Court Opinion

ID: 2662199
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-04-03 12:03:52.513891+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:19:09.627825
License: Public Domain

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                   FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

______________________________
                              )
FELD ENTERTAINMENT, INC.      )
                              )
          Plaintiff,          )
                              )
     v.                       )      Civ. Action No. 07-1532 (EGS)
                              )
AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR THE      )
PREVENTION OF CRUELTY         )
TO ANIMALS, et al.,           )
                              )
          Defendants.         )
______________________________)

                         MEMORANDUM OPINION

     This case arises out of a prior, long running litigation in

this Court over whether Feld Entertainment Inc. (“FEI”) violated

the Endangered Species Act by its use of Asian elephants in FEI’s

Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus (“Circus”).    That

litigation (hereinafter the “ESA Action”) was brought by several

non-profit organizations and one individual plaintiff, Thomas

Rider (“Rider”), who had worked with several of FEI’s elephants

in the Circus.   After nine years of litigation and a six week

non-jury trial, the Court concluded that Rider failed to prove

that he had Article III standing.    ASPCA v. Feld Entm’t, Inc.,

677 F. Supp. 2d 55 (D.D.C. 2009).    The Court found that Rider was

“not credible” with respect to his asserted emotional and

aesthetic injuries that formed the basis for his claim to

standing.   Id. at 83.   The Court further found that Rider was

“essentially a paid plaintiff and fact witness” whose sole source
of income throughout the litigation was provided by the animal

advocacy organizations which had been his co-plaintiffs in the

ESA Action.   Id. at 67, 72.1

     FEI has now sued the plaintiffs in the ESA Action as well as

their counsel of record, arguing that the ESA plaintiffs’

payments to Rider during that litigation violated the Racketeer

Influence and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”) and the Virginia

Conspiracy Act.   FEI has also asserted claims of common law abuse

of process, malicious prosecution, maintenance, and champerty.

Defendants move to dismiss FEI’s Amended Complaint in its

entirety.   Upon consideration of the motions to dismiss, the

oppositions and replies thereto, the arguments of counsel during

the hearing held on June 23, 2011, the supplemental submissions

of the parties, the applicable law and the record as a whole, the

motions to dismiss are hereby GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART.

     1
        The Court found that the one remaining organizational
plaintiff asserting claims in the ESA Action, the Animal
Protection Institute (“API”) also lacked standing to proceed.
Id. at 95-101. The other organizational plaintiffs abandoned all
of their claims for relief during the trial. Id. at 66 n.10.

                                 2
I.   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

     A.   The ESA Case and the Alleged Racketeering Activity2

     The original complaint in the ESA Action was filed in July,

2000 on behalf of, among others, the American Society for the

Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (“ASPCA”), Animal Welfare

Institute (“AWI”), Fund For Animals (“FFA”), and Rider.   ASPCA et

al. v. Ringling Bros., et al., Case No. 00-1641.   That complaint,

and the others that were filed in the original case as well as

its successor case, ASPCA et al. v. Feld Entertainment Inc., Case

No. 03-2006, alleged that Asian elephants are an endangered

species and that the circus mistreats its elephants in violation

of the ESA, 16 U.S.C. § 1531, et. seq.   The cases were filed

under the citizen-suit provision of the ESA, which permits

private individuals or organizations to sue to enjoin violations

of the statute.

     2
        Inexplicably, during briefing on the Motions to Dismiss,
all of the parties constantly cited to the record in the ESA
Action, while at the same time insisting adverse parties should
not be able to rely on the same record. The Court therefore
addresses at the outset how it will make use of the record in the
ESA Action. Given the centrality of the ESA Action to the
Amended Complaint, the Court takes judicial notice of the record
in the ESA Action in considering the motion to dismiss. The
Court may do so without converting the motion to dismiss into one
for summary judgment. Covad Commc’ns Co. v. Bell Atlantic Corp.,
407 F.3d 1220, 1222 (D.C. Cir. 2005); Dupree v. Jefferson, 666
F.2d 606, 608 n.1 (D.C. Cir. 1981); United States ex rel. New v.
Rumsfeld, 350 F. Supp. 2d 80, 88-89 (D.D.C. 2004) (citations
omitted). However, the Court emphasizes that it did not pore
over the entire record in that action, which contains nearly 600
docket entries and is extremely voluminous. The Court considers
such an exercise outside the purview of a motion to dismiss.

                                3
       Tom Rider was a former elephant “barn helper” and “barn man”

for FEI from June 1997 until November 1999.      First Amended

Complaint (“FAC”) ¶¶ 4, 37.      He alleged that he had suffered

aesthetic and emotional injury based on his exposure to

mistreated elephants while working for FEI.      Specifically, Rider

alleged that he “has a personal and emotional attachment to these

elephants,” Complaint, ASPCA v. Feld Entm’t, Case 03-2006, ECF

No. 1 at ¶ 20, that he “stopped working in the circus community

because he could no longer tolerate the way the elephants were

treated by defendants,” id. ¶ 21, and that he “continues to

visit” the elephants he knows, even though “each time he does so,

he suffers more aesthetic injury,” id. ¶ 23.

       This Court dismissed the original case on the ground that

Rider as well as the organizational plaintiffs lacked standing to

sue.       ASPCA v. Ringling Bros. & Barnum & Bailey Circus, No. 00-

1641, 2001 U.S. Dist. Lexis 12203 (D.D.C. June 29, 2001).        In

February 2003, the D.C. Circuit reversed, ruling that, assuming

the truth of the allegations in the complaint, Rider had

standing.      ASPCA v. Ringling Bros. & Barnum & Bailey Circus, 317
F.3d 334 (D.C. Cir. 2003).3       The ESA Action continued for

another six years, culminating in a six week bench trial in

       3
        The Circuit did not reach the organizational plaintiffs’
standing, asserted on separate grounds, “because each of them is
seeking relief identical to what Rider seeks.” 334 F.3d at 338
(citations omitted).

                                     4
February and March 2009.   Following the trial, on December 30,

2009, this Court dismissed the case on the grounds that neither

Rider nor the other then-remaining plaintiff in the case, the

non-profit organization Animal Protection Institute (“API”),

satisfied the constitutional standing requirements.

     The bulk of the Court’s December 2009 decision is devoted to

Rider.   The Court found that Rider “failed to prove either a

strong and personal attachment to the seven elephants at issue or

that FEI’s treatment of those elephants caused and continues to

cause [him] to suffer aesthetic or emotional injury.”    ASPCA v.

Feld Entm’t, 677 F. Supp. 2d at 67.    The Court further found

Rider was “essentially a paid plaintiff and fact witness who is

not credible, and therefore affords no weight to his testimony

regarding the matters discussed herein, i.e., the allegations

related to his standing to sue.” Id.

     The Court found serious problems with the substance of

Rider’s allegations.   It noted that Rider had never complained to

management, veterinarian, or government officials about the

treatment of the elephants during the two and a half years he

worked at Ringling Brothers   Id. at 68.   The Court also found

incredible Rider’s claim that he left Ringling Brothers because

he could not bear to witness further mistreatment of the

elephants, noting that after he left FEI’s employment he went to

work for another circus which allegedly mistreated its elephants

                                 5
in the same way.     Id. 70.    The Court also found that since his

employment with FEI ceased, Rider continued to see the elephants

who were allegedly still suffering mistreatment, thus undermining

his claim that “he would like to again visit or observe” these

elephants but “was refraining from doing so in order to avoid

subjecting himself to further aesthetic injury.”       Id. at 83.     At

the same time, Rider made little to no effort to see the

elephants who were no longer performing in the circus and

therefore no longer allegedly mistreated, thus undermining his

claim that he “had formed a personal attachment” to the elephants

and, if “they were no longer allegedly mistreated, he would visit

these animals as often as possible and would seek a position to

work with them again.”     Id.    Indeed, the Court found that when

presented with videotapes of the elephants practicing for the

circus, Rider could not identify the elephants to whom he was

allegedly personally and emotionally attached.       Id. at 84.

     As to the payments themselves, the Court found that Rider

had received at least $190,000 from the ESA plaintiffs since the

lawsuit began.     Id. at 78.    The Court further found that the ESA

plaintiffs had been “less than forthcoming about the extent of

the payments to Mr. Rider.” Id. at 82.       Finally, the Court found

that the primary purpose of the payments to Rider was to keep him

involved in the litigation, and not, as the ESA plaintiffs

asserted, to support his “media and educational outreach program

                                     6
about the treatment of FEI’s elephants.”     Id. at 79.    The Court

found that Rider did engage in such activity, and the plaintiff

organizations “willingly supported those efforts.”        Id.   The

Court concluded, however, that “while the organizational

plaintiffs may see Mr. Rider’s media and outreach activities as a

benefit, this is not the primary purpose for the payments to Mr.

Rider.”   Id.     Rather, the Court found that:

     [T]he primary purpose of the funding provided by the
     organizational plaintiffs . . . was to secure Mr. Rider’s
     initial and continuing participation as a plaintiff in this
     litigation. This is not a case in which the financial
     support began years--or even months--after Mr. Rider’s
     advocacy efforts, which might suggest that the organizations
     were simply providing financial support so that Mr. Rider
     could continue advocating for an issue or cause to which he
     had long since demonstrated a commitment. To the contrary,
     the financial support in this case began before the advocacy
     efforts and suggests that absent the financial incentive,
     Mr. Rider may not have begun or continued his advocacy
     efforts or his participation as a plaintiff in this case. In
     May 2001, at the time that the organizational plaintiffs
     commenced providing financial support to Mr. Rider . . . Mr.
     Rider was the only plaintiff in the case alleging that he
     had a personal and emotional attachment to FEI’s elephants
     and the only plaintiff alleging that FEI’s treatment of its
     elephants caused him aesthetic and emotional injury. . . .
     [I]t was . . . crucial to the organizational plaintiffs that
     Mr. Rider remain a plaintiff. The Court finds that ensuring
     Mr. Rider’s continued participation as a plaintiff was a
     motivating factor behind the payments to him, and that these
     payments were a motivating factor for his continued
     involvement in the case.

Id. at 81.

     B.      This Action.

     FEI’s Amended Complaint here is based on the initiation and

prosecution of the ESA Action.    FEI alleges that through that

                                   7
litigation, the ESA plaintiffs and their attorneys perpetrated

“multiple schemes to permanently ban Asian elephants in circuses,

to defraud FEI of money and property, and/or to unjustly enrich

themselves.”   FAC ¶ 16.

      First, FEI alleges that the ESA plaintiffs and their counsel

of record knew that the factual assertions underlying Rider’s

claims of emotional and aesthetic standing were false.        Id. ¶ 51-

53.   FEI claims that they paid Rider for this false testimony in

order to prosecute the ESA lawsuit, which amounts to bribery and

illegal witness payments.    Id. ¶¶ 2-3, 60-65, 78-79.

      Second, FEI alleges that the payments to Rider were

deliberately concealed.    All of the organizational plaintiffs in

the ESA Action paid Rider during the course of the litigation,

beginning as early as May 2001.       Id. ¶ 60.   These payments were,

for the most part, coordinated through counsel of record in the

ESA case, Meyer, Glitzenstein & Crystal (“MGC”).        Id. ¶ 61.   In

some cases, “the funds that MGC paid to Rider were charged back

to the existing organizational plaintiffs . . . on MGC’s legal

bills for the ESA Action.”    Id. ¶ 62.    At other times, the

organizational plaintiffs gave money to the Wildlife Advocacy

Project (“WAP”), a non-profit advocacy group founded by attorneys

at MGC.   Id. ¶ 43.   WAP, in turn, made “regular and systematic

payments of . . . $1000.00 every two weeks” to Rider.        Id. ¶ 112.

FEI alleges that defendants tried “deliberately [to] conceal,”

                                  8
id. ¶ 62, and “cover-up the improper payment scheme,” id. ¶ 104,

by routing payments through MGC and/or WAP and by characterizing

them as legal expenses, “grants” for “media and public education

efforts” or “PR efforts.”        Id. ¶¶ 62, 104.   FEI alleges that each

payment to Rider, and each invoice from MGC to the organizational

ESA plaintiffs constitutes wire fraud as well as money

laundering.     Id. ¶¶ 77, 80.

       FEI alleges the ESA plaintiffs further sought to conceal the

payments to Rider through “responses to discovery in the ESA

Action.”     Id. ¶ 196.   FEI alleges that Rider and some of the

organizational plaintiffs failed to disclose that they had paid

money to Rider by providing false or incomplete answers in

interrogatories and depositions in 2004 and 2005.         Id. ¶¶ 199-

230.   FEI alleges that this conduct amounts to obstruction of

justice.     Id. ¶¶ 205, 216, 222, 230.

       Third, FEI alleges that the ESA plaintiffs violated mail and

wire fraud statutes when, in July 2005, they jointly hosted a

fundraiser to raise money from donors to fund the ESA litigation.

Id. ¶ 179.    FEI alleges the invitation to the fundraiser is

“false and or misleading” because, inter alia, it portrays Rider

as someone genuinely injured by FEI, and it claims to raise money

for a legitimate litigation rather than one characterized by

fraud.     Id. ¶ 180.   FEI claims the mailings defrauded the non-

profit organizations’ donors, who gave money on the basis of

                                      9
false information, and defrauded FEI, because money from the

fundraiser was used to pay Rider to participate in the ESA

Action.    Id. ¶¶ 180-82.

       Fourth, FEI alleges that Rider testified falsely in

proceedings other than the ESA Action.   Specifically, FEI alleges

that Rider gave false information about FEI and about his own

attachment to the elephants he worked with on five occasions: a

sworn statement to Congress in 2000, an affidavit to the U.S.

Department of Agriculture also in 2000, testimony to a committee

of the Connecticut legislature in 2005, testimony to a committee

of the Nebraska legislature in 2006, and a statement to the

Chicago City Council in 2006.    Id. ¶¶ 236-243.   Plaintiff alleges

this false testimony to the state legislatures, procured through

payments to Rider since the inception of the ESA litigation,

violates the bribery laws of Connecticut, Nebraska and Illinois.

Id.4

       4
        FEI claims that other individuals, in addition to Rider,
were paid to participate in the ESA Action and other forums.
Specifically, FEI alleges that non-party People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals (“PETA”) paid a former FEI employee named
Frank Hagan for a period of time in 2004, during which he
participated in news conferences and other public events on
behalf of PETA, swore a false affidavit to the USDA regarding FEI
and was deposed for the ESA Action. Id. ¶¶ 248-257. FEI alleges
PETA also paid former FEI employees Archele Hundley and Robert
Tom, who attempted to join the ESA Action as plaintiffs in 2007,
to testify falsely in the ESA Action and to speak against FEI in
“participating in PETA’s legislative and public relations
efforts.” Id. ¶ 270; see generally ¶¶ 262-272. The FAC does
not, however, name PETA as a defendant.

                                 10
     FEI alleges that it suffered financially from the

defendants’ fraud “resulting from the substantial costs incurred

by FEI to defend the ESA Action.”     Id. ¶ 273.   FEI alleges that

the ESA Action continued, after May 2001, “only due to the

racketeering and tortious activity” of the ESA plaintiffs, WAP

and MGC.    Id.

     FEI initially sought to bring its claims underlying this

lawsuit as permissive counterclaims in the ESA Action.      See ESA

Action, Case No. 03-2006, Docket No. 121.    The Court denied the

motion in August 2007, finding, inter alia, that the claims were

made with a dilatory motive--namely, to indefinitely delay and

dramatically change the nature of the ESA Action.      See ASPCA v.

Feld, 244 F.R.D. 49, 51 (D.D.C. 2007) (“[T]he only claim in this

case is whether or not defendant’s treatment of its elephants

constitutes a taking within the meaning of Section 9 of the ESA.

Any limited information about payments to or the behavior of Tom

Rider that defendant is entitled to in order to challenge [the]

credibility of one plaintiff in this case is far different from

the vast amount of information they would be seeking under the

guise of attempting to prove an alleged RICO scheme.”).

     FEI filed this action (hereinafter the “RICO Action”) four

days after the Court’s ruling.   See RICO Action, Doc. No. 1, Aug.

28, 2007.   The original complaint named ASPCA, FFA, AWI, WAP, and

Rider, and alleged violations under RICO and the Virginia

                                 11
Conspiracy Act.   The defendants in the RICO Action immediately

moved to stay the proceedings pending a final judgment in the ESA

Action, and the Court granted the motion.    Specifically, the

Court found that pursuit of the RICO Action while the ESA Action

was pending would delay resolution of the ESA Action, thereby

prejudicing the ESA plaintiffs, and would not serve judicial

economy and efficiency.   Feld Entm’t, Inc. v. ASPCA, 523 F. Supp.
2d 1 (D.D.C. 2007).   On December 30, 2009, the Court issued its

opinion and judgment in the ESA Action.5    On January 15, 2010,

the Court lifted the stay in this action, and on February 16,

2010, FEI filed its First Amended Complaint (hereinafter “FAC”).

In addition to the original defendants, the FAC adds attorney

defendants MGC, Katherine Meyer, Eric Glitzenstein, Howard

Crystal, Jonathan Lovvorn and Kimberly Ockene, as well as

organizational defendant Humane Society of the United States

(“HSUS”).   It alleges violations of RICO (Counts I and II) and

the Virginia Conspiracy Act (Count III), as well as common law

claims of Abuse of Process (Count IV), Malicious Prosecution

(Count V), Champerty (Count VI) and Maintenance (Count VII).

After the parties’ unsuccessful attempt at settlement, the

     5
        The decision was affirmed on appeal.    ASPCA v. Feld
Entm’t, Inc., 659 F.3d 13 (D.C. Cir. 2011).

                                12
defendants filed three motions to dismiss the FAC.6    The motions

to dismiss are now ripe for resolution by the Court.

II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW

      A motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) “tests the legal

sufficiency of a complaint.”     Browning v. Clinton, 292 F.3d 235,

242 (D.C. Cir. 2002).    A complaint must contain “a short and

plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled

to relief, in order to give the defendant fair notice of what the

. . . claim is and the grounds upon which it rests.”     Bell Atl.

Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007) (internal quotation

marks and citations omitted).    “‘[W]hen ruling on a defendant’s

motion to dismiss, a judge must accept as true all of the factual

allegations contained in the complaint[,]’” Atherton v. D.C.

Office of the Mayor, 567 F.3d 672, 681 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (quoting

Erickson v. Pardus, 551 U.S. 89, 94 (2007)), and grant the

plaintiff “the benefit of all inferences that can be derived from

the facts alleged.”     Kowal v. MCI Commc’ns Corp., 16 F.3d 1271,

1276 (D.C. Cir. 1994).     A court need not, however, “accept

inferences drawn by plaintiffs if such inferences are unsupported

by the facts set out in the complaint.    Nor must the court accept

legal conclusions cast in the form of factual allegations.”      Id.

      6
        The defendants filed one omnibus motion to dismiss. RICO
Action, Doc. No. 54. In addition, defendant HSUS and defendants
Jonathan Lovvorn and Kimberly Ockene filed separate motions.
Id., Doc. Nos. 53, 55.

                                  13
In addition, “[t]hreadbare recitals of the elements of a cause of

action, supported by mere conclusory statements, do not suffice.”

Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. 1937, 1949 (2009).     “[O]nly a

complaint that states a plausible claim for relief survives a

motion to dismiss.”   Id. at 1950.

III. ANALYSIS

     Defendants raise two arguments that the case must be

dismissed before reaching the RICO allegations: compulsory

counterclaim and Noerr-Pennington immunity.     The Court finds that

the counterclaim defense must be rejected, and further concludes

that although Noerr-Pennington narrows FEI’s claims slightly, it

does not dispose of most of the case.

     A.   Compulsory Counterclaim

     The defendants argue that FEI’s RICO claims must be

dismissed pursuant to Rule 13(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil

Procedure because they should have been raised as compulsory

counterclaims in the ESA Action.     Federal Rule of Civil Procedure

13(a)(1) provides:

     A pleading must state as a counterclaim any claim that--at
     the time of its service--the pleader has against the
     opposing party if the claim: (A) arises out of the
     transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the
     opposing party’s claims; and (B) does not require adding
     another party over whom the court cannot acquire
     jurisdiction.

     The parties agree that the RICO action does not require

adding another party over whom the Court cannot acquire

                                14
jurisdiction.   FEI maintains, however, that the other

requirements for a compulsory counterclaim are not met: the RICO

action does not arise out of the same subject matter as the

claims in the ESA Action, and FEI did not know enough to trigger

the filing of a compulsory counterclaim when it answered the

Complaints in the ESA Action.     The Court concludes that the ESA

claims and the RICO claims do not arise out of the same

transaction or occurrence, and for that reason finds FEI’s RICO

claims were not compulsory counterclaims in the ESA Action.

Accordingly, the Court need not determine whether FEI knew enough

to file its RICO claims when it filed its Answers in the ESA

Action.

     The Supreme Court has stated that “‘[t]ransaction’ is a word

of flexible meaning.   It may comprehend a series of many

occurrences, depending not so much upon the immediateness of

their connection as upon their logical relationship.”     Moore v.

N.Y. Cotton Exch., 270 U.S. 593, 610 (1926).    “This inquiry is

flexible and attempts to analyze whether the essential facts of

the various claims are so logically connected that considerations

of judicial economy and fairness dictate that all the issues be

resolved in one lawsuit.”     Computer Assocs. Int’l v. Altai, Inc.,

893 F.2d 26, 29 (2d Cir. 1990) (internal citations omitted).

Courts routinely examine four factors to determine whether a

counterclaim is compulsory:

                                  15
     (1) Are the issues of fact and law raised by the claim or
         counterclaim largely the same?
     (2) Would res judicata . . . bar a subsequent suit on
         defendant’s claim absent the compulsory counterclaim?
     (3) Will substantially the same evidence support or refute
         plaintiff’s claim as well as defendant’s counterclaim?
     (4) Is there any logical relationship between the claim and
         the counterclaim?

6 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1410

(3d ed. 2011) (collecting cases).    Applying these factors to

FEI’s RICO claims, the Court finds that they were not compulsory

counterclaims.

     The Court begins with the first and third factors.     The

issues of fact and law raised in the ESA claim, and the evidence

required to sustain it, concerned whether FEI’s treatment of

elephants constituted a taking under the Endangered Species Act.

These are entirely distinct from the issues of fact and law

raised in the RICO case, which has nothing to do with the law of

endangered species or FEI’s treatment of elephants; rather, it

concerns whether the prosecution of the ESA Action was a

racketeering scheme.   In order to prove its RICO claim, FEI must

prove that the ESA plaintiffs and their attorneys bribed Rider to

testify falsely about his aesthetic and emotional injury.

Although the Court’s decision in the ESA case that Rider lacked

standing may be helpful to FEI, it is hardly conclusive of a RICO

scheme.7   See, e.g., Majik Mkt. v. Best, 684 F. Supp. 1089, 1091

     7
        The fact that the Court ultimately resolved the ESA
matter on standing grounds in 2009 does not render the RICO

                                16
(N.D. Ga. 1987) (where defendant in RICO action filed a separate

suit for abusive litigation stemming from the RICO action, the

abusive claim was not a compulsory counterclaim because of the

difference in the substantive law and evidence required to prove

a RICO claim compared to an abusive litigation claim).   The

second factor also weighs against finding a counterclaim;

defendants do not even suggest FEI’s claims are res judicata.

     Turning to the fourth factor, the Court does not find there

is a “logical relationship” between the ESA claim and RICO claim

of the type contemplated by Rule 13(a).   “The general purpose of

. . . Rule 13(a) is to have all related actions heard at one

time.”   Chelsea House N. Apts. v. Blonder, 223 F.R.D. 388, 391

(D. Md. 2004) (quoting Painter v. Harvey, 863 F.2d 329, 334 (4th

Cir. 1988)).   In this instance, the Court already determined that

it would have served neither efficiency nor convenience to

adjudicate the ESA and RICO claims in one action.   See generally

ASPCA v. Ringling Bros., 244 F.R.D. 49.   Moreover, as already

explained, the claim and would-be counterclaim do not share

substantially the same issues of fact, law, and evidence.    The

Court therefore concludes that the claims in this case should not

claim, filed in 2007, a compulsory counterclaim. Neither the
parties nor the Court could have known, in 2007, that the Court
would not reach the merits of the ESA claim.

                                17
be dismissed because FEI failed to plead them as compulsory

counterclaims in the ESA Action.8

            B.   Noerr-Pennington

     The Noerr-Pennington9 doctrine is rooted in the Petition

Clause of the First Amendment, which provides that “those who

petition any department of the government for redress are

generally immune from statutory liability for their petitioning

conduct.”    Sosa v. DIRECTV, Inc., 437 F.3d 923, 929 (9th Cir.

2006).   The “doctrine holds that defendants who petition the

government for redress of grievances, whether by efforts to

influence legislative or executive action or by seeking redress

in court, are immune from liability for such activity under the

First Amendment.”    Nader v. Democratic Nat’l Comm., 555 F. Supp.
2d 137, 156 (D.D.C. 2008), aff’d on other grounds, 567 F.3d 692

(D.C. Cir. 2009) (internal citations omitted).   Although the

doctrine is broad, it does have limits. “Neither the Noerr-

     8
         Defendants also argue that this Court’s refusal to allow
FEI to add its RICO claims to the ESA litigation in 2007 because
those claims were untimely supports their compulsory counterclaim
argument. This is inaccurate. FEI’s attempt to add RICO claims
to the ESA Action was based on Rule 15(a), regarding amended
pleadings, and Rule 13(e), which provides that the Court may
permit supplemental counterclaims acquired after a party has
already filed a responsive pleading. Fed. R. Civ. P. 13(e).
This Court’s concerns in 2007 regarding the lateness of
permissive counterclaims are irrelevant to any analysis regarding
the timeliness of compulsory counterclaims.
     9
        E. R.R. Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight,
Inc., 365 U.S. 127 (1961); United Mine Workers v. Pennington, 381
U.S. 657 (1965).

                                    18
Pennington doctrine nor the First Amendment more generally

protects petitions predicated on fraud or deliberate

misrepresentation.”   United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc., 566
F.3d 1095, 1123 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (internal citations omitted).

As a threshold matter, therefore, “[a]ttempts to influence

governmental action through overtly corrupt conduct, such as

bribes (in any context) and misrepresentation (in the

adjudicatory process) are not normal and legitimate exercises of

the right to petition, and activities of this sort have been held

beyond the protection of Noerr.”     Whelan v. Abell, 48 F.3d 1247,

1255 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (quoting Federal Prescription Serv., Inc.

v. Am. Pharmaceutical Ass’n, 663 F.2d 253, 263 (D.C. Cir. 1981)),

see also Cal. Motor Transp. Co. v. Trucking Unltd., 404 U.S. 508,

512-13 (1974).

     In this case, defendants have been involved in both

legislative/executive advocacy as well as litigation.    The

parties spend significant time in their briefs arguing whether

the alleged legislative and executive advocacy is immunized

pursuant to Noerr-Pennington.   However, as explained below, the

Court finds that FEI does not have standing to assert claims

based on the legislative and executive advocacy; accordingly, the

                                19
Court need not determine whether such conduct is protected under

Noerr-Pennington.   See infra Section III.C.5.10

     Turning to the ESA lawsuit, FEI argues that Noerr-Pennington

does not apply to bribery or to deliberate misrepresentations to

the Court.   Opp’n at 57.   The Court agrees.   As set forth above,

Noerr-Pennington does not apply, first and foremost, to bribes,

“in any context.”   Whelan, 48 F.3d at 1255     (citations omitted).

Moreover, “[m]isrepresentations, condoned in the political arena,

are not immunized when used in the adjudicatory process.”      Cal.

Motor, 404 U.S. at 513.     As discussed throughout, the FAC is

premised on allegations of bribery and deliberate

misrepresentations by defendants throughout the ESA Action.

Accordingly, defendants are not entitled to Noerr-Pennington

immunity at the motion to dismiss stage as to their litigation

efforts.

     However, the FAC alleges defendants engaged in other

activities to garner publicity and urge legislative action, which

     10
         Were the Court to consider defendants’ legislative and
administrative activity, it would likely find it unprotected
under Noerr-Pennington, at least at the motion to dismiss stage.
In this case, plaintiff has alleged that Rider’s legislative
branch advocacy efforts were “all tainted by bribes.” Opp’n at
55. Specifically, the FAC alleges that ASPCA, AWI, FFA/HSUS,
and/or API paid Rider to testify falsely under oath before
Congress, three state legislatures, and the USDA, that these
payments violated state bribery laws in Connecticut, Nebraska and
Illinois as well the federal bribery statutes. FAC ¶¶ 239-243.
Under the law of this Circuit, such allegedly corrupt conduct is
not protected under Noerr-Pennington. See, e.g., Whelan, 48 F.3d
at 1255.

                                 20
involved neither bribery to petition a legislature nor bribery or

deliberately false statements in adjudicative proceedings.

Specifically, it is alleged that Rider and others made false or

misleading statements, and in some cases were compensated to do

so, when they participated in press conferences, made other

statements to news outlets, and posted letters on organizational

websites.     See, e.g., FAC ¶¶ 159, 161, 245, 252, 269-71.   These

statements were not made during any governmental proceeding.

Rather, the statements were part of “publicity campaign[s] to

influence governmental action,” and therefore are entitled to

Noerr-Pennington immunity.      Noerr, 365 U.S. at 140. See also

Allied Tube & Conduit Corp. v. Indian Head, Inc., 486 U.S. 492,

499-500 (1988) (“a publicity campaign directed at the general

public, seeking legislative or executive action, enjoys . . .

immunity even when the campaign employs unethical or deceptive

methods.”)    Accordingly, FEI cannot rely on these statements to

support its claims.

     C.      RICO

     FEI alleges violations under RICO sections 1962(c) and (d).

“A violation of § 1962(c) . . . consists of four elements: (1)

conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of

racketeering.”      Western Assocs. Ltd. P’ship v. Market Square

Assocs., 235 F.3d 629, 633 (D.C. Cir. 2001) (citations omitted).

Section 1962(d) provides in part: “It shall be unlawful for any

                                   21
person to conspire to violate any of the provisions of Subsection

[] (c) of this section.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d).    The defendants

argue that the RICO claims are barred by the statute of

limitations, that FEI has failed to allege adequately the

existence of a pattern, an enterprise, that defendants conducted

the enterprise, the existence of predicate acts, and that FEI has

standing.   In addition to the arguments made by all defendants,

three defendants:   HSUS, Jonathan Lovvorn and Kimberly Ockene

have filed supplemental motions to dismiss.    The Court will first

address defendants’ global arguments, then will address arguments

advanced with respect to individual defendants.

            1.   Statute of Limitations

     Statute of limitations is an affirmative defense which need

not be asserted in a pre-answer motion.    Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(c)(1).

“A defendant may raise the affirmative defense of statute of

limitations via a Rule 12(b)(6) motion when the facts that give

rise to the defense are clear from the face of the complaint.”

DePippo v. Chertoff, 453 F. Supp. 2d 30, 33 (D.D.C. 2006) (citing

Smith-Haynie v. Dist. of Columbia, 155 F.3d 575, 578 (D.C. Cir.

1998)).   “Because statute of limitations issues often depend on

contested questions of fact, however, the court should hesitate

to dismiss a complaint on statute of limitations grounds based

solely on the face of the complaint.”     Id. (citing Firestone v.

Firestone, 76 F.3d 1205, 1209 (D.C. Cir. 1996)).     Accordingly,

                                 22
“a court should grant a pre-discovery motion to dismiss on

limitations grounds ‘only if the complaint on its face is

conclusively time-barred,’ and the parties do not dispute when

the limitations period began.”   Turner v. Afro-American Newspaper

Co., 572 F. Supp. 2d 71, 72 (D.D.C. 2008) (quoting DePippo, 453
F. Supp. 2d at 33).   Upon careful consideration, the Court finds

that the defendants have not met their heavy burden here.

     Civil RICO actions face a four year statute of limitations,

which begins to run from the date of discovery of the injury.

Under the discovery rule, “a cause of action accrues when the

plaintiff has knowledge of (or by the exercise of reasonable

diligence should have knowledge of) (1) the existence of the

injury, (2) its cause in fact, and (3) some evidence of

wrongdoing.”   Chalabi v. Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, 503 F.

Supp. 2d 267, 274 (D.D.C. 2007) (citations omitted)(internal

quotation marks omitted), aff’d, 543 F.3d 725 (D.C. Cir. 2008).

     FEI filed its original Complaint on September 26, 2007.

Defendants base their argument that the four year statute of

limitations had expired before then on two facts they allege FEI

knew before September 2003: first, Rider had been employed by

PAWS as a security guard in 2000 (PAWS is another not-for-profit

organization dedicated to animal welfare, which was then the lead

plaintiff in the ESA case), and second, ASPCA paid Rider’s

traveling expenses to testify before various state legislatures.

                                 23
Defs.’ Mem at 22-23.   The Court agrees with FEI that these two

pieces of evidence, without more, are insufficient to trigger the

statute of limitations.   See FEI Opp’n at 33-34, 35 (“[A] job

with PAWS as a security guard, for which Rider was paid bona fide

wages to perform, would not lead to the conclusion that he was

being bribed to anchor a lawsuit,” nor does payment of traveling

expenses to testify before state legislatures.    “The bribery

statute expressly excludes from its prohibitions paying a witness

the reasonable cost of traveling and subsistence incurred.”

(citing 18 U.S.C. § 201(d))).   Accordingly, defendants have not

conclusively shown that the statute of limitations began to

accrue before September 26, 2003, four years before FEI filed its

RICO claim.

      Defendants argue that even if FEI’s original complaint was

timely, the FAC, which added new defendants MGC, Katherine Meyer,

Eric Glitzenstein, Howard Crystal, HSUS, Jonathan Lovvorn, and

Kimberley Ockene when it was filed in February 2010, is not

timely as to the new defendants.     Defendants argue that the

statute of limitations for the RICO claims against these

defendants began running prior to February 2006; accordingly, the

new defendants must be dismissed.    Defs.’ Mem. at 30 n.20.

     In support of their argument, defendants rely on several

pieces of information FEI knew in 2005.    Specifically, defendants

reference (1) a 2001 email (provided to FEI in 2004), stating

                                24
that three ESA plaintiffs were contributing to Rider’s living and

traveling expenses; (ESA Action, Doc. No. 457, Att. 8); (2) a

statement by ESA plaintiffs’ counsel in open court in 2005 that

plaintiff organizations provided grants to Rider to “speak out

about what really happened when he worked” at the circus. (Defs.’

Mem at 9, 23-24; see also September 16, 2005 hearing transcript,

ESA Action, Doc. No. 169-13 at 29-30); and (3) FEI’s own

statement, in the FAC, that it “did not begin to uncover the

payment scheme [to Rider] until the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition of

ASPCA, taken in the ESA Action on July 19, 2005.”   (Defs.’ Mem at

9, n.5, citing FAC ¶ 32.)11   Defendants also maintain that in

June 2004, Rider responded to an interrogatory from FEI asking

him to, inter alia, “[i]dentify all income, funds, compensation,

     11
        In the Reply in support of their Motion to Dismiss,
defendants attach excerpts of the deposition transcript; however,
neither plaintiff nor defendants have identified it as part of
the record in the ESA Action. Plaintiffs claim that “because FEI
specifically relies in its Amended Complaint on the deposition
testimony, the Court may consider other portions of those same
documents on a ruling in its motion to dismiss.” Reply at 38,
n.34. The Court declines to consider these excerpts here.
First, defendants improperly submitted this evidence for the
first time in their reply brief. See, e.g., Holiday CVS Pharmacy
v. Holder, -- F. Supp. 2d -–, 2012 WL 883123, at *20 n.16 (D.D.C.
March 16, 2012) (issues and factual evidence may not be raised
for the first time in a reply brief) (collecting cases). Second,
even if the Court did consider arguments and evidence raised for
the first time in a reply brief, the Court is not persuaded that
it should consider non-contiguous excerpts of a deposition which,
so far as the Court is aware, does not appear in the record of
the ESA Action. See DePippo, 453 F. Supp. 2d at 33 (facts for
statute of limitations defense in motion to dismiss must be clear
on face of complaint).

                                 25
other money or items, including, without limitation, food,

clothing, shelter, or transportation, you have ever received from

any animal advocate or animal advocacy organization.”     ESA

Action, Doc. No. 476, Att. 14 at 39.     Rider offered to provide

FEI with the information requested, subject to a confidentiality

agreement; FEI rejected this offer.      Id.; see also Defs.’ Mem. at

9 n.4; Defs.’ Reply at 48 n.43.

     FEI responds that again, these statements did not place it

on notice that Rider was being paid to be a plaintiff and to

testify falsely about his standing.     It argues that the 2001

email showed no more than that “organizational plaintiffs may

have shared defraying some traveling expenses for Rider in 2001.”

Opp’n at 37.   And it points out that defendants’ account of the

September 16, 2005 hearing is incomplete:     counsel’s full

statement at the hearing was that Rider is “going around the

country in his own van, he gets grant money from some of the

clients and some other organizations to speak out and say what

really happened when he worked there.”      Id. at 38, citing ESA

Action, Doc. No. 169-13 at 29-30.      FEI argues that this statement

is in fact misleading: “it says nothing about the true purpose of

the payments, which was to secure Rider’s participation in the

ESA case . . . his ‘own van’ was actually bought by [ESA

organizational plaintiffs] . . . ‘grant money’ actually meant

Rider’s sole livelihood . . . [and] payments had come not from

                                  26
‘some of the clients’ but from all organizational plaintiffs in

the ESA case.”   Id. (internal citations omitted).

      With respect to the June 2004 interrogatory, FEI points out

that in June 2004, FFA, ASPCA and AWI also responded to

interrogatories and each of them failed to disclose any payment

to Rider, or to WAP or MGC for remittance to Rider; moreover, in

his June 2004 interrogatory Rider denied receiving any

“compensation” from animal advocates.   Opp’n at 37 (citing to ESA

Docs. 476, 477, FAC ¶¶ 196, 223-30).    With respect to its

allegation that “FEI did not begin to uncover the payment scheme

described herein until the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition of ASPCA,

taken in the ESA Action on July 19, 2005,” FAC ¶ 32, FEI argues

that this is “not synonymous with knowledge of the injury, its

cause, and some evidence of wrongdoing.”   Opp’n at 44.   Rather,

FEI claims, it is merely “the earliest point alleged in the FAC

that even addresses FEI’s knowledge of any of the three

requirements of the discovery rule.”    Id.; see also FAC ¶¶ 81,

219 (FEI was not fully aware of MGC’s involvement in the payments

to Rider until August 2007; FEI was not aware of FFA/HSUS

payments to Rider until August 2007).   Finally, FEI responds that

“the time in which a case is stayed by court order is excluded

from the limitations period” as to all defendants, including

those who have not been named when the case is stayed.    Opp’n at

45.

                                27
     The Court is troubled by the statute of limitations argument

with respect to the new defendants.   As an initial matter, FEI’s

argument is not persuasive that the statute of limitations is

tolled as to new defendants when a case is stayed.   See Anbinder

v. Kelleher, No. 92 Civ 7315, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10832, *9,*18

n.4 (S.D.N.Y. July 25, 1997) (Sotomayor, J.) (stay does not toll

statute of limitations as to new defendant unless defendant’s

actions prevented plaintiff from discovering he has a cause of

action), aff’d 152 F.3d 917 (2d Cir. 1998).   In most of the cases

FEI cites, the court tolled the statute of limitations against

existing defendants during the period of time where the case was

stayed.   Selph v. Nelson, 966 F.2d 411 (8th Cir. 1992); Bixby

Food Sys. v. McKay, No. 96 c 3915, 2001 U.S. Dist. Lexis 3355

(N.D. Ill. Mar. 19, 2001).   In Javier v. Garcia Botella, the sole

case cited by FEI in which the statute of limitations was tolled

against new defendants while the case was stayed, the Court

permitted tolling because “plaintiff’s counsel lacked knowledge

of [the new defendants’] existence until counsel was able to

review . . . evidence” which did not become available until the

stay was lifted.   239 F.R.D. 342, 348 (W.D.N.Y. 2006).   FEI makes

no argument, nor could it, that it did not know the new

defendants’ identities as a result of the stay.

     Moreover, as discussed above, defendants point to not-

insignificant information at FEI’s disposal before February 16,

                                28
2006 that, defendants may be able to show, may well have

triggered the statute of limitations for RICO against the new

defendants.      However, FEI asserts it did not discover the alleged

RICO violation as to the new defendants until later in 2006, or

even until 2007.     Opp’n at 30, 32, 33-39, see also FAC ¶¶ 81,

219.   The face of the FAC does not clearly provide otherwise.

Accordingly, and given the stringent standard defendants must

meet to warrant dismissal on statute of limitations grounds on a

12(b)(6) motion, FEI’s RICO claim will not be dismissed as time

barred at this stage of the litigation.

            2.     Pattern

       A “pattern of racketeering activity” requires commission of

at least two predicate offenses on a specified list.      18 U.S.C. §

1961(1), (5).     In this case, FEI has alleged the defendants

committed the predicate acts of bribery, illegal witness

payments, money laundering, mail and wire fraud, and obstruction

of justice.      FAC at pps. 103-112.   “The Supreme Court, however,

has made it clear that in addition to the requisite number of

predicate acts, the plaintiff must show ‘that the racketeering

predicates are related, and that they amount to or pose a threat

of continued criminal activity.’” Edmondson & Gallagher v. Alban

Towers Tenants Ass’n, 48 F.3d 1260, 1264 (D.C. Cir. 1995)

(quoting H.J. Inc. v. Nw. Bell Telephone Co., 492 U.S. 229, 239

(1989)).   In their motions to dismiss, defendants do not

                                   29
challenge the relatedness of the predicate acts; they challenge

their continuity.   “Continuity is both a closed- and open-ended

concept, referring either to a closed period of repeated conduct,

or to past conduct that by its nature projects into the future

with a threat of repetition.”    H.J. Inc., 492 U.S. at 241

(internal quotation marks omitted).   For the following reasons,

the Court finds the FAC adequately pleads closed-ended

continuity; therefore, the Court need not determine whether it

also sufficiently alleges open-ended continuity.

       The D.C. Circuit has identified six factors the Court should

consider in deciding whether closed-ended continuity has been

established.    Western Assocs., 235 F.3d at 633 (citing Edmondson,
48 F.3d at 1265).   Those factors are “the number of unlawful

acts, the length of time over which the acts were committed, the

similarity of the acts, the number of victims, the number of

perpetrators, and the character of the unlawful activity.”       Id.

(quoting Edmondson, 48 F.3d at 1265).    The factors “d[o] not

establish a rigid test,” and should be used as a “flexible guide

for analyzing RICO allegations on a case by case basis.”      Id. at

634.   The D.C. Circuit has also found that if a plaintiff alleges

only “a single scheme, a single injury and few victims it is

‘virtually impossible for plaintiffs to state a RICO [pattern]

claim.’” Id. (quoting Edmondson, 48 F.3d at 1265).

                                 30
     FEI claims defendants engaged in “multiple schemes to

permanently ban Asian elephants in circuses, to defraud FEI of

money and property and to unjustly enrich themselves.”    FAC ¶ 16.

FEI claims it was the primary victim of these schemes, but

alleges that third party donors to the organizational defendants

were also victimized.12   Specifically, FEI alleges that the

defendants held a fundraiser in 2005 and committed mail and wire

fraud by soliciting funds based on “materially false and/or

misleading statements about Rider, the ESA Action, and FEI.”       Id.

¶ 179.    FEI claims that the defendants “unjustly enrich[ed]”

themselves “through donations obtained from third parties on the

basis of false or otherwise misleading information.”     Id. ¶¶

181-82.    Defendants, by contrast, argue that the FAC must be read

to boil down to a single scheme: the lawsuit, a single victim:

FEI, and a single injury to FEI: the costs of defending the

lawsuit.   Defs.’ Mem. 47.   Defendants claim that the remaining

activity is either immunized by Noerr-Pennington (in the case of

the legislative and administrative activity) or did not generate

     12
        FEI also claims that defendants “potentially victimized
. . . any institution that uses the guide or tethers” on
elephants because “the ESA case . . . was brought for the very
reason of creating precedent.” Opp’n at 66. FEI fails to
explain, however, how RICO is cognizable to protect “potential”
victims, at whom the alleged racketeering was not directed and
who never suffered any injury. Accordingly, this claim is
rejected.

                                 31
additional victims or result in any injury besides the cost of

defending against the lawsuit.   Id. at 48-49.

     The Court agrees with defendants that the ESA Action is,

overwhelmingly, the basis for this lawsuit. However, at this

stage of the proceedings, the Court accepts all facts alleged in

the FAC as true and thus cannot ignore the other allegations in

the Amended Complaint: specifically, the allegedly unlawful

fundraising activity.13   The FAC alleges victims and injuries in

     13
        As discussed in section III.C.5 infra, FEI lacks
standing to pursue the claims related to the alleged legislative
and administrative advocacy. Following oral argument, the
parties submitted supplemental briefs addressing, inter alia,
whether FEI could rely on these acts to show a pattern of
racketeering activity even if it has no standing to sue for them.
Upon careful consideration, the Court concludes that FEI cannot,
because FEI has not adequately alleged any other victims of the
alleged legislative and administrative activity. See n.12, supra
(no other institution using elephants injured); see also Giuliano
v. Fulton, 399 F.3d 381, 390 n.8 (1st Cir. 2005) (declining to
find governmental bodies victims of racketeering schemes). The
lack of any cognizable victim of defendants’ alleged legislative
and administrative activity distinguishes this case from those
cited by FEI, in which courts allowed RICO plaintiffs to plead
allegations of essentially the same injuries to other, non-party
victims to support a pattern of racketeering activity. See,
e.g., Marshall & Ilsley Trust Co. v. Pate, 819 F.2d 806, 810 (7th
Cir. 1987) (“[E]ach victim can sue the RICO violator, adducing
evidence of the offense against the other victims to meet the
proof requirement of the statute as to a pattern.”); SKS
Constructors, Inc. v. Drinkwine, 458 F. Supp. 2d 68, 80 (E.D.N.Y.
2006) (“[W]hile plaintiff may not be able to collect damages with
respect to the injuries of other, unnamed parties, it does not
necessarily follow that Plaintiff may not allege injury to others
in support of . . . [a] pattern of racketeering activity.”);
Pruitt v. County of Sacramento, Case No. 10-416, 2010 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 102125 (E.D. Cal. Sept. 15, 2010) (permitting plaintiffs,
victims of baseless drug prosecutions, to allege other baseless
drug prosecutions by same defendants in order to meet RICO’s
pattern requirement). Therefore, the Court does not consider the

                                 32
addition to FEI and its lawsuit related costs: the donors who

were allegedly defrauded and lost money as a result.   FEI may

ultimately be unable to demonstrate that the fundraising

materials were unlawful or that anyone other than FEI was injured

by them.    However, reading the FAC in the light most favorable to

FEI, the Court finds it has alleged more than one victim, and

more than one injury, associated with defendants’ alleged RICO

activity.    Accordingly, because FEI has alleged more than a

single victim and a single injury, this case is distinguishable

from Edmondson and Western Associates.    See Edmondson, 48 F.3d at

1266 (finding no pattern where there was a single scheme to

prevent or delay the sale of a building, single injury of loss of

the sale, and three victims); Western Assocs., 235 F.3d at 634-35

(finding no pattern where single scheme to diminish the value of

a partnership interest in a single property, single injury of

lost value in the property, and single victim).

     The remaining factors in the pattern analysis--which,

notably, the defendants do not acknowledge or address--also

support a finding that FEI has adequately pled closed-ended

continuity.   The FAC pleads over 1000 predicate acts which varied

in nature:    bribery, illegal gratuity, mail fraud, wire fraud,

claims related to the alleged legislative and administrative
advocacy as support for demonstrating a pattern of racketeering
activity.

                                 33
money laundering, and obstruction of justice.        It alleges these

acts occurred for eight years: from 2001 through the ESA trial in

2009.        And it alleges the acts were committed by thirteen

perpetrators.        These factors further distinguish this case from

Edmondson and Western Associates.         See Edmondson, 48 F.3d at 1265

(fifteen predicate acts over three years, most of which were

committed over a span of about six months); Western Assocs., 235
F.3d at 635-36 (although predicate acts took place over eight

years, the total number of acts was in the “dozens,” and the

predicate acts were all of the same type--mail and wire fraud--

which “can basically be characterized as beginning with

fraudulent budget underestimates, with the subsequent predicate

acts serving as attempts to cover up . . . cost overruns.”).14

                3.   Enterprise

        The defendants make two arguments related to the

“enterprise” element of RICO.       First, they claim FEI has failed

to allege an enterprise that is separate from the person[s] who

participate in it.        See 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) (“It shall be

        14
        These factors likewise distinguish this case from others
cited by defendants, where courts have dismissed RICO cases
focused on a single legal dispute or litigation. In Jackson v.
Bellsouth Telecomm., 372 F.3d 1250 (11th Cir. 2004), the Eleventh
Circuit found no RICO pattern where the alleged predicate
activity took place solely during the settlement phase of a
single lawsuit, and lasted nine months. In In re Burzynski, 989
F.2d 733 (5th Cir. 1993), the Fifth Circuit dismissed the RICO
claims where the alleged racketeering consisted of five predicate
acts during litigation, all of which were mail fraud.

                                     34
unlawful for any person employed by or associated with any

enterprise . . . to conduct or participate, directly or

indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise's affairs through a

pattern of racketeering activity.”).        Second, defendants claim

that even if FEI has sufficiently pled the existence of a

distinct enterprise, it failed to plead that each and every

defendant “participate[d] . . . in the conduct of such

enterprise’s affairs.”     Id.     FEI responds that it has adequately

pled both.

     i.      Distinct Enterprise

     “[T]o establish liability under § 1962(c), one must allege

and prove the existence of two distinct entities: (1) a ‘person’;

and (2) an ‘enterprise’ that is not simply the same ‘person’

referred to by a different name.”         Cedric Kushner Promotions,

Ltd. v. King, 533 U.S. 158, 161 (2001).        The term “enterprise” is

defined in the statute to “include[] any individual, partnership,

corporation, association or other legal entity, and any union or

group of individuals associated in fact although not a legal

entity.”   18 U.S.C. § 1961(4).      An associated-in-fact enterprise,

which is the type FEI asserts here, reaches a group of people

and/or organizations “associated together for a common purpose of

engaging in a course of conduct” and “is proved by evidence of an

ongoing organization, formal or informal, and by evidence that

the various associates function as a continuing unit.”         United

                                     35
States v. Turkette, 452 U.S. 576, 583 (1981).    It is undisputed

that a collection of RICO “persons” may, together, make up a RICO

“enterprise.”     See, e.g., Boyle v. United States, 129 S. Ct.
2239, 2241-42 (2009); Philip Morris, 566 F.3d at 1116; Yellow Bus

Lines, Inc. v. Drivers, Chauffeurs & Helpers Local Union 639, 883
F.2d 132, 141 (D.C. Cir. 1989).    To establish liability, however,

plaintiff must “show[] that the defendants conducted or

participated in the enterprise’s affairs, not just

their own affairs.”     Cedric Kushner, 533 U.S. at 163 (quoting

Reves v. Ernst & Young, 507 U.S. 170, 185 (2001)).

     Defendants allege that FEI has not shown a distinct

enterprise because FEI has not alleged how the defendants

conducted or participated in the enterprise’s affairs as opposed

to their own.15    Defendants argue that “all that FEI has alleged

     15
        As a threshold matter, they claim FEI has not pled “any
distinction between the RICO persons themselves (namely, the
animal protection organizations, their lawyers and Mr. Rider) and
the so called ‘enterprise’.” Defs.’ Mem. at 58.    This claim is
unavailing. There are three structural features required to
plead an associated-in-fact enterprise: “a purpose, relationships
among those associated with the enterprise, and longevity
sufficient to permit these associates to pursue the enterprise’s
purpose.” Boyle, 129 S.Ct at 2244. FEI has pled all three. The
FAC states that the individual defendants came together for the
purpose of, inter alia, filing and prosecuting the ESA Action,
became plaintiffs, attorneys and/or benefactors of that
litigation, and engaged in a pattern of allegedly unlawful
conduct for several years while pursuing that litigation. FAC ¶¶
2-12, 282. Moreover, this Circuit has expressly found that in a
RICO case, a litigation “enterprise” may be distinct from the
“persons” who are parties and counsel in that litigation. See
Philip Morris, 566 F.3d at 1114 (“[T]here is no question that
[the clients] and the law firms together can constitute an

                                  36
is that the various animal advocates simply engaged in conduct to

further their own interests--the protection of elephants--which

cannot constitute a RICO enterprise.”      Defs.’ Mem. at 59.   FEI

responds that “the enterprise is plaintiffs’ side of the ESA

case.    Defendants associated in fact to bring the ESA case as

plaintiffs, plaintiffs’ counsel and two other benefactors, WAP

and HSUS, supplying money to Rider.”      Opp’n at 70.   FEI further

argues that the FAC “clearly distinguishes the defendants and

their missions and activities from their involvement in the ESA

case.”     Id.   FEI admits there is “an overlap between the affairs

of the enterprise” and the individual defendants, but argues

“this does not mean that the enterprise is not sufficiently

distinct.”       Id. at 71 (citing In re Ins. Brokerage Antitrust

Litig., 618 F.3d 300, 378 (3d Cir. 2010)).

        The Court agrees with FEI.    The FAC adequately pleads that

the individual defendants conducted the affairs of the enterprise

as opposed to their own individual affairs, and distinguishes the

parties and their missions and activities from their involvement

in the ESA case.      FEI identifies the organizational defendants as

having longstanding missions dedicated to protecting a wide

variety of animals, not merely elephants or circus animals, and

makes clear that their identities are in no way limited to that

‘associated in fact’ RICO enterprise.” (quoting Living Designs,
Inc. v. E.I. DuPont De Nemours & Co., 431 F.3d 353, 362 (9th Cir.
2005))).

                                     37
as plaintiffs in, or beneficiaries of, the ESA litigation.    FAC

¶¶ 34-36, 38.   It identifies lawyers, law firms, and

plaintiff/witnesses, which are distinct entities from the

litigation in which they participate or the clients they serve.

     The cases defendants rely on do not prove otherwise.     In

Yellow Bus, this Circuit held that a union and its business agent

cannot, without more, form an enterprise -- “an organization

cannot join with its own members to do that which it normally

does and thereby form an enterprise separate and apart from

itself.   Where . . . the organization is named as defendant, and

the organization associates with its member to form the

enterprise, the requisite distinctness does not obtain . . .

There is no difference between the union as an entity including

[the officer], and the union plus [the officer], since the whole

is no different than the sum of its parts.” 883 F.2d at 141.

The facts here are easily distinguishable; the enterprise is the

plaintiffs’ side of the ESA litigation, which is not named as an

individual defendant, and moreover is a separate entity than any

individual defendant.

     Reves and Cedric Kushner likewise do not help defendants.

In Reves, the Supreme Court focused not on whether the enterprise

was distinct from individual defendants, but whether those

defendants participated in or conducted the affairs of the

enterprise.   Finally, in Cedric Kushner, the Supreme Court held

                                38
that plaintiff could name an employee (Don King) as a RICO person

and his employer (Don King Productions, a closely held

corporation) as an enterprise, because they were two distinct

entities. 533 U.S. at 163.    If Cedric Kushner helps any party

here, it is FEI.

            ii.    Conducted or Participated in the Enterprise’s
                   Affairs

     To be liable under RICO, a person must “participate,

directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s

affairs.”   18 U.S.C. § 1962(c).    The Supreme Court has held that

in order to meet this requirement, “one must participate in the

operation or management of the enterprise itself.”      Reves, 507
U.S. at 185.      “Of course, the word ‘participate’ makes clear that

RICO liability is not limited to those with primary

responsibility for the enterprise’s affairs, just as the phrase

‘directly or indirectly’ makes clear that RICO liability is not

limited to those with a formal position in the enterprise, but

some part in directing the enterprise’s affairs is required.”

Id. at 179.    This does not mean, however, that “participants”

must serve in leadership roles.     “An enterprise is ‘operated’ not

just by upper management but also by lower rung participants in

the enterprise who are under the direction of upper management.”

Id. at 184.

     Defendants claim that FEI failed to specifically allege “how

the animal protection organizations, their lawyers, or Mr. Rider

                                   39
participated in the operation or management” of the enterprise.

Defs.’ Mem. at 61.   FEI responds with a three page chart

detailing the specific paragraphs in the FAC which allege direct,

hands-on, continuing involvement in the enterprise, namely the

prosecution of the ESA case, by most of the defendants.     Opp’n at

73-75.

     Specifically, FEI alleges Rider (1) accepted more than

$190,000 in cash, property and other benefits, FAC ¶¶ 5, 19-27,

(2) provided false testimony in exchange for the money he was

paid, FAC ¶¶ 184-91, (3) evaded paying federal income tax on the

money, FAC ¶¶ 28-29, and (4) obstructed FEI’s inquiry into the

alleged bribery by submitting false affidavits, spoliating

evidence and absenting himself from the contempt hearing.    FAC ¶¶

192-93, 223-25.

     FEI alleges organizational defendants ASPCA, AWI and FFA (1)

were plaintiffs in the ESA lawsuit, and agreed with each other

and other defendants in this case to fund Rider’s participation

in the lawsuit with knowledge that he would testify falsely

regarding his standing,   FAC ¶¶ 50-51, 55, 98-129, 144-46, 157,

(2) paid Rider for his participation in the fraudulent lawsuit,

FAC ¶¶ 69, 132-33, 135-37, 147-49, 159, 161, (3) participated in

the July 2005 fundraiser, FAC ¶¶ 179-83, and (4) obstructed FEI’s

inquiry into the alleged bribery by submitting false

interrogatories, providing false deposition testimony, spoliating

                                40
evidence and procuring Rider’s absence from contempt hearings.

FAC ¶¶ 196-222, 231-35.   FEI alleges organizational defendant API

became a plaintiff in the ESA Action in 2006 and participated in

the alleged bribery of Rider.   Id. ¶¶ 169-70, 172-73.

     FEI alleges MGC, Meyer and Glitzenstein (1) were counsel of

record for the ESA plaintiffs throughout the litigation, FAC ¶¶

98-129, (2) paid Rider directly and charged amounts on legal

bills back to ASPCA, AWI and FAA, FAC ¶¶ 67-68, 72-75, and (3)

concealed the payments to Rider, and obstructed FEI’s inquiry

into the payments by participating in submission of knowingly

false interrogatories and false deposition testimony, and by

procuring Rider’s absence from contempt hearings.   FAC ¶¶ 50-56,

196-234.

     FEI alleges WAP was the alter ego of MGC, was controlled by

Meyer and Glitzenstein, and collected over $155,000 from ASPCA,

AWI, API, and FFA/HSUS to pay to Rider for his participation in

the lawsuit.   FAC ¶¶ 43, 82-97, 125-26.   FEI further alleges that

WAP concealed the nature of the payments to Rider by issuing

falsely worded correspondence and making false ledger entries.

FAC ¶¶ 113-124.

     Based on the foregoing, the Court is persuaded that the FAC

adequately pleads participation in the enterprise as to these

                                41
defendants.16   Three of the four remaining defendants, Jonathan

Lovvorn, Kimberly Ockene and HSUS, have filed separate motions to

dismiss, which are considered in separate sections below.    The

Court therefore turns to the last remaining defendant, attorney

Howard Crystal.

     Crystal argues that he committed no acts of racketeering,

that even if he did commit such acts, the acts do not comprise a

pattern of racketeering, and he did not participate in the

operation or management of the enterprise.   Defs.’ Mem. at 61-62.

FEI offers two arguments in response.   First, it claims that as a

partner or former partner in MGC, Crystal may be held jointly and

severally liable for the acts of the partnership during the time

he was a partner.   Opp’n at 75-76.   Second, FEI argues that the

FAC properly pleads direct liability as to Crystal, namely that

     16
       In a footnote to their Motion to Dismiss, defendants cite
a number of cases where lawyers or other professionals providing
traditional legal services have not been accorded “participant”
status in a RICO enterprise. Defs.’ Mem. 62 n.33. These cases
are inapplicable here because MGC, Meyer and Glitzenstein are
alleged to have gone far beyond providing traditional legal
services. See FAC ¶¶ 98-129 (alleging lawyers paid Rider to
fabricate his standing as a plaintiff and concealed nature of
payments). In circumstances more like the facts alleged here,
courts have found attorneys conducted or participated in the RICO
enterprise. Handeen v. Lemaire, 112 F.3d 1339, 1348-50 (8th Cir.
1997); Napoli v. United States, 32 F.3d 31, 36 (2d Cir. 1994);
see also JSC Foreign Econ. Ass’n Technostroyexport v. Weiss, Case
No. 06-6095, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28954, *27-29 (S.D.N.Y Apr.
18, 2007) (applying the same principles to accountants); compare
RSM Prod. Co. V. Freshfields Bruckhaus Derenger, Case 11-7101,
2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 12784 (June 22, 2012) (law firm and
attorneys not liable under RICO where complaint did not allege
that lawyer or law firm committed any predicate act).

                                 42
he individually engaged in sufficient racketeering acts to

constitute a pattern under RICO, and he participated in the

operation or management of the enterprise.   Id. at 76-77.    The

Court finds that FEI has pled only indirect liability as to

Crystal.

     A partnership, and its partners, may be held jointly and

severally liable for wrongful acts committed by other partners

acting in the ordinary course of business of the partnership.

See, e.g., D.C. Code § 29-603.01(1) (each partner is an agent of

other partners, whose acts in the ordinary course of business

bind the others); § 29-603.05(a) (partnership liable for third-

party loss due to partner’s wrongful acts); § 29-603.06(a) (all

partners jointly and severally liable for all partnership

obligations).   The Court agrees with several others that have

found vicarious liability based on the racketeering acts of co-

partners is appropriate in RICO claims.   See, e.g., Avianca, Inc.

v. Corriea, No. 89-3277, 1992 WL 93128, *13-14 (D.D.C. Apr. 13,

1992), amended on reconsideration on other grounds, 1993 WL
797453 (D.D.C. Mar. 16, 1993) (Lamberth, J.) (co-partners may be

held indirectly liable under RICO for acts of co-partners);

Burns v. MPK Partnership, No. 03-3021, 2003 WL 23979014, *13 (D.

Or. Nov. 5, 2003); Thomas v. Ross & Hardies, 9 F. Supp. 2d 547,

555-59 (D. Md. 1998); 131 Main St. Assocs. v. Manko, 897 F. Supp.
43
1507, 1533-35 (S.D.N.Y. 1995); Crowe v. Smith, 848 F. Supp. 1258,

1261-63 (W.D. La. 1994).

     Here, FEI alleges that MGC is a law firm organized as a

general partnership, and alleges that Crystal was a partner in

MGC during at least a portion of the period during which MGC,

Meyer, and Glitzenstein allegedly committed hundreds of

racketeering acts.   FAC ¶¶ 39, 40-42, 44-46.    At the motion to

dismiss stage, the Court finds that plaintiff has sufficiently

pled joint and several liability.      BCCI Holdings (Luxembourg),

S.A. v. Clifford, 964 F. Supp. 468, 485-86 (D.D.C. 1997).

     By contrast, plaintiff does not plead direct liability as to

Crystal.   The FAC alleges only one act of racketeering

specifically involving Crystal: the alleged refusal of “MCG and

the lawyer defendants,” to accