Source: http://thewebsafe.tripod.com/08022000wolfresponse.htm
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 14:53:33+00:00

Document:
On July 25th the Ramseys filed a Motion to Dismiss Chris Wolf's complaint for failure to state a cause of action (i.e., Wolf has no case.) The Ramseys allege that the statements they made about Chris Wolf were (a) not false, (b) not defamatory, and (c) constitute non-actionable opinion or rhetoric that cannot be proved false.
"Plaintiff Chris Wolf submits this memorandum of law pursuant to Local Rule 7.1 in support of his opposition to the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint."
Evidence exists, moreover, in the form of handwriting reports and affidavits from forensic handwriting experts (Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint, Ex. 1), that Patsy Ramsey is the author of the ransom note found at the scene of her daughter’s murder.
The Ramseys made certain statements in their book The Death of Innocence: The Untold Story of JonBenet’s Murder and How Its Exploitation Compromised the Pursuit of Truth (“D.O.I.”) (published in March of 2000), and in the media promoting their work, that were deliberately calculated to create the false impression that Chris Wolf was the murderer of their daughter JonBenet. The Ramseys also spent nearly three years hiring private investigators to discover “evidence” of Wolf’s “guilt,” which they duly turned over to Boulder authorities.
As a result of the Ramseys’ continued interest in “proving” that Chris Wolf was involved in the murder of JonBenet, he has unnecessarily become the subject of unflattering and intrusive attention by law enforcement and the media, causing him extreme humiliation, embarrassment, and emotional distress. He has also been exposed to public hatred, contempt, and ridicule in the small community of Boulder, Colorado, where he lives and works.
As set forth more fully below, the Defendants’ motion to dismiss the Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint should be denied in its entirety. The statements complained of constitute libel and slander and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
The defendants claim that the statements complained of by the plaintiff are not capable of a defamatory meaning as a matter of law. In raising this argument the defendants predictably ignore a crucial distinction in the caselaw. For example, although the defendants’ correctly argue that it is one of the functions of the court to determine the threshold question of whether a statement is reasonably susceptible of conveying a defamatory meaning, they conveniently overlook the fact that it remains within the exclusive province of the jury to determine whether the plaintiff has in fact been defamed. Bryant v. Avado Brands, Inc., 187 F. 3d 1271 (11th Cir. 1999); South Fla. Water Management Dist. V. Montalvo, 84 F. 3d 402 (11th Cir. 1996).
In making this evaluation, moreover, the court must read the words “naturally,” within their context, and as an average reader or viewer would understand them. “A publication claimed to be defamatory must be read and construed in the sense in which the readers to whom it is addressed would ordinarily understand it.” Fiske v. Stockton, 171 Ga. App. 601, 605, 320 S.E.2d 590.
The case of Harcrow v. Struhar, 235 Ga. App. 403, 511 S.E.2d 545 (Ga. App. 1999) illustrates this principle. When a libel defendant wrote and circulated a neighborhood flyer implying that the plaintiffs were responsible for shooting his cat, the court found that the writing as a whole could be reasonably construed to imply that the plaintiffs had shot the defendant’s cat and were, therefore, guilty of the crime of cruelty to animals.
The Harcrow court held, furthermore, that just because the defendant’s flyer included a statement which was clearly intended to act as a general disclaimer (“I’m not saying that they [the plaintiffs] are responsible for this atrocious act, that will be determined by the…police, but they are prime suspects,” id. at 546), this fact alone did not negate the other portions of the writing. The court found that a jury could reasonably conclude that the statements in the flyer, when taken as a whole, could be understood to be the equivalent of imputing a crime to the plaintiffs. “The evidence was clearly sufficient for the jury to conclude that the writing published by [defendant] was false and malicious defamation tending to injure the [plaintiffs’] reputation or expose them to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule.” Id. at 546.
A similar conclusion was reached by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in a decision which held that “statements implicating [the plaintiff] in a murder [which] appear among conflicting and speculative versions of an unresolved mystery reflects only that a jury issue exists as to how the words were likely to be understood by the ordinary and average reader, and does not preclude a trier of fact from finding a defamatory connotation.” Levin v. McPhee, 119 F.3d 189, 195 (2nd Cir. 1997).
“Words which alone are innocent may in their context clearly be capable of a defamatory meaning and may be so understood.” Jewell v. NYP Holdings, Inc., 23 F. Supp. 2d 348, 362 (S.D.N.Y. 1998).
The defendants’ statements, when taken within the context of their book about the “unsolved” murder of their daughter and the various “suspects” they believe worthy of investigation, are capable of conveying to the average reader that Chris Wolf was a violent murder suspect who “One person had seen…go into an angry tirade aimed at [John Ramsey]” because “the company [John Ramsey] worked for” was “selling arms to South American countries.” (D.O.I. at p. 329.) Given the reading public’s extensive knowledge of the contents of the Ramsey “ransom note,” in which “a small foreign faction” was demanding money in return for the release of the Ramseys’ daughter, a court could easily conclude that a fair reading of this statement would lead the general reader (and a jury) to believe that the defendants’ intended to convey the impression that Chris Wolf had at least written the ransom note, if not actually murdered JonBenet Ramsey.
Moreoever, the fact that the defendants’ state that “By March 1, 1999, we had reported more information on Chris Wolf to the authorities” (D.O.I. at p. 329) only adds to the general impression being created in the reader that the Ramseys had some undisclosed “factual” basis for approaching the Boulder authorities with additional information about Chris Wolf, despite the nearly two years which had passed since Wolf’s first appearance as a suspect. More importantly, the implication is that the Boulder authorities were interested enough in this information for the Ramseys to even think they could successfully approach them with it, especially in light of the newspaper and television accounts of the public animosity between the Ramseys and the Boulder police.
The Ramseys then go on to state that “We considered this a very significant lead and gave all the information we had to the police.” (D.O.I. at p. 205). What the Ramseys fail to tell the reader, except by implication and innuendo, is why they consider all of this to be “very significant.” Clearly, they want the reader to draw the inevitable conclusion that Chris Wolf murdered their daughter. The fact that he “went on our suspect list” and that “he represented too many unanswered questions” despite the police statement that “We have no interest in you,” only serves to deepen the impression that the Ramseys have an undisclosed “factual” basis to believe Chris Wolf is a murderer.
The defendants’ statements, moreover, are libel per se. “Whether stated directly or by implication or innuendo, it is libelous per se to falsely state that a person is guilty of a crime or has a criminal case pending against him.” (emphasis added) Harcrow v. Struhar, 236 Ga. App. 403, 511 S.E.2d 545, 546 (G. App. 1999); Mead v. True Citizen, Inc., 203 Ga. App. 361, 362, 417 S.E.2d 16 (1992); Melton v. Bow, 241 Ga. 629, 630-31, 247 S.E.2d 100 (1978); Witham v. Atlanta Journal, 124 Ga. 688, 53 S.E. 105 (1906). Therefore, it is unnecessary for the plaintiff to plead special damages.
As the U.S. Supreme Court explained in Milkovich v. Lorain Journal, 497 U.S. 1, 110 S. Ct. 2695, 111 L. Ed. 2d 1 (1990), the Constitution does not offer wholesale protection for so-called “expressions of opinion” if those expressions imply assertions of objective fact. (“As Judge Friendly aptly stated: ‘It would be destructive of the law of libel if a writer could escape liability for accusations of [defamatory conduct] simply by using, explicitly or implicitly, the words ‘I think.’id. at 18-19.) The Milkovich court also observed that “It is worthy of note that at common law, even the privilege of fair comment did not extend to ‘a false statement of fact, whether it was expressly stated or implied from an expression of opinion.’” Id. at 19.
A statement cast in the form of an opinion may imply the existence of undisclosed defamatory facts on which the opinion purports to be based, and thus may be actionable. Jaillett v. Georgia Television Co., 238 Ga. App. 885, 890, 520 S.E. 2d 721 (1999); Restatement (Second) of Torts 566 (1977).
When John Ramsey made the televised statement that “This is it. This is the killer.” he was offering more than just his “opinion.” He was implying that there were facts provided to him by his private investigators, which remained undisclosed to the television viewer, which led him to the conclusion that Chris Wolf was “the killer.” During the program, the Ramseys had talked about the investigation their private detectives had been making in the case without sharing the results with the audience, implying that there were facts to the case that were still not generally known to the public.
Remarkably, these facts are very similar to those of Harcrow v. Struhar, 236 Ga. App at 403-4, in which a Georgia Court of Appeals rejected the argument that a general “disclaimer” by a cat owner accusing his neighbors of shooting his pet was vitiated by his statement that “I’m not saying that [the plaintiffs] are responsible for this atrocious act, that will be determined by the [police], but they are prime suspects…” Id. at 404. The Court found, moreover, that this statement “was not merely an expression of his opinion,” id. at 404, and that it “does not negate other portions of the writing,” id. at 404, and that as a result “the jury was entitled to conclude [the statements] were the equivalent of imputing a crime to the [plaintiffs].” Id. at 404.
The defamatory statements complained of in the defendants’ book also suffer the same problems as those statements made by John Ramsey on television. For example, the defendants make it perfectly clear to the reader that they have hired private investigators who, over a period of three years, conducted their own investigation into the murder of their daughter. The book is even advertised as containing the “results” of the Ramseys’ investigation, with a “profile” of “the killer” featured in Chapter 33 “The Murderer.” However, the results of their investigation, and the facts upon which they base their statements, remain largely undisclosed to the reader, who is left to draw his own conclusions as to what is “fact” and what is “opinion,” with no idea of how much is drawn from, and based upon, the “secret” investigative files of the Ramseys.
On page 329 of their book, for example, the Ramseys state that they “had reported more information on Chris Wolf to the authorities” without revealing to the reader the nature of what that “information” consisted, while stating on page 205 of their book that “whatever the police’s intentions, Wolf went on our suspect list. He represented too many unanswered questions.” The Ramseys make this latter statement, moreover, only after devoting passages of their book to describing their own investigation into their daughter’s murder. See, e.g., (“Our attorneys contacted John Douglas, the world’s leading crime profiler and former FBI agent. He agreed to meet with us and our investigators.”D.O.I. at p. 108); see also (“Our investigators tried to sift out what was going on inside the Boulder police department. We were giving our leads and follow-up information to the police.” D.O.I. at p. 109).
John and Patsy Ramsey’s statements, on television and in their book, are laden with innuendo and suggestions that the plaintiff Chris Wolf was a legitimate murder suspect. In order to support their case against the plaintiff, they “republish” the initial libel and slander of Wolf’s girlfriend, which she originally made to the Boulder authorities. Jacqueline Dilson’s statements were so clearly the product of a disturbed individual with a hidden domestic agenda that it is preposterous that the Ramseys could even consider claiming that they “reasonably relied” on her statements for their investigation of Chris Wolf as a suspect. “Even if the speaker states the facts upon which he bases his opinion, if those facts are either incorrect or incomplete, or if his assessment of them is erroneous, the statement may still imply a false assertion of fact.” Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co., 497 U.S. 1 at 18-19.
In order to be actionable, mixed statements of opinion and fact must not only imply an assertion of undisclosed facts, but must also be capable of being proven false. See Jaillett v. Georgia Television, 238 Ga. App. 885, 890, 520 S.E. 2d 721, 725-26 (1999); Eidson v. Berry, 202 Ga. App. 587, 587-88, 415 S.E.2d 16, 17 (1992).
they are, therefore, somehow not actionable as intentional infliction of emotional distress. They conveniently ignore the fact that it is the defendants’ conduct in hiring private investigators to intrusively probe into the life of Chris Wolf for the purposes of subjecting him to police scrutiny as a murder suspect, which is the gravaman of the plaintiff’s complaint for intentional (reckless) infliction of emotional distress.
Instead, most of the defendants’ argument is devoted to recitals of black letter law, with little discussion of whether or not the hiring of private detectives to “pin” a murder “rap” on the plaintiff is actionably “outrageous” conduct directed to the plaintiff. Because there are so few millionaire murder suspects such as the Ramseys still “at large,” who have devoted a substantial portion of their fortune and their time to “investigating” the private lives of people like Chris Wolf, in the hope of diverting suspicion away from themselves, this case remains one of “first impression” with respect to the conduct complained of by the plaintiff. There is no Georgia case law on point, and so the inquiry must of necessity remain “fact intensive” for the court’s decision.
The plaintiff contends that if the conduct of the Ramseys in trying to implicate him in the horrific sexual assault and murder of a six-year girl, in a case which has received enormous international press attention, doesn’t rise to the level of “extreme and outrageous” conduct, then what does? If not him, then who can ever bring a claim of intentional (reckless) infliction of emotional distress?
For the foregoing reasons, the defendants’ Motion to Dismiss should be denied, or in the alternative, the plaintiff should be allowed to amend his Complaint.

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