 – 316:19 (business cards for Adrian Lopez and Susan 

Wagner used at the 2015 Annual Meeting); Declaration of Megan Barr (Dkt. No. 226-27) ¶¶ 4-5 

(use of business card at 2015 Meeting).

7 Daleiden testified that all of the “investigators” involved in the Project were CMP “contractors” 

acting under Daleiden’s specific direction. Daleiden Depo. Trans. at 131:7-24, 135:21-136:11, 

194:1, 194:10-195:6; see also Daleiden Supp. Resp. to NAF Interrogatories (Dkt. No. 227-18)

Nos. 2, 6.

8

¶ 79(C) refers to a specific excerpt of a recording taken by Daleiden. Sub-Bates 15-062; Time 

stamp: 14:56:02-14:56:50. The Court has reviewed all recording excerpts or transcripts of 

recording excerpts cited in this Order.

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At the 2014 and 2015 Annual Meetings, Daleiden and his associates wore and carried a 

variety of recording devices that they did not disclose to NAF or any of the meeting attendees. 

Daleiden Depo. at 118-121; 255; 292-93. Daleiden and his associates did not limit their recording 

to presentations or conversations regarding fetal tissue, but instead turned on their recording 

devices before entering the meetings each day and only turned them off at the end of the day. 

Daleiden Depo. at 121:24-122:22, 124:1-15. In the end, they recorded approximately 257 hours 

and 49 minutes at NAF’s 2014 Annual Meeting and 246 hours and 3 minutes at NAF’s 2015 

Annual Meeting. They recorded conversations with attendees at the BioMax Exhibitor booths, the 

formal sessions at the Meetings, and interactions with attendees during breaks. Foran PI Decl. ¶ 2

& Pl. Ex. 19; Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 18; Daleiden Depo. at 122:18-123:25; 293:4-25. The 

interactions with individuals were recorded in exhibit halls, hallways, and reception areas where 

Daleiden contends hotel staff were “regularly” present. Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 18. Hotel staff were

also present in the rooms during presentations and talks, but hotel staff did not sign confidentiality 

agreements. Id. ¶ 19; Deposition of Vicki Saporta (Defendants’ Ex. 7) at 33:10-23. Broadly 

speaking, the majority of the recordings lack any sort of public interest and consist of 

communications that are tangential to the ones discussed in this Order. 

During the Annual Meetings, Daleiden and his associates would meet to “discuss our . . . 

strategy for . . . the project and for the meeting,” including “specific strategies for specific 

individuals.” Daleiden Depo. at 134:15-135:6. The associates were given a “mark list” to identify 

their targets. Foran PI Decl. ¶ 79D (Sub-Bates: 15-145; Time stamp: 14:56:02-14:56:50). The 

group also picked targets based on circumstance: in one instance, Daleiden tells “Tennenbaum” 

that it “would be really good to talk tonight” with a particular doctor “now that she’s been 

drinking.” Id. ¶ 79E (Sub-Bates: 15-225; Time stamp 15:33:00 - 15:34:00). 

In approaching these individuals, the group used “pitches” in their efforts to capture NAF 

members agreeing to suggestions and proposals made by the group about the “sale” of fetal tissue 

 

9

 Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 is a copy of the hard drive produced by defendants containing the audio and 

video recordings made by Daleiden and his associates at the 2014 and 2015 NAF Annual 

Meetings.

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or other conduct that might suggest a violation of state or federal law. Daleiden told his associates 

that their “goal” was to trap people into “saying something really like messed up, like yeah, like, 

I’ll give them, like, live everything for you. You know. If they say something like that it would be 

cool.” Id. ¶ 79G (Sub-Bates: 15-021; Time Stamp: 5:13-5:49). Daleiden also instructed his group 

to attempt to get attendees to say the words “fully intact baby” on tape. Id. ¶ 79H (Sub-Bates: 15-

152; Time Stamp: 16:06:50-16:07:00). As part of their efforts, “Tennenbaum” would explain to 

providers that she “can make [fetal tissue donation] extremely financially profitable for you” and 

that BioMax has “money that is available” and is “sitting on a goldmine” as long as you’re 

“willing to be a little creative with [your] technique.” Foran PI Decl. ¶ 79J (Sub-bates: 15-152

Time Stamp: 15:48:00 - 15:52:00). She asked NAF attendees: “what would make it profitable for 

you? Give me a ballpark figure . . . .” Id. Or “[i]f it was financially very profitable for you to 

perhaps be a little creative in your method, would you be open to” providing patients with 

reimbursements for tissue donations. Id. ¶ 79K (Sub-bates: 15-203; Time Stamp: 12:09:00 -

12:10:21).

The parties dispute whether these goals were met and if defendants’ traps worked.

10

 

Defendants argue that they captured NAF attendees agreeing to explore, or at least expressing 

interest in exploring, being compensated for the sale of fetal tissue at a profit, which defendants 

contend is illegal under state and federal laws. Defendants’ Opposition to Motion for Preliminary 

Injunction (Dkt. No. 262-4) at 10-14. However, they tend to misstate the conversations that 

occurred or omit the context of those statements. For example, defendants rely on a conversation 

 

10 NAF argues that defendants cannot rely on any portion of the recordings to oppose NAF’s 

motion for a preliminary injunction. NAF Reply Br. at 29-30. NAF is correct that under 

California and Maryland law, recordings taken in violation of state laws prohibiting recordings of 

confidential communications are not admissible in judicial proceedings, except as proof of an act 

or violation of the state statutes. See Cal. Penal Code § 632(d); Feldman v. Allstate Ins. Co., 322 

F.3d 660, 667 (9th Cir. 2003) (concluding that § 632(d) is a substantive law, applicable in federal 

court on state law claims); see also Md. Code Ann., Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 10-405; Standiford v. 

Standiford, 89 Md. App. 326, 346 (1991). Because the accuracy of defendants’ allegations of 

criminal conduct are central to this decision, however, I discuss the portions of the recordings 

relied upon by plaintiff and defendants in some detail in this section. To place this discussion 

under seal would undermine my responsibility to the public as a court of public record to explain 

my decision. Consistent with the TRO and the reasoning of this Order, in describing the protected 

conversations I balance the interests of the providers’ privacy, safety and association by omitting 

names, places, and other identifying information.

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with a clinic owner where Daleiden suggests BioMax could pay $60 per sample instead of $50 per 

sample. Defs. Ex. 8. The clinic owner doesn’t respond to that suggestion, or give any indication 

about the actual costs to the clinic of facilitating outside companies to come in and collect fetal 

tissue. Id. Instead, the clinic owner responds that providing tissue to outside companies “is a nice 

way to get extra income in a very difficult time, and you know patients like it.” Id.

11 Defendants 

point to another conversation where a provider asks what the “reimbursement rate” is for the 

clinic, and was told “it varies” by Tennenbaum. Defs. Ex. 9 (Dkt. No. 266-4) at p. 18. Then, in 

response to Tennenbaum’s suggestion about whether she’d “be open to maybe being a little 

creative in the procedure,” the provider responds that she was not sure and would have to discuss 

it and run it by the doctors. Defs. Ex. 9 (Dkt. No. 266-4) at p. 18. Tennenbaum explains that 

specimens “go for” anywhere from “500 up to 2,000” and so “you can see how profitable” it 

would be for clinics, to which the provider says “Yeah, absolutely” and a different provider says 

“that would be great” in response to comments about having further discussions. Id. at p. 19. 

Another provider responded to defendants’ suggestion of financial incentives by indicating 

that the clinic would be “very happy about it,” but admitted others would have to approve it and it 

wasn’t up to her. Id., Dkt. No. 266-4 at p.8. Defendants point to a conversation with a provider 

who discusses the “fine line” between an illegal partial birth abortion and the types of abortion that 

they perform, and the techniques that they employ to ensure that they do not cross that line. Defs. 

Ex. 10, Dkt. No. 266-5 at p. 4. That conversation, however, does not indicate that any illegal 

activity was occurring. Similarly, defendants contend that a provider stated that he ordinarily 

minimizes dilation, since that is what is safest for the women, but that if he had a reason to dilate 

more (such as tissue procurement), he might perform abortions differently. Oppo. Br. at 11. But 

that is not what the provider said. After acknowledging tissue donation was not allowed in his 

state, he stated that “I could mop up my technique if you wanted something more intact. But right 

now my only concern is the safety of the woman” and there was no reason to further dilate a 

 

11 Defendants do not suggest the “patients like it” is a suggestion that patients are being paid for 

the fetal tissue. Instead, in the context of that conversation, it refers to patients that like providing 

fetal tissue for research purposes.

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woman. Defs. Ex. 11, Dkt. No. 266-6 at p. 5. 

Defendants rely on another conversation where an abortion provider explains that how 

intact aborted fetuses are depends on the procedure used and that she does not ordinarily use 

digoxin to terminate the fetus before performing 15-week abortions. Defs. Ex. 12, Dkt. No. 266-7, 

pgs. 1-8. She goes on to say that if there was a possibility of donating the tissue to research, 

women may choose that, and with the consent of the woman she would be open to attempting to 

obtain intact organs for procurement. Id. Again, this is not evidence of any wrongdoing.

In another conversation, a provider states that his/her clinic has postponed the stage at 

which digoxin is used and that as a result they can secure more and bigger organs for research so 

the tissue “does not go to waste,” to which the vast majority of women using their facility consent. 

Defs. Ex. 13, Dkt. No. 266-8 pgs. 1-8.12 Defendants contend that a provider commented that 

he/she may be willing to be “creative” on a case-by-case basis, but the provider was responding to 

a question about doctors using digoxin in general. Defs. Ex. 9, Dkt. No. 266-4 pg. 13. And while 

defendants characterize that provider as assenting to being “creative,” so that BioMax could “keep 

them happy financially” (Oppo. Br. at 11-12), the actual discussion was about off-setting the 

disruption that third-party technicians can have on clinic operations and keeping those disruptions 

to a minimum. Id. at p. 14. 

In a different conversation, defendants characterize a provider as agreeing to discuss ways 

in which a financial transaction would be structured to make it look like a clinic was not selling 

tissue. Oppo. Br. at 12. The unidentified female (there is no indication of where she works or

what role she plays) simply responds to Tennenbaum’s suggestions that in response to payment 

for tissue from BioMax the clinic could offer its services for less money or provide transportation 

for the patients, with an interested but non-committal response and clarified “that’s something 

we’d have to figure out how to do that.” Defs. Ex. 14, Dkt. No. 266-9 pgs. 1-4. Another provider 

admits that doing intact D&Es for research purposes would “be challenging” and explained that 

there are layers of people and approvals at the clinic before any agreements to work with a 

 

12

 There is no evidence that a desire to secure more fetal tissue samples caused the clinic to alter 

its procedures. 

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bioprocurement lab could be reached. Defs. Ex. 9, Dkt. No. 266-4 pgs. 8-9.

Defendants state that a provider responded to Tennenbaum’s comment that with the right 

vision an arrangement can be “extremely financially profitable,” with “we certainly do” have that 

vision. Oppo. Br. at 12. But defendants omit that the context of the conversation was the “waste” 

of fetal tissue that could otherwise be going to research. Defs. Ex. 9, Dkt. No. 266-4 pgs. 2-3. In 

the excerpt relied on by defendants, after Tennenbaum mentioned the profit she went onto 

describe tissue donation working for those that have the “vision and the passion for research.” 

The provider responded, “Which we certainly do.” Id. p. 2. Similarly, while defendants are 

correct that a provider did say, “if guys it looks like you’d pay me for [fetal tissue], that would be 

awesome,” but omit that the provider preceded that comment with “I would love to have it [the 

fetal tissue] go somewhere” and that the provider was excited about the possibility of the tissue 

going to be used in research to be “doing something.” Defs. Ex. 15, Dkt. No. 266-10. pgs. 1-2.

Defendants cite a handful of similar discussions – where “profit” “sale” or “top dollar” are 

terms used by Daleiden or Tennenbaum and then providers at some point following that lead in 

the conversation express general interest in exploring receiving payment for tissue – but those 

conversations do not show that any clinic is making a profit off of tissue donations or that the

providers are agreeing to a profit-making arrangement.13 Defendants are correct that one provider 

indicates it received $6,000 a quarter from a bioprocurement lab, but there is no discussion 

showing that amount is profit (in excess of the costs of having third-party technicians on site and 

providing access and storage for their work). Defs. Ex. 21, Dkt. No. 267-2 p.2. An employee of a 

bioprocurement lab also agrees in response to statements from Tennenbaum that the clinics know 

it is “financially profitable” for them to work with bioprocurement labs and that arrangement helps 

 

13 Some of defendants’ citations are to comments about providers performing abortions 

differently, not in terms of gestational timing, but in terms of attempting to keep tissue samples

more intact during the procedure if those samples might be of use for research. Oppo. Br. at 12-

13. There is no argument that taking those steps violates any law. Defendants also cite provider 

comments – for example, an abortion provider engaging in conduct “under the table” to get around 

restrictions – which do not show up in the transcript excerpts they refer to. Oppo. Br. at 13.

Finally, defendants rely on comments – from panel presentations and individual conversations –

where providers express the personal and societal difficulties they face in performing abortions. 

There is no indication in those comments of any illegal conduct. Oppo. Br. at 12, 14-15. 

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the clinics “significantly.” Defs. Ex. 23, Dkt. No. 267-4 p. 2.

Having reviewed the records or transcripts in full and in context, I find that no NAF 

attendee admitted to engaging in, agreed to engage in, or expressed interest in engaging in 

potentially illegal sale of fetal tissue for profit. The recordings tend to show an express rejection 

of Daleiden’s and his associates’ proposals or, at most, discussions of interest in being paid to 

recoup the costs incurred by clinics to facilitate collection of fetal tissue for scientific research, 

which NAF argues is legal. See, e.g., Foran PI Decl. ¶ 79(I) (Sub-bates: 14-147; Time Stamp 

05:56:00 - 05:57:00 (Dr. Nucatola identifying an “ethical problem” with Daleiden’s payment 

proposal: “We just really want the affiliates to be compensated in a way that is proportionate to the 

amount of work that’s required on their end to do it. In other words, we don’t see it as a money 

making opportunity. That’s not what it should be about.”); Foran PI Decl. ¶ 79(K) (Sub-bates: 15-

203; Time Stamp: 12:09:00 - 12:10:21) (NAF attendee responding to Tennenbaum’s proposal” 

“Do the patients get any reimbursement? No, you can’t pay for tissue, right. You can’t pay for 

tissue.”); Foran PI Decl. ¶ 79(M) (Sub-bates: 15-010; Time Stamp: 24:29 - 25:43) (NAF attendee 

responds that “we cannot have that conversation with you about being creative,” because it 

“crosses the line.”); Foran PI Decl. ¶ 79(N) (Sub-Bates: 15-010; Time Stamp: 59:18-1:04:32) 

(NAF attendee responding to Tennenbaum with, “No profiteering or appearance of profiteering . . 

. we need it to be a donation program rather than a business opportunity.”).

Defendants also gathered confidential NAF and NAF-member materials at the Annual 

Meetings, including lists and biographies of NAF faculty and contact information for NAF 

members. Foran PI Decl. ¶ 3; Pl. Ex. 56 at 3; Pl. Ex. 58. 

Following the 2014 Annual Meeting, Daleiden followed up with the “targets” he met at the 

Meeting, in part to set up meetings with abortion providers, including Dr. Deborah Nucatola.

14

 Pl. 

Exs. 26 (list of “targets”), 36, 59-61, 64-65, 67-69; Daleiden Depo. 257-259, 265-269. As he 

explained to his supporters and funders in a report prepared following the 2014 Meeting – in 

which he shared some of the confidential NAF information that had been collected at that meeting 

 

14

 Dr. Nucatola was identified by defendants as a key target and the Senior Director of Medical 

Services for Planned Parenthood. Pl. Ex. 26. 

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– he was able to secure the follow up meetings because, following its attendance at the 2014 

Annual Meeting, “BioMax is now a known and trusted entity to many key individuals in the upper 

echelons of the abortion industry.” Pl. Ex. 26; see also Pl. Exs. 59-63 (emails to targets 

referencing their meeting at NAF); Pl. Ex. 64 (email to Dr. Nucatola); Daleiden Depo. at 253-259

(Daleiden’s follow up with Dr. Nucatola); Pl. Ex. 67 ¶¶ 3-4 (StemExpress representative 

explaining her initial meeting with Daleiden at the NAF 2014 Annual Meeting, as the reason a 

subsequent meeting was arranged); Daleiden Tr. at 271-274 (discussing his follow up

communications with StemExpress representatives). In a recording following Daleiden and 

Tennenbaum’s meeting with StemExpress representatives, Daleiden credited the ability to secure 

that meeting to “because like we’ve been at NAF. Like, we’re so vetted and so like.” Foran PI 

Decl. ¶ 12; Pl. Ex. 70 at FNPB029820150522190849.avi at 19:13:00-19:15:00).

III. DEFENDANTS RELEASE HUMAN CAPITAL PROJECT VIDEOS 

On July 14, 2015, CMP released two videos of a lunch meeting that Daleiden had with Dr. 

Nucatola, a “key” target from the 2014 NAF Annual Meeting. Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 25; Pl. Ex. 26. 

Daleiden testified that one of the videos “contained the entire conversation with Nucatola” and the 

other was “a shorter summary version of the highlights from the conversation.” Id. CMP issued a 

press release in conjunction with the release of these videos entitled “Planned Parenthood’s Top 

Doctor, Praised by CEO, Uses Partial-Birth Abortion to Sell Baby Parts.” Pl. Ex. 66. NAF 

counters that the “highlights” video was misleadingly edited and omits Dr. Nucatola’s comments 

that “nobody should be selling tissue. That’s just not the goal here,” and her repeated comments 

that Planned Parenthood would not sell tissue or profit in any way from tissue donations. Foran 

TRO Decl. Ex. 18 at 7, 21-22, 25-26, 34, 48, 52-54. 

On July 21, 2015, CMP released two more videos: a 73-minute video and a shorter 

“highlights summary” from Daleiden’s lunch meeting with Planned Parenthood “staff member” 

Dr. Mary Gatter. Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 26. CMP issued a press release in conjunction with the 

release of these videos entitled “Second Planned Parenthood Senior Executive Haggles Over Baby 

Parts Prices, Changes Abortion Methods.” Pl. Ex. 71. NAF again contends the “highlight” video 

was misleadingly edited, including the omission of Dr. Gatter’s comments that tissue donation was 

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not about profit, but “about people wanting to see something good come out” of their situations, 

“they want to see a silver lining . . . .” Pl. Ex. 82 at NAF0001395.

CMP has continued to release other videos as part of the Project, including one featuring a 

site visit to Planned Parenthood Rocky Mountains, where Savita Ginde is Medical Director. 

Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 27. On July 30, 2015, CMP issued a press release in conjunction with the 

release of this video entitled “Planned Parenthood VP Says Fetuses May Come Out Intact, Agrees 

Payments Specific to the Specimen.” Pl. Ex. 74.15

Daleiden asserts that when CMP released the “highlight” or summary videos, CMP also 

released “full” copies of the underlying recordings. Daleiden PI Decl. ¶¶ 25-27. NAF has 

submitted a report by Fusion GPS, completed at the request of counsel for Planned Parenthood, 

analyzing the videos released by CMP and concluding that there is evidence that CMP edited 

content out of the “full” videos and heavily edited the short videos “so as to misrepresent 

statements made by Planned Parenthood representatives.” Pl. Ex. 77; see also Pl. Exs. 78-79.

16

The day before the first set of videos was released, CMP put together a press kit with 

“messaging guidelines” that was circulated to supporters. Pl. Ex. 135; Deposition Transcript of 

Charles C. Johnson (Dkt. No. 255-11) 70:22-71:19. In those guidelines, defendants assert that 

their aim for the Project is to create “political pressure” on Planned Parenthood, focusing on 

“Congressional hearings/investigation and political consequences for” Planned Parenthood such as 

defunding and abortion limits. Pl. Ex. 135.

To be clear, the videos released by CMP as part of the Project to date do not contain 

information recorded during the NAF Annual Meetings.17 With respect to the NAF material 

 

15 See also Pl. Ex. 74 (CMP press release on fifth Project video; “‘Intact Fetal Cadavers’ at 20 

Weeks ‘Just a Matter of Line Items’ at Planned Parenthood TX Mega-Center; Abortion Docs Can 

‘Make it Happen.’”); Pl. Ex. 69 (CMP press release on eighth Project video; “Planned Parenthood 

Baby Parts Buyer StemExpress Wants ‘Another 50 Livers/Week,’ Financial Benefits for Abortion 

Clinics.”); Pl. Ex. 75 (CMP press release on ninth Project video; “Planned Parenthood Baby Parts 

Vendor ABR Pays Off Clinics, Intact Fetuses ‘Just Fell Out.’”); Pl. Ex. 76 (CMP press release on 

tenth Project video; “Top Planned Parenthood Exec Agrees Baby Parts Sales ‘A Valid Exchange,’ 

Some Clinics ‘Generate a Fair Amount of Income Doing This.’”).

16 Defendants object to Exhibits 78-79 as inadmissible hearsay, for lack of personal knowledge 

and authentication, and improper expert testimony. Those objections are overruled.

17 NAF contends that the meetings Daleiden had with Doctors Nucatola, Gatter, and Ginde that 

resulted in the CMP videos would not have been possible without BioMax having fraudulently 

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covered by the TRO and at issue on the motion for a preliminary injunction, Daleiden affirms that 

other than: (i) providing a StemExpress advertisement from the NAF 2014 Annual Meeting 

program to law enforcement in El Dorado County, California in May 2015; (ii) short clips of video 

to law enforcement in Texas in June or July 2015; (iii) providing the 504 hours of recordings in 

response to the Congressional subpoena; and (iv) providing a short written report to CMP donors 

in April 2014, “Daleiden and CMP have made no other disclosures of recordings or documents 

from NAF meetings.” Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 24. However, a portion of the NAF materials were 

leaked and posted on the internet on October 20 and 21, 2015.18

IV. IMPACT OF DISCLOSURES ON NAF AND ITS MEMBERS

NAF is a not-for-profit professional association of abortion providers, including private 

and non-profit clinics, Planned Parenthood affiliates, women’s health centers, physicians’ offices, 

and hospitals. Declaration of Vicki Saporta (Dkt. No. 3-34) ¶ 2. It sets standards for abortion care 

through Clinical Policy Guidelines (CPGs) and Ethical Principles for Abortion Care, and develops 

continuing medical education and training programs and educational resources for abortion 

providers and other health care professionals. Id. ¶ 3. NAF also implemented a multi-faceted 

security program to help ensure the safety of abortion providers by putting in place reference, 

security, and confidentiality requirements for its membership and for attendance at its Meetings. 

Id. ¶¶ 10-14; Declaration of Mark Mellor (Dkt. No. 3-33) ¶ 5-12. NAF tracks security threats to 

abortion providers and clinics, and offers technical assistance, on-site security training, and 

 

gained access to NAF’s Annual Meetings and, thereby, appearing to be a legitimate operation.

18 This leak occurred after defendants produced NAF materials covered by the TRO to Congress. 

NAF argues – and moves for an Order to Show Cause asking me to sanction defendants – that 

defendants violated my order and the TRO by producing to Congress NAF audio and video 

recordings that were not directly responsive to the Congressional subpoena. See Dkt. Nos. 155, 

222. NAF complains that as a result of this “over production,” the subsequent leak included NAF 

Materials that had nothing to do with alleged criminal activity. I heard argument on this motion 

on December 18, 2015. Dkt. No. 310. Having considered the representations of defense counsel, 

I DENY the motion for an order to show cause. Defendants did produce materials that were not 

covered by the subpoena, but were covered by the TRO, contrary to my Order allowing a response 

to the subpoena. Dkt. No. 155. Defense counsel did so because in light of their conversations 

with Congressional staffers, they believed Congress wanted “unedited” recordings, which defense 

counsel interpreted to mean the whole batch of recordings, even those where fetal tissue was not 

being discussed. At the hearing I cautioned defense counsel that in the future, before they take it 

upon themselves to arguably violate an order from this Court – even if in good faith – they should 

seek clarification from me first.

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assessments at facilities and homes of clinic staff, as well as 24/7 support to its members when 

they are “facing an emergency or are targeted. Id. ¶ 10, 15; see also Declaration of Derek Foran in 

Support of TRO (Dkt No. 3-2) ¶ 6 & Ex 2 (NAF statistics documenting more than 60,000 

incidents of harassment, intimidation, and violence against abortion providers, including murder, 

shootings, arson, bombings, chemical and acid attacks, bioterrorism threats, kidnapping, death 

threats, and other forms of violence between 1997 and 2014).

Following the release of the videos in July 2015, the subjects of those videos (including 

Doctors Nucatola, Gatter, and Ginde), have received a large amount harassing communications 

(including death threats). Pl. Exs. 80-81 (internet articles and threats by commentators), 83-91;

see also Saporta Decl. ¶ 19. Incidents of harassment and violence directed at abortion providers 

increased nine fold in July 2015, over similar incidents in June 2014. Pl. Ex. 92. The incidents 

continued to sharply rise in August 2015. Pl. Ex. 93. The FBI has also reported seeing an increase 

in attacks on reproductive health care facilities. Pl. Ex. 94.

19

 Since July 2015, there have also 

been four incidents of arson at Planned Parenthood and NAF-member facilities. Saporta Depo. at 

42:1-10; Pl. Exs. 96-99.

20

 Most significantly, the clinic where Dr. Ginde is medical director – a 

fact that was listed on the AbortinDocs.org website operated by defendant Newman’s Operation 

Rescue group – was attacked by a gunman, resulting in three deaths. Pl. Exs. 18, 20, 21, 22,

148.

21

NAF’s President and CEO testified that there “has been a dramatic increase” in harassment 

since July 14, 2015, and the “volume of hate speech and threats are nothing I have ever seen in 20 

years.” Pl. Ex. 95 (Deposition Transcript of Vicki Saporta) at 16:17-23, 39:13-20; see also id. at 

43:15-18 (“We have uncovered many, many direct threats naming individual providers. Those 

 

19 Defendants object to Exhibits 92 - 94 on the grounds that Foran lacks personal knowledge and 

cannot authenticate the exhibits, as hearsay, and on relevance. Those objections are overruled.

20 Defendants object to Exhibits 96 - 99 as inadmissible hearsay, lack of personal knowledge, lack 

of authentication, irrelevant and prejudicial. Those objections are overruled. Defendants also filed 

a motion to supplement the Preliminary Injunction record with a news article indicating the 

individual arrested in connection with the fire at the Thousand Oaks Planned Parenthood office 

was not motivated by politics, but by a “domestic feud.” Dkt. No. 322. That motion is 

GRANTED.

21 Defendants object to Exhibit 148 as irrelevant and inadmissible hearsay. Those objections are 

overruled.

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providers have had to undergo extensive security precautions and believe they are in danger.”). In 

response, NAF hired and committed additional staff to monitoring the internet for harassment and 

threats. Saporta Depo. at 38:2-20. NAF’s security team has also seen an increase in off-hour 

communications from members about security. Mellor Decl. ¶ 15. As a result, NAF has been 

forced to take increased security measures at increased cost, has cut back on its communications 

with members, and alerted hotel staff and security for its upcoming events that those meetings 

have been “compromised.” Id. ¶ 15.

Two NAF members also submit declarations in support of NAF. Jennifer Dunn, a law 

professor, submits a declaration explaining her expectation that she was filmed during the 2014 

Annual Meeting during a panel presentation and that following the release of the CMP videos, she 

took steps to protect the safety and privacy of her family. Declaration of Jennifer T. Dunn (Dkt. 

No. 3-31) ¶ 10.22 She explains that she is fearful that CMP may release a misleading and highly 

edited video featuring some or all of her panel presentation that would open her up to the sort of 

public disparagement and intimidation she saw directed towards Doctors Nucatola and Gatter after 

the CMP videos were released. Id. ¶¶ 9-10. 

Dr. Matthew Reeves, the medical director of NAF, submits a declaration explaining his 

understanding that Daleiden filmed conversations with him during the 2014 Annual Meeting. 

Declaration of Dr. Matthew Reeves (Dkt. No.) ¶¶ 12-16.23 Dr. Reeves explains that he has 

witnessed “the terrible reaction towards the prior doctors” who were featured in CMP’s videos and 

he expects he “will suffer similar levels of reputational harm should a heavily edited and 

misleading video of me be released.” Id. ¶ 17. Because of his expectation that defendants could 

“target” him, since the release of the videos, he had his home inspected by NAF’s security team 

and is installing a security system, but given the current atmosphere he remains fearful for his

safety and that of his family. Id. ¶¶ 19, 21.

 

22 Defendants object to paragraph 10 of Dunn’s declaration as lacking in personal knowledge, 

improper expert testimony, inadmissible hearsay, and improper opinion. Those objections are 

overruled.

23 Defendants object to paragraph 12 of Dr. Reeves declaration as speculative, improper expert 

testimony, improper opinion testimony, and for lack of personal knowledge. Those objections are 

overruled.

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V. TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER AND PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

On July 31, 2015, based on an application from NAF and after reviewing the preliminary

evidentiary record, I granted NAF’s request and entered a Temporary Restraining Order that 

restrained and enjoined defendants and their officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys, 

and any other persons who are in active concert or participation with them from:

(1) publishing or otherwise disclosing to any third party any video, audio, photographic, or 

other recordings taken, or any confidential information learned, at any NAF annual 

meetings;

(2) publishing or otherwise disclosing to any third party the dates or locations of any future 

NAF meetings; and

(3) publishing or otherwise disclosing to any third party the names or addresses of any 

NAF members learned at any NAF annual meetings.

Dkt. No. 15. On August 3, 2015, after reviewing the arguments and additional evidence submitted 

by defendants, I issued an order keeping the TRO in place pending the hearing and ruling on 

NAF’s motion for a preliminary injunction. Dkt. No. 27. On August 26, 2015, I entered a 

stipulated Protective Order, which provided that before responding to any subpoenas from law 

enforcement entities for information designated as confidential under the Protective Order, the 

party receiving the subpoena must notify the party whose materials are at issue and inform the 

entity that issued the subpoena that the materials requested are covered by the TRO. Dkt. No. 92 

¶ 9. The purpose of the notice provision is to allow the party whose confidential materials are 

sought the opportunity to meet and confer and, if necessary, seek relief from the subpoena in the 

court or tribunal from which the subpoena issued. Id. 

In NAF’s motion for preliminary injunction, NAF asks me to continue in effect the 

injunction provided in the TRO, but also to expand the scope to include the following: 

(4) enjoin the publication or disclosure of any video, audio, photographic, or other 

recordings taken of members or attendees Defendants first made contact with at NAF 

meetings; and publishing or otherwise disclosing to any third party the dates or 

locations of any future NAF meetings; and

(5) enjoin the defendants from attempting to gain access to any future NAF meetings.

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Motion (Dkt. No. 228-4) at i. 

LEGAL STANDARD

“‘A plaintiff seeking a preliminary injunction must establish that he is likely to succeed on 

the merits, that he is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary relief, that the 

balance of equities tips in his favor, and that an injunction is in the public interest.’” Alliance for 

the Wild Rockies v. Cottrell, 632 F.3d 1127, 1131 (9th Cir. 2011) (quoting Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. 

Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7 (2008)). Where an injunction restrains speech, a showing of 

“exceptional” circumstances may be required, as the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the 

Press pointed out.

24

 See, e.g., Bank Julius Baer & Co. Ltd v. Wikileaks, 535 F. Supp. 2d 980, 985 

(N.D. Cal. 2008). On this record, I conclude that exceptional circumstances exist, meriting the 

continuation of injunctive relief pending final resolution of this case.

DISCUSSION

I. LIKELIHOOD OF SUCCESS

NAF’s Amended Complaint asserts eleven different causes of action against the three 

defendants. Dkt. No. 131. In moving for a preliminary injunction, NAF rests on only two –

breach of contract and violation of California Penal Code section 632 – to argue its likelihood of 

success on the merits. 

A. Breach of Contract

Under California law, to succeed on a breach of contract claim, a plaintiff must prove: (1) 

the existence of a contract, (2) plaintiff performed or is excused for nonperformance, (3) 

defendant’s breach, and (4) resulting damages to plaintiff. See, e.g., Reichert v. Gen. Ins. Co. of 

Am., 68 Cal. 2d 822, 830 (1968). NAF argues that defendants’ conduct: (i) breached the EAs, by 

misrepresenting BioMax and their own identities; (ii) breached the EAs and CAs by secretly 

recording during the Annual Meetings; and (iii) breached the EAs and CAs by disclosing and 

publishing NAF’s confidential materials.

 

24 The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press resubmitted their motion asking the Court to 

consider their amici curiae letter brief. Dkt. No. 287. I GRANT that motion and consider the 

Reporters Committee letter, as well as NAF’s response, and the Reporters Committee’s reply. 

Dkt. Nos. 109, 111, 114, 287.

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1. Existence of a Contract; Consideration for the Confidentiality Agreements

Defendants argue that NAF cannot enforce the CA because that particular agreement was

not supported by consideration for the 2014 or 2015 Meetings. See Chicago Title Ins. Co. v. AMZ 

Ins. Servs., Inc., 188 Cal. App. 4th 401, 423 (2010) (“Every executory contract requires 

consideration, which may be an act, forbearance, change in legal relations, or a promise.”).25 They 

contend that the only document that needed to be signed to gain access to the NAF Meetings was 

the EA. Therefore, according to defendants, there was no separate consideration given with 

respect to the CAs that were signed by or sought from the attendees at the NAF registration tables

because NAF already had a legal obligation to permit them access to the meetings. Oppo. Br. at 

19-20. 

Defendants’ argument is not supported by the facts. The EAs on their face provided access 

to the exhibition area (“Exhibit Rules and Regulations”) and also required that any exhibitor’s 

representatives be registered for the NAF Annual Meetings. Pl. Exs. 3,4. The CAs were required 

as part of the registration for the NAF Annual Meeting, and NAF’s evidence demonstrates that no 

one was supposed to be allowed into the Meetings unless their identification was checked and they 

signed a CA. Declaration of Mark Mellor (Dkt. No. 3-33) ¶ 11; Dunn Decl. ¶ 6; see also Foran PI 

Decl. ¶ 79(C) (Sub-Bates 15-062; Time stamp: 14:56:02-14:56:50) (NAF representative 

confirming that Daleiden and associates had their identification checked and signed confidentiality 

agreements). Nothing in the language of the EAs or CAs, or the other facts in the record, support 

defendants’ argument that upon signing the EAs, NAF had the legal obligation to permit 

Daleiden’s group access to the meetings without further requirement.

Other than lack of consideration, the only other argument defendants appear to make with 

respect to the CA is that the CA cannot be enforced against Daleiden and two of his associates 

(Tennenbaum and Allen) because they did not execute CAs for the 2015 NAF Annual Meeting. 

Oppo. Br. at 19-20 & fn. 7. As an initial matter, there is no dispute that everyone in Daleiden’s 

group signed the CAs for the 2014 Meeting. There is also no dispute that the reason Daleiden and 

 

25 Defendants make no argument that the EA was not supported by consideration. It plainly was; 

access to the exhibition hall in exchange for submission of the Application and payment of the 

exhibitor fee.

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two of his associates did not sign the CAs for the 2015 Meeting is that Daleiden lied about it to a 

NAF representative. Foran PI Decl. ¶ 79(C) (Sub-Bates 15-062; Time stamp: 14:56:02-14:56:50). 

There is likewise no dispute that at least one of the CMP associates working at Daleiden’s 

direction, “Lopez,” signed the 2015 CA. Given these facts, on this record, the 2015 CA can be 

enforced against defendants for purposes of determining likelihood of success on NAF’s breach of 

contract claim. 

I find that NAF has shown a likelihood of success on their breach of contract claim based 

on the 2014 and 2015 CAs.

2. Whether Defendants’ Conduct Breached the EA

Defendants argue that NAF cannot prevail on its claim that defendants misrepresented 

themselves in violation of the EA because Paragraph 15 of the EA only requires Exhibitors to 

“identify, display, and/or represent their business, products, and/or services truthfully, accurately, 

and consistently with the information provided in the Application.” Defendants contend that this 

requirement applies only to BioMax, not Daleiden and his associates “individually,” and that 

NAF is attempting to base its breach claim on representations defendants made about BioMax 

and/or CMP outside of the NAF Annual Meetings. Oppo. Br. at 20-21. 

By signing the EA on behalf of a fake company, defendants CMP and Daleiden necessarily 

violated paragraph 19 of the EA, which required the signatory’s affirmation that the information in 

the Agreement, as well as any information displayed at the Meetings, was “truthful, accurate, 

complete, and not misleading.” Pl. Exs. 3,4. Similarly, by signing the EA and then displaying and 

representing false and inaccurate information about BioMax at the Meetings, defendants CMP and 

Daleiden violated paragraph 15 as well.26 Defendants’ conduct with respect to the information 

they conveyed in the EA and their conduct at the NAF meeting is sufficient – on this record – to 

 

26 Defendants assert in their brief, without any citation to evidence, that BioMax’s “business” was 

to “assess the market for clinics and abortion providers willing to partner with it in buying and 

selling fetal tissue.” Oppo. Br. at 21. This post-hoc rationalization is contrary to the defendants’ 

own contemporaneous statements and their statements on the EAs themselves which required the 

applicant to “5. List the products or services to be exhibited” and which Daleiden filled out as 

“biological specimen procurement, stem cell research” and “fetal tissue procurement, human 

biospecimen procurement.” Pl. Exs. 3,4; see also Pl. Ex. 26 (describing BioMax as a “front 

organization.”).

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show a violation of that agreement, regardless of how defendants may have portrayed BioMax 

outside of the NAF Meetings. 

Defendants’ argument that paragraph 15 of the EA restricts the remedies NAF can seek for 

breach to cancellation of the EA and removal of exhibits at the Meetings, and excludes the 

injunctive relief sought in this motion is likewise without support. Defendants continue to ignore 

paragraphs 18 and 19, which provide that if there is a breach of the EA, NAF is entitled to seek 

specific performance, injunctive relief and “all other remedies available at law or equity.” Pl. Exs. 

3,4.

On the record before me, NAF has a strong likelihood of success on its argument that 

defendants breached the EA for the 2014 and 2015 NAF Annual Meetings.27

3. Scope and Reasonableness of the EA

Defendants argue that the EA is unenforceable because it is overbroad, imprecise, and 

unreasonable. Specifically, they rely on NAF’s characterization of the EA (and presumably the 

CA as well) as “broad” and encompassing all NAF communications and things learned at the NAF 

Meetings to argue that the EA’s breadth is problematic. 

That a confidentiality provision is broad does not mean it is unenforceable. The cases cited 

by defendants on this point are not to the contrary.28 For example, in Wildmon v. Berwick 

Universal Pictures, 803 F. Supp. 1167, 1178 (N.D. Miss.) aff’d, 979 F.2d 209 (5th Cir. 1992), 

after applying Mississippi’s contract interpretation doctrine and determining that the contract 

language was ambiguous, the Court concluded that “an ambiguous contract should be read in a 

 

27 Defendants also argue that their recordings could not have violated the EA because the EA did 

not prohibit audio and video recording, it only prohibited photography. Oppo. Br. at 19-20; EA at 

¶ 13. Disputes over whether a ban on “photography” would prohibit video and audio recording 

aside, the CAs clearly prohibited all forms of recording and are enforceable against defendants, 

even for the 2015 meeting as discussed above. In a footnote, defendants assert that the CAs 

should be read as limiting the prohibition on recording to only formal sessions at the Meetings and 

not informal discussions. Oppo. Br. at 20, fn. 8. That argument is not supported. There is 

nothing in the text of the CA that indicates that “discussions” is limited to formal panel or 

workshop presentations and does not encompass information that is conveyed outside of those 

“formal” events.

28 Cf. Coast Plaza Doctors Hosp. v. Blue Cross of California, 83 Cal. App. 4th 677, 684 (2000), as 

modified (Sept. 7, 2000) (giving full effect to “contractual language [that] is both clear and plain. 

It is also very broad. In interpreting an unambiguous contractual provision we are bound to give 

effect to the plain and ordinary meaning of the language used by the parties.”).

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way that allows viewership and encourages debate.” The problem in Wildmon was not breadth,

but ambiguity. 

In In re JDS Uniphase Corp. Sec. Litig., 238 F. Supp. 2d 1127 (N.D. Cal. 2002), a 

securities class action, the state of Connecticut moved the court to limit the scope of a 

confidentiality agreement the employer imposed on its employees so that the employees could 

respond to a state investigation. The court concluded, to “the extent that those agreements 

preclude former employees from assisting in investigations of wrongdoing that have nothing to do 

with trade secrets or other confidential business information, they conflict with the public policy in 

favor of allowing even current employees to assist in securities fraud investigations.” Id. at 1137. 

The considerations the court addressed in In re JDS Uniphase Corp. Sec. Litig that led it to limit 

the scope of the employee confidentiality agreement may have some persuasive value with respect 

to the interests of the Attorney General amici discussed below, but do not weigh against 

enforcement of NAF’s confidentiality agreements against defendants generally. This is especially 

true considering that there are significant, countervailing public policy arguments weighing in 

favor of enforcing NAF’s confidentiality agreements. See, e.g., Cal. Govt. Code § 6215(a) 

(recognizing that persons working in the reproductive health care field, specifically the provision 

of terminating a pregnancy, are often subject to harassment, threats, and acts of violence by 

persons or groups).

The final case relied on by defendants in support of their argument that the EA should be 

interpreted narrowly, consistent with the public’s interest in hearing speech on matters of public 

concern, did not address a confidentiality agreement at all. See Curtis Pub. Co. v. Butts, 388 U.S. 

130, 145 (1967). The Curtis case found that absent clear and compelling circumstances, the Court 

would not find that a defendant had waived a First Amendment defense to libel (where that

specific defense had not been established by the Supreme Court at the time of defendants’ libel

trial).

Defendants also rely on established case law directing courts to interpret ambiguous 

contracts in a manner that is reasonable and does not lead to absurd results. Oppo. Br. at 22-23. 

Defendants argue that the broad coverage NAF contends the EA imposes on defendants is 

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unreasonable and absurd because NAF’s interpretation of the broad scope of the EA would cover 

all information discussed at NAF’s Meetings, even publicly known information. Oppo. at 22-23. 

Defendants’ argument might have some merit if it was made concerning a challenge to the 

application of the EAs’ confidentiality provisions with respect to specific pieces or types of 

information that are otherwise publicly known or intended by NAF to be shared with individuals 

not covered by the EA. Defendants do not make that type of “as applied,” narrow argument. 

Instead, they argue that the whole EA is unenforceable. There is no legal support for that result or 

for defendants’ speculation that the EA might be enforced in an unreasonable manner against other 

NAF attendees.

29

4. What Information is Covered by EA

Defendants argue that even if enforceable, the EA should be read to create confidentiality 

only for the information provided by NAF in formal sessions and should not be construed to cover 

information provided by conference attendees in informal conversations. Oppo. Br. at 26-27. 

Defendants rely on the two portions of paragraph 17 of EA for their restrictive interpretation of its 

coverage; they argue that paragraph 17 only restricts disclosure of information “NAF may furnish” 

and “written information provided by NAF.” Those provisions, defendants say, should be read to 

modify “any information which is disclosed orally or visually.” Taken together, defendants argue, 

this language “connotes formality” and therefore should cover only oral and visual information 

provided in formal sessions at the Meetings. Oppo. Br. at 26.

As an initial matter, defendants wholly ignore the provision in the EAs that signatories 

agree – on behalf of entities and their employees and agents – to “hold in trust and confidence any 

confidential information received in the course of exhibiting at the NAF Annual Meeting and 

agree not to reproduce or disclose confidential information without express permission from 

NAF.” Pl. Exs. 3,4. The only reason defendants gained access to the NAF Annual Meetings was 

 

29 I agree with defendants that NAF’s intent with respect to the EA and CA is irrelevant for 

purposes of this motion. Under California contract law, intent comes into play only when contract 

language is ambiguous. There is no ambiguity concerning meaning of the EA or CA with respect 

to defendants’ conduct here and, therefore, no need to construe otherwise ambiguous terms against 

the drafter. But see Rebolledo v. Tilly’s, Inc., 228 Cal. App. 4th 900, 913 (2014) (“ambiguities in 

standard form contracts are to be construed against the drafter.”).

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under their guise as exhibitors and all information they received was in the course of that role, 

even if gathered in places other than the exhibition hall. Moreover, defendants’ constrained 

reading of paragraph 17 is illogical. The text of paragraph 17, when read as a whole, covers all 

written, oral, and visual information, and the “formality” of the language does not restrict its 

requirements to only the “formal” workshops and presentations as argued by defendants. 30 

In sum, on the record before me, NAF has demonstrated a strong likelihood of success on 

its breach of contract claims both with respect to the EAs that were signed by all CMP operatives 

in 2014 and 2015, and with respect to the CAs that were signed by Daleiden and his associates in 

2014 and signed by Lopez in 2015.

B. California Penal Code section 632

NAF also contends that it has demonstrated a likelihood of success on its claim that 

defendants violated California Penal Code section 632. That provision makes it a crime to,

“without the consent of all parties to a confidential communication, by means of any electronic 

amplifying or recording device, eavesdrops upon or records the confidential communication,

whether the communication is carried on among the parties in the presence of one another or by 

means of a telegraph, telephone, or other device.” Cal. Penal Code § 632(a). “The term 

‘confidential communication’ includes any communication carried on in circumstances as may 

reasonably indicate that any party to the communication desires it to be confined to the parties 

thereto, but excludes a communication . . . in any other circumstance in which the parties to the 

communication may reasonably expect that the communication may be overheard or recorded.” 

Id. § 632(c). And “[e]xcept as proof in an action or prosecution for violation of this section, no 

evidence obtained as a result of eavesdropping upon or recording a confidential communication in 

violation of this section shall be admissible in any judicial, administrative, legislative, or other 

proceeding.” Id. § 632(d).

Defendants argue that because section 632 does not prohibit publication of recordings 

made in violation of the statute, NAF cannot justify an injunction against defendants based upon 

 

30 The same is true of defendants “implications of formality” argument made with respect to the 

CAs in a footnote. See Oppo. Br. at 27, n.12.

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an alleged violation of that statute. Indeed, California courts have held that “Penal Code section 

632 does not prohibit the disclosure of information gathered in violation of its terms.” Lieberman 

v. KCOP Television, Inc., 110 Cal. App. 4th 156, 167 (2003); cf. Kight v. CashCall, Inc., 200 Cal. 

App. 4th 1377, 1393 (2011) (“Although a recording preserves the conversation and thus could 

cause greater damage to an individual's privacy in the future, these losses are not protected by 

section 632.”).

In reply, NAF argues that its section 632 claim is not being asserted as a basis for 

enjoining release of the recordings already made, but in support of its request that defendants be 

enjoined from “attempting to gain access to any future NAF meetings in order to tape its members, 

a form of relief specifically provided under § 637.2(b) (“Any person may . . . bring an action to 

enjoin and restrain any violation of this chapter, and may in the same action seek damages as 

provided by subdivision (a).”). 

Penal Code section 632, therefore, is not relevant to NAF’s chances of success on the 

merits, but only with respect to the appropriate scope of injunctive relief, discussed below.31

C. The First Amendment and Public Policy Implications of the Requested Injunction

Defendants argue that, assuming NAF demonstrates a likelihood of success on the breach 

of contract claim, the EAs and CAs should not be enforced through an injunction prohibiting 

defendants from publishing the recordings because that is an unjustified prior restraint and against 

public policy. NAF counters that even if First Amendment issues are raised by the injunction it 

seeks, any right to speech implicated by publishing the NAF recordings has been waived by 

defendants knowing agreement to the EAs and CAs. 

NAF relies primarily on a line of cases holding that where parties to a contract agree to 

restrictions on speech, those restrictions are generally upheld. For example, in Leonard v. Clark, 

the Ninth Circuit addressed a union and union members’ challenge to a Collective Bargaining 

 

31 Both sides spend much time arguing whether section 632 prohibits recording panel 

presentations as opposed to conversations between individuals, because section 632’s protections 

only extend to information as to which the speaker has a “reasonable expectation” of privacy. I 

need not reach these arguments as NAF no longer asserts section 632 as a ground for its likelihood 

of success on this motion.

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Agreement that arguably restricted their First Amendment rights to petition the government. 12 

F.3d 885, 886 (9th Cir. 1993), as amended (Mar. 8, 1994). The court, following Supreme Court 

precedent, recognized that “First Amendment rights may be waived upon clear and convincing 

evidence that the waiver is knowing, voluntary and intelligent,” and concluded that in negotiating 

the CBA the union knowingly waived any First Amendment rights that may have been implicated. 

Id. at 890. 

Other cases have likewise found that speech rights can be knowingly waived. ITT Telecom 

Prod. Corp. v. Dooley, 214 Cal. App. 3d 307, 317, 319 (1989) (recognizing, in a case determining 

the scope of California’s litigation privilege, that “it is possible to waive even First Amendment 

free speech rights by contract.”); Perricone v. Perricone, 292 Conn. 187, 202 (2009) (Supreme 

Court of Connecticut enforced non-disclosure agreement as knowing and voluntary waiver of First 

Amendment rights and enjoined ex-wife from “appearing on radio or television” for purposes of 

discussing her former marriage or spouse); Brooks v. Vallejo City Unified Sch. Dist., No. 2:09-

CV-1815 MCE JFM, 2009 WL 10441783, at *5 (E.D. Cal. Oct. 30, 2009) (recognizing, in 

denying a third-party’s attempt to secure a copy of a public entities’ settlement agreement with 

two individual plaintiffs, that individuals “were entitled to bargain away their free speech rights by 

agreeing to confidentiality provisions or other contractual provisions that restrict free speech”).

Defendants respond that NAF has not shown that Daleiden knowingly and intelligently 

waived his First Amendment rights by signing the NAF confidentiality agreements, resting their 

argument on Daleiden’s position that he believed the agreements were unenforceable and void. 

Daleiden PI Decl. ¶ 12 (“I understood that no nondisclosure agreement is valid in the face of 

criminal activity. In the course of my investigative journalism work, I have seen other 

confidentiality agreements, all of which were far more specific and detailed in terms of what the 

protected information was. I believed the working of the nondisclosure portions of the Exhibit 

Agreement was too broad, vague, and contradictory to be enforced.”). However, even if Daleiden 

honestly believed he had defenses to the enforcement of the confidentiality agreements, there is no 

argument – and no case law cited – that his signature on them and his agreement to them was not 

“knowing and voluntary.” Daleiden and his associates chose to attend the NAF Annual Meetings 

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and voluntarily and knowingly signed the EAs and CAs. 

Daleiden’s argument would vitiate the enforceability of confidentiality agreements based 

on an individual’s correct or mistaken belief as to the enforceability of those agreements. It is 

contrary to well-established law. See, e.g., Leonard v. Clark, 12 F.3d at 890 (“The fact that the 

Union informed the City of its view that Article V was ‘unconstitutional, illegal, and 

unenforceable’ does not make the Union’s execution of the agreement any less voluntary.”); see

also Griffin v. Payne, 133 Cal. App. 363, 373 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933) (“A secret intent to violate the 

law, concealed in the mind of one party to an otherwise legal contract, cannot enable such party to 

avoid the contract and escape his liability under its terms.”).

Defendants contend that the public policy at issue – allowing free speech on issues of 

significant public importance – weighs against finding a waiver and/or enforcing the 

confidentiality agreements. The Ninth Circuit has recognized that courts should balance the 

competing public interests in determining whether to enforce confidentiality agreements that 

restrict First Amendment rights. Leonard, 12 F.3d at 890 (“even if a party is found to have validly 

waived a constitutional right, we will not enforce the waiver ‘if the interest in its enforcement is 

outweighed in the circumstances by a public policy harmed by enforcement of the agreement.’”) 

(quoting Davies v. Grossmont Union High Sch. Dist., 930 F.2d 1390, 1394 (9th Cir.1991)); see 

also Perricone v. Perricone, 292 Conn. 187, 221-22 (in weighing the public interests as to whether 

to enforce the agreement, the court observed: “The agreement does not prohibit the disclosure of 

information concerning the enforcement of laws protecting important rights, criminal behavior, the 

public health and safety or matters of great public importance, and the plaintiff is not a public 

official.”).

On the record before me, balancing the significant interests as stake on both sides supports 

enforcement of the confidentiality agreements at this juncture. As the Supreme Court recognized 

in Cohen v. Cowles Media Co., 501 U.S. 663, 672 (1991), “the First Amendment does not confer 

on the press a constitutional right to disregard promises that would otherwise be enforced under 

state law.” Id. at 672. “‘[T]he publisher of a newspaper has no special immunity from the 

application of general laws. He has no special privilege to invade the rights and liberties of 

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others.’” Id. at 7670 (quoting Associated Press v. NLRB, 301 U.S. 103 (1937)); see also 

Dietemann v. Time, Inc., 449 F.2d 245, 249 (9th Cir. 1971) (“The First Amendment is not a 

license to trespass, to steal, or to intrude by electronic means into the precincts of another's home 

or office. It does not become such a license simply because the person subjected to the intrusion is 

reasonably suspected of committing a crime.”). That defendants intended to infiltrate the NAF 

Annual Meetings in order to uncover evidence of alleged criminal wrongdoing that would “trigger 

criminal prosecution and civil litigation against Planned Parenthood and to precipitate pro-life 

political and cultural ramifications when the revelations become public,” does not give defendants 

an automatic license to disregard the confidentiality provisions. Pl. Ex. 26. 

Defendants passionately contend that public policy is on their side (and the side of public 

disclosure) because the recordings show criminal wrongdoing by abortion providers – a matter 

that is indisputably of significant public interest. Cf. Bernardo v. Planned Parenthood Fed’n of 

Am., 115 Cal. App. 4th 322, 358 (2004) (approving judicial notice “of the fact that abortion is one 

of the most controversial political issues in our nation.”).32 I have reviewed the recordings relied 

on by defendants and find no evidence of criminal wrongdoing. At the very most, some of the 

individuals expressed an interest in exploring a relationship with defendants’ fake company in 

response to defendants entreaties of how “profitable” it can be and how tissue donation can assist 

in furthering research. There are no express agreements to profit from the sale of fetal tissue or to 

change the timing of abortions to allow for tissue procurement.

33

 

 

32 Defendants ask for leave to supplement the record to include the January 20, 2016 Order in the 

StemExpress LLC, Inc. v. Center for Medical Progress case pending in Los Angeles Superior 

Court. Dkt. No. 352. Defendants ask me to take notice that the Superior Court found defendants’ 

Project video regarding StemExpress was “constitutionally protected activity in connection with a 

matter of public interest” under California’s anti-SLAPP statute. That motion is GRANTED.

33 The first piece of evidence that defendants repeatedly point to show “illegality” is an 

advertisement by StemExpress that was in both of the NAF 2014 and 2015 Meeting brochures. 

That ad states that clinics can “advance biomedical research,” that partnering with StemExpress 

can be “Financially Profitable*Easy to Implement Plug-In Solution*Safeguards You and Your 

Donors” and that the “partner program” “fiscally rewards clinics.” See Dkt. No. 270-1 at p. 3 of 

10. However, the ad explains that StemExpress is a company that provides human tissue products 

“ranging from fetal to adult tissues and healthy to diseased samples” to many of the leading 

research institutions in the world. Id. The ad, therefore, is a general one and not one aimed solely 

at providers of fetal tissue. The ad does not demonstrate that StemExpress was engaged in illegal 

conduct of paying clinics at a profit for fetal tissue.

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I also find it significant that while defendants’ repeatedly assert that their primary interest 

in infiltrating NAF was to uncover evidence of criminal wrongdoing, and that the NAF recordings 

show such wrongdoing, defendants did not provide any of the NAF recordings to law enforcement 

following the 2014 Annual Meeting. Nor did defendants provide any of the NAF recordings to 

law enforcement immediately following the 2015 Annual Meetings. Instead, defendants decided it 

was more important to “curate” and release the Project videos starting in July 2015. Sworn 

testimony from Daleiden establishes that the only disclosure of NAF materials he made to law 

enforcement officers was: (i) providing a StemExpress advertisement from the NAF 2014 Annual 

Meeting program to law enforcement in El Dorado County, California in May 2015; and, 

providing (ii) “short clips” of video to law enforcement in Texas in June or July 2015. Daleiden 

PI Decl. ¶ 24. If the NAF recordings truly demonstrated criminal conduct – the alleged goal of the 

undercover operation – then CMP would have immediately turned them over to law enforcement. 

They did not.

Perhaps realizing that the recordings do not show criminal wrongdoing, defendants shift 

and assert that there is a public interest in the recordings showing “a remarkable de-sensitization in 

the attitudes of industry participants.” Oppo. Br. at 14. As part of that shift, defendants’ 

opposition brief highlights portions of the recordings where abortion providers comment candidly 

about how emotionally and professionally difficult their work can be. Oppo. Br. at 14-15. I have 

reviewed defendants’ transcripts of these portions of the recordings. Some comments can be 

characterized as callous and some may show a “de-sensitization,” as defendants describe it. They 

can also be described as frank and uttered in the context of providers mutually recognizing the 

difficulties they face in performing their work. However they are characterized, there issome 

public interest in these comments. But unlike defendants’ purported uncovering of criminal 

activity, this sort of information is already fully part of the public debate over abortion. Oppo. Br. 

at 49-50 (citing Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124, 158 (2007); Stenberg v. Carhart, 530 U.S. 

914, 962 (2000)); see also VALUE OF HUMAN LIFE, 162 Cong Rec S 162, 163 (January 21, 

2016); PROVIDING FOR CONSIDERATION OF H.R. 1947, FEDERAL AGRICULTURE 

REFORM AND RISK MANAGEMENT ACT OF 2013, 159 Cong Rec H 3708, 3709 (June 8, 

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2013 testimony on the PAIN-CAPABLE UNBORN CHILD PROTECTION ACT). The public 

interest in additional information on this issue cannot, standing alone, outweigh the competing 

interests of NAF and its members’ expectations of privacy, their ability to perform their 

professions, and their personal security. 

It is also this very information that could – if released and taken out of the context that it 

was shared in by NAF members – result in the sort of disparagement, intimidation, and harassment

of which NAF members who were recorded during the Annual Meetings are afraid. Dunn Decl. ¶ 

10; Reeves Decl. ¶ 17. In sum, the public interest in these comments is certainly relevant, but 

does not weigh heavily against the enforcement of the NAF confidentiality agreements.

On the other side, public policy also supports NAF’s position. NAF has submitted 

extensive evidence that in order to fulfill its mission and allow candid discussions of the 

challenges its members face – both professional and personal – confidentiality agreements for 

NAF Meeting attendees are absolutely necessary. Dunn Decl. ¶¶ 5-6; Reeves Decl. ¶ 7; Saporta 

Decl. ¶¶ 11, 13-16; Mellor Decl. ¶¶ 7, 10-14. Release of the recordings procured by fraud and

taken in violation of NAF’s stringent confidentiality agreements, which disclose the identities of 

NAF members and compromise steps NAF members take to protect their privacy and professional 

interests, is also contrary to California’s recognition of the dangers faced by providers of abortion, 

as well as California’s efforts to keep information regarding the same shielded from public 

disclosure and protect them from threats and harassment. See Cal. Govt. Code § 6215(a) (“(a) 

Persons working in the reproductive health care field, specifically the provision of terminating a 

pregnancy, are often subject to harassment, threats, and acts of violence by persons or groups.”); 

Cal. Civ. Code § 3427 et seq. (creating cause of action to deter interference with access to clinics 

and health care); Cal. Govt. Code § 6218 (“Prohibition on soliciting, selling, trading, or posting on 

Internet private information of those involved with reproductive health services”); Cal. Govt. Code 

§ 6254.28; Cal. Penal Code § 423 (“California Freedom of Access to Clinic and Church Entrances 

Act.”). As noted above, since defendants’ release of the Project videos (as well as the leak of a 

portion of the NAF recordings), harassment, threats, and violent acts taken against NAF members

and facilities have increased dramatically. It is not speculative to expect that harassment, threats, 

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and violent acts will continue to rise if defendants were to release NAF materials in a similar way.

Weighing the public policy interests on the record before me, enforcement of the confidentiality 

agreements against defendants is not contrary to public policy. 

That said, public policy may well support the release of a small subset of records – those 

that defendants believe show criminal wrongdoing – to law enforcement agencies.34 Defendants 

rely on a line of cases where courts have refused to enforce, or excused compliance with,

otherwise applicable confidentiality agreements for the limited purpose of allowing cooperation 

with a specified law enforcement investigation. See, e.g., Alderson v. United States, 718 F. Supp. 

2d 1186, 1200 (C.D. Cal. 2010); In re JDS Uniphase Corp. Sec. Litig., 238 F. Supp. 2d 1127 

(N.D. Cal. 2002); Lachman v. Sperry-Sun Well Surveying Co., 457 F.2d 850, 854 (10th Cir. 1972); 

see also United States ex rel. Green v. Northrop Corp., 59 F.3d 953, 965 (9th Cir. 1995) (refusing 

to enforce a prefiling release of a False Claims Act claim); Siebert v. Gene Sec. Network, Inc, No. 

11-CV-01987-JST, 2013 WL 5645309, at *8 (N.D. Cal. Oct. 16, 2013) (declining to enforce a 

nondisclosure agreement with respect to documents relevant to a FCA claim because application 

of the NDA to those documents would “would frustrate Congress’ purpose in enacting the False 

Claims Act—namely, the public policy in favor of providing incentives for whistleblowers to 

come forward, file FCA suits, and aid the government in its investigation efforts.”); but see

Cafasso, U.S. ex rel. v. Gen. Dynamics C4 Sys., Inc., 637 F.3d 1047, 1062 n.15 (9th Cir. 2011) 

(upholding breach of confidentiality claim, despite plaintiff’s attempt to “excuse her conduct on 

the grounds that she was in contact with, and providing information to, government investigators,” 

in part because that justification “neither explains nor excuses the overbreadth of her seizure of 

documents.”).

35

I do not disagree with the analysis and results in those cases, but note that the posture of 

 

34

 As I have said, my review of the recordings relied on by defendants does not show criminal 

conduct, but I recognize that law enforcement agencies may want to review the information at 

issue themselves in order to make their own assessment.

35 Defendants also rely on a related line of cases holding that contracts which expressly prohibit a 

signatory from reporting criminal behavior to law enforcement agencies are void as against public 

policy. See, e.g., Oppo. Br. at 52-55 (citing Fomby-Denson v. Dep’t of the Army, 247 F.3d 1366, 

1376 (Fed. Cir. 2001); Bowyer v. Burgess, 54 Cal. 2d 97, 98 (1960)). Those cases are inapposite.

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this case is different. Defendants’ purported desire to disclose the NAF recordings to law 

enforcement does not obviate the confidentiality agreements for all purposes. At most, defendants 

might have a defense to a breach of contract claim based on production of NAF materials to law 

enforcement. However, the question of whether defendants should be excused from complying 

with NAF’s confidentiality agreements in order to provide NAF materials to law enforcement has 

not been placed directly at issue. In this case, Attorney General amici have appeared (with leave 

of court) to present their arguments on the scope of the TRO and the requested preliminary 

injunction.36 They have not directly sought relief from the confidentiality agreements, the TRO, 

or the requested preliminary injunction by intervening and moving for declaratory relief in this 

Court or by seeking enforcement of their subpoenas in the courts of their own states. And 

contrary to their assertion, the TRO in place and the Preliminary Injunction requested do not 

prevent law enforcement officials from investigating defendants’ claims of criminal wrongdoing. 

For example, law enforcement agencies from the states of Arizona and Louisiana have instituted 

formal efforts to secure the NAF recordings. Under procedures outlined in the Protective Order in 

this case, NAF and defendants have been and continue to meet and confer with those state 

authorities about the scope of the subpoenas and defendants’ responses.

37

The record before me demonstrates that defendants infiltrated the NAF meetings with the 

intent to disregard the confidentiality provisions and secretly record participants and presentations 

at those meetings. Defendants also admit that only a small subset of the total material gathered 

implicate any potential criminal wrongdoing. Oppo. Br. at 10-14. I have reviewed those 

transcripts and recordings and find no evidence of actual criminal wrongdoing. That defendants 

did not promptly turn over those recordings to law enforcement likewise belies their claim that 

 

36 I have granted the Attorneys General of the states of Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Michigan, 

Montana, Nebraska, and Oklahoma leave to participate as amici curiae in this matter. Dkt. Nos. 

99, 100, 285. As represented by the office of the Attorney General of Arizona, the amici filed a 

brief and argued in court during the hearing on the Motion for a Preliminary Injunction.

37 There have only been three subpoenas served on CMP for NAF materials; the Congressional 

subpoena that has been complied with, as well as subpoenas from Louisiana and Arizona. 

Negotiations between NAF, CMP, and the states of Louisiana and Arizona are ongoing. While 

NAF and the defendants have repeatedly stipulated to extend the timeframe for NAF to file a 

challenge to the state subpoenas in state court (see Dkt. Nos. 246, 300), those were decisions 

reached by the parties and not imposed by the Court. 

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they uncovered criminal wrongdoing, and instead supports NAF’s contention that defendants’ goal 

instead is to falsely portray the operations of NAF’s members through continued release of its 

“curated” videos as part of its strategy to alter the political landscape with respect to abortion and 

the public perception of NAF’s members.

38

 I conclude that NAF has shown a strong likelihood of 

success on its breach of contract claims against CMP and Daleiden. Enforcement of NAF’s 

confidentiality provisions for purposes of continuing the injunction prohibiting defendants from 

releasing the NAF materials is not against public policy.

D. Claims Against Newman

Defendant Newman argues that NAF has failed to show a likelihood of success against 

him because there is no evidence of his role in the NAF infiltration and no argument that Newman 

breached any of NAF’s agreements. Newman’s argument would be more relevant if this were a 

motion for summary judgment. However, it is not. The only question is whether NAF has made a 

strong showing of the likelihood of success on its contract claim against CMP and Daleiden, 

which it has. NAF submitted evidence of Newman’s own admissions that he advised Daleiden on 

how to infiltrate the NAF meetings as part of the Project, which is relevant to the appropriate 

scope of an injunction. Pl. Ex. 14 (at NAF0004475-76); Pl. Ex. 16 (at NAF0004493-94). That 

evidence makes clear that Newman should remain covered by the Preliminary Injunction, even if 

he is no longer serving as a board member of CMP. Dkt. No. 344.

II. IRREPARABLE INJURY

To sustain the request for a preliminary injunction, NAF must demonstrate that 

“irreparable injury is likely in the absence of” the requested injunction” and establish a “sufficient 

causal connection” between the irreparable harm NAF seeks to avoid and defendants’ intended 

conduct – release of the NAF materials. Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7, 22

(2008); Perfect 10, Inc. v. Google, Inc., 653 F.3d 976, 982 (9th Cir. 2011).

 

38 In opposing NAF’s request that the Court order Daleiden to turn over the NAF materials to his 

outside counsel, Daleiden’s counsel explained that Daleiden needed access to the NAF materials 

because “Mr. Daleiden continues to work on the Human Capital Project, including the work of

curating available raw investigative materials for disclosure to law enforcement and for release of 

videos to the public.” Dkt. No. 195.

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Defendants argue that NAF has not shown that it will suffer irreparable injury to justify a 

preliminary injunction. However, as detailed above, the release of videos as part of defendants’

Human Capital Project has directly led to a significant increase in harassment, threats, and 

violence directed not only at the “targets” of CMP’s videos but also at NAF and its members more 

generally. This significant increase in harassment and violent acts – including the most recent 

attack in Colorado Springs at the clinic where “target” Dr. Ginde is the medical director – has been 

adequately linked to the timing of the release of the Project videos by CMP. Saporta Decl. ¶ 19; 

Saporta Depo. 42:1-10; Pl. Exs. 92, 93, 96-99.39 If the NAF materials were publicly released, it is 

likely that the NAF attendees shown in those recordings would not only face an increase in 

harassment, threats, or incidents of violence, but also would have to expend more effort and 

money to implement additional security measures. See, e.g,. Dunn Decl. ¶ 10; Reeves Decl. ¶ 

19.40 The same is true for NAF itself, which provides security assessments and assistance for its 

members. Mellor Decl., ¶ 15; Saporta Decl. ¶ 10.

Defendants contend that they cannot be held responsible for the threats, harassment, and 

violence caused by “third-parties” in response to the release of the Project videos, and that 

defendants’ ability to publish the NAF materials cannot be prevented when defendants have not 

themselves been linked to the threats, harassment, and violence. Oppo. Br. at 43-44. But they fail 

to contradict NAF’s evidentiary showing that a significant increase in these acts followed CMP’s

release of its Project videos. Moreover, a report submitted by NAF of an analysis of many of the 

“highlight” and “full” videos released by CMP concluded that the “curated” or highlight Project 

videos were “misleading” and suggests that the “full” videos defendants released along with their 

“highlights” were also edited. Pl. Ex. 77. Defendants do not counter this evidence, other than 

pointing to Daleiden’s assertion that the highlight videos were accompanied by the release of the 

“full” recordings. Given the evidence of defendants’ past practices, allowing defendants to use the 

NAF materials in future Project videos would likely lead to the same result – release of misleading 

 

39 Defendants object to Exhibits 98 and 99 as inadmissible hearsay, for lack of personal 

knowledge, lack of authentication, and as irrelevant. Those objections are overruled.

40 Defendants object to paragraph 19 of Dr. Reeves’ declaration as speculative, improper expert 

testimony, and for lack of foundation. Those objections are OVERRULED. 

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“highlight” videos disclosing the identity and comments of NAF members and meeting attendees,

resulting in further harassment and incidents of violence against the individuals shown in those 

recordings. The NAF members and attendees in the recordings have a justifiable expectation that 

release of the materials – in direct contravention of the NAF confidentiality agreements – will 

result not only in harassment and violence but reputational harms as well. See, e.g., Dunn Decl. ¶¶ 

9-10;41 Reeves Decl. ¶ 17.

Defendants miss the point in their attempt to shift the responsibility to overly zealous thirdparties for the actual and likely injury to NAF and its members that would stem from disclosure of 

the NAF materials. If defendants are allowed to release the NAF materials, NAF and its members 

would suffer immediate harms, including the need to take additional security measures. The 

“causal connection” between NAF’s and its members’ irreparable injury and the conduct enjoined 

(release of NAF materials) has been shown on this record.42

On the other side of the equation is defendants’ claim of irreparable injury. They focus on 

their First Amendment right to disseminate the information fraudulently obtained at the NAF 

Meetings, and the injury to the public of being deprived of the NAF recordings. But freedom of 

speech is not absolute, especially where there has been a voluntary agreement to keep information 

confidential. While the disclosure of evidence of criminal activity or evidence of imminent harm 

to public health and safety could outweigh enforcement of NAF’s confidentiality agreements (as 

discussed above), there is no such evidence in defendants’ recordings. Viewed in a light most 

favorable to defendants, what does appear is information that is already in the public domain that

defendants characterize as showing a “de-sensitization” as to the work performed by abortion 

 

41 Defendants object to paragraph 9 of the Dunn Declaration as lacking in personal knowledge, 

improper expert testimony, inadmissible hearsay, improper opinion testimony, and under the best 

evidence rule. Those objections are overruled.

42

 The sum of defendants’ argument and evidence on this point is that they cannot be blamed for 

the “hyperbolic comments of anonymous Internet commenters” and that “hyperbolic ‘death 

threats’ on the Internet and through social media has become an ubiquitous feature of online 

discourse.” Oppo. Br. at 44-45. But the misleading nature of the Project videos that they have 

produced – reflective of the misleading nature of defendants’ repeated assertions that the 

recordings at issue show significant evidence of criminal wrongdoing – have had tragic 

consequences, including the attack in Colorado where the gunman was apparently motivated by 

the CMP’s characterization of the sale of “baby parts.”

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providers. The balance of NAF’s strong showing of irreparable injury to its members’ freedom of 

association (to gather at NAF meetings and share their confidences), to its and its members’

security, and to its members’ ability to perform their chosen professions against preventing 

(through trial) defendants from disclosing information that is of public interest but which is neither 

new or unique, tilts strongly in favor of NAF. 

III. BALANCE OF EQUITIES

Similar to the discussion of competing claims of irreparable injury, the balance of equities 

favors NAF. Defendants will suffer the hardship of being restricted in what evidence they can 

release to the public in support of their ongoing Human Capital Project, at least through a final 

determination at trial. However, the hardships suffered by NAF and its members are far more 

immediate, significant, and irreparable.

IV. PUBLIC INTEREST

I fully recognize that there is strong public interest on the issue of abortion on both sides of 

that debate, and that members of the public therefore have an interest in accessing the NAF 

materials. I also recognize that this case impinges on defendants’ rights to speech and the public’s 

equally important interest in hearing that speech. But this is not a typical freedom of speech 

case.43 Nor is this a typical “newsgathering” case where courts refuse to impose prior restraints on 

speech, leaving the remedies for any defamatory publication or breach of contract to resolution

 

43 None of the “prior restraint” cases defendants rely on address the types of exceptional facts 

established here: (i) enforceable confidentiality agreements, knowingly and voluntarily entered 

into, in which defendants agreed to the remedy of injunctive relief in the event of a breach; (ii) 

extensive and repeated fraudulent conduct; (iii) misleading characterizations about the information 

procured by misrepresentation; and (iv) a strong showing of irreparable harm if the confidentiality 

agreements are not enforced pending trial. See Oppo. Br. at 32-35. Several of defendants’ prior 

restraint cases expressly left open the possibility of limits on speech where “private wrongs” and 

“clear evidence of criminal activity” occurred. See, e.g., Org. for a Better Austin v. Keefe, 402 

U.S. 415, 419-20 (1971) (overturned broad injunction prohibiting “peaceful” pamphleteering 

across a city where injunction was not necessary to redress a “private wrong”); CBS, Inc. v. Davis, 

510 U.S. 1315, 1318 (1994) (emergency stay overturning prior restraint where damage to meat 

packing company was readily remedied by post-publication damages action and “the record as 

developed thus far contains no clear evidence of criminal activity on the part of CBS, and the court 

below found none.”); see also Bartnicki v. Vopper, 532 U.S. 514, 529-30 (2001) (striking down 

wiretap statutes to extent they penalized the publishing of secretly recorded phone conversations 

by reporters who played no role in the illegal interception; rejecting proposition that “speech by a 

law-abiding possessor of information can be suppressed in order to deter conduct by a non-lawabiding third party.”).

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post-publication. See, e.g., CBS, Inc. v. Davis, 510 U.S. 1315, 1318 (1994); see also Promotions, 

Ltd. v. Conrad, 420 U.S. 546, 559 (1975).

Instead, this is an exceptional case where the extraordinary circumstances and evidence to 

date shows that the public interest weighs in favor of granting the preliminary injunction. 

Weighing against the public’s general interest in disclosure of the recordings showing the “desensitization” of abortion providers, is the fact that there is a constitutional right to abortions and 

that NAF members also have the right to associate in privacy and safety to discuss their profession

at the NAF Meetings, and need that privacy and safety in order to safely practice their profession. 

On the record before me, NAF has demonstrated the release of the NAF materials will irreparably 

impinge on those rights.

The context of how defendants came into possession of the NAF materials cannot be 

ignored and directly supports preliminarily preventing the disclosure of these materials. 

Defendants engaged in repeated instances of fraud, including the manufacture of fake documents, 

the creation and registration with the state of California of a fake company, and repeated false 

statements to a numerous NAF representatives and NAF members in order to infiltrate NAF and 

implement their Human Capital Project. The products of that Project – achieved in large part from 

the infiltration – thus far have not been pieces of journalistic integrity, but misleadingly edited 

videos and unfounded assertions (at least with respect to the NAF materials) of criminal 

misconduct. Defendants did not – as Daleiden repeatedly asserts – use widely accepted 

investigatory journalism techniques. Defendants provide no evidence to support that assertion and 

no cases on point.44 

 

44 Defendants rely on cases where reporters misrepresented themselves in the course of undercover 

investigations, but those cases do not show the level of fraud and misrepresentation defendants 

engaged in here. For example, in Med. Lab. Mgmt. Consultants v. ABC, 306 F.3d 806, 812 (9th 

Cir. 2002), reporters posed as employees of fictitious labs, in order to investigate whether an 

existing lab was violating federal regulations and misreading pap smear tests. There is no 

evidence that the reporters in the Med. Lab. case did anything other than verbally misrepresent 

themselves to the lab owner; the reporters did not create fictitious documents, register a fictitious 

company, or intentionally agree to confidentiality agreements before making their undercover 

recordings. Id. at 814 n.4 (noting the plaintiffs failed to obtain confidentiality agreements from 

defendants). It is also important to note that while the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s 

order granting summary judgment to defendants on plaintiffs’ intrusion on seclusion, trespass, and 

tortious interference claims under Arizona law, the district court denied in part defendants’ motion 

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V. SCOPE OF INJUNCTION

A. Coverage of Third Party Law Enforcement Entities and Governmental Officials

Defendants and the Attorney Generals of the states of Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, 

Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, and Oklahoma (AG Amici) argue that any continuing injunction on

the release of the NAF materials should not run to third-party law enforcement entities or 

government officials because NAF has not shown that disclosure of the NAF materials to law 

enforcement entities or government officials will result in irreparable harm and the public interest 

strongly favors governments being free to exercise their investigatory powers. See AG Amici

Brief (Dkt. No. 285).

The Protective Order and the injunction in this case do not hinder the ability of states or 

other governmental entities from conducting investigations. Nor do they bar defendants from 

disclosing materials in response to subpoenas from law enforcement or other government entities. 

Instead, those orders simply impose a notice requirement on defendants; requiring them to notify 

NAF prior to defendants’ production of the NAF materials so that NAF may (if necessary) 

challenge the subpoenas in the state court at issue. Contrary to the AG Amici position, these 

limited procedures do not purport to bind the states or prevent them from conducting 

investigations or seeking relief in their own courts. The Protective Order and injunction simply 

create an orderly procedure to allow production of relevant information to state law enforcement 

 

as to plaintiffs’ fraud claim. Id. at 812. In J.H. Desnick v. Am. Broad. Cos., 44 F.3d 1345, 1348 

(7th Cir. 1995), the reporters posed as patients of an eye center and secretly recorded their eye 

exams. The misrepresentations in that case simply do not rise to the level of the 

misrepresentations here or the fraudulent lengths defendants went through to secure their

recordings. Also, in that case, the Court of Appeals remanded the defamation claim for further 

proceedings, and affirmed the dismissal of the trespass, privacy, wiretapping, and fraud claims 

based on an analysis of the facts under the state and federal laws at issue. The district court did 

not dismiss the breach of contract claim. Id. at 1354. Finally, defendants’ citation to Animal 

Legal Def. Fund v. Otter, No. 1:14-CV-00104-BLW, 2015 WL 4623943 (D. Idaho Aug. 3, 2015), 

for the proposition that using deceptive tactics to conduct an undercover investigation “is not 

‘fraud’ and is fully protected by the First Amendment,” is not supported. In that case, the district 

court struck down a state law that criminalized the use of “misrepresentation” to gain access to and 

record operations in an agricultural facility. In striking down the law as a content-based regulation 

of protected speech which failed strict scrutiny, the court noted that the law did not “limit its 

misrepresentation prohibition to false speech amounting to actionable fraud,” and any harm from 

the speech at issue would not be compensable as “harm for fraud or defamation” because the harm 

did not stem from the misrepresentation made to access the facility. Id. at * 5-6. That case did not

hold that undercover operations could not result in actionable fraud, breach of contract, or libel. 

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or other governmental entities. As far as I am aware, that procedure has worked well and 

negotiations are ongoing between NAF, defendants, and the two states that have issued subpoenas 

to CMP, Arizona and Louisiana.

45

B. Expansion of Injunctive Relief

NAF also seeks to expand the injunctive relief to prevent defendants and those acting in 

concert with them from publishing or disclosing “any video, audio, photographic, or other 

recordings taken of members or attendees Defendants first made contact with at NAF meetings” 

and “enjoin the defendants from attempting to gain access to any future NAF meetings.” Motion 

at i, 2. 

On this record, NAF has not demonstrated that an expansion of the injunction is warranted. 

NAF does not identify (under seal or otherwise) the NAF members or attendees whom it believes 

have been recorded and whom defendants “first made contact with” at a NAF Annual Meeting. A 

request for injunctive relief must be specific and reasonably detailed, but NAF’s request would 

import ambiguity into the scope of the injunction. Absent a more specific showing supported by 

evidence, I will not expand the preliminary injunction to ban CMP from releasing unspecified 

recordings of unspecified NAF members or attendees defendants “first made contact with” at the 

NAF Meetings.

Similarly, NAF has not shown that an “open-ended” expansion of the injunction to prohibit 

the “defendants from attempting to gain access to any future NAF meetings,” is necessary. 

Defendants and their agents are now well known to NAF and its members and absent evidence 

that defendants intend to continue to attempt to infiltrate NAF meetings, there is no need to extend 

the preliminary injunction at this juncture.

 

45 Similarly defendants appropriately notified the Court that CMP was subpoenaed to testify in 

front of a grand jury, and explained that if Daleiden was called upon to disclose information he 

learned at the NAF Annual Meetings in responding to the grand jury’s questions, Daleiden 

intended to do so absent further order from this Court. Dkt. No. 323-5. This Court did nothing to 

prevent Daleiden from testifying fully in front of that grand jury.

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CONCLUSION

Considering the evidence before me, and finding that NAF has made a strong showing on 

all relevant points, I GRANT the motion for a preliminary injunction. Pending a final judgment, 

defendants and those individuals who gained access to NAF’s 2014 and 2015 Annual Meetings 

using aliases and acting with defendant CMP (including but not limited to the following 

individuals/aliases: Susan Tennenbaum, Brianna Allen, Rebecca Wagner, Adrian Lopez, and 

Philip Cronin) are restrained and enjoined from:

(1) publishing or otherwise disclosing to any third party any video, audio, photographic, or 

other recordings taken, or any confidential information learned, at any NAF annual meetings;

(2) publishing or otherwise disclosing to any third party the dates or locations of any future 

NAF meetings; and

(3) publishing or otherwise disclosing to any third party the names or addresses of any 

NAF members learned at any NAF annual meetings.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Dated: February 5, 2016

______________________________________

WILLIAM H. ORRICK

United States District Judge

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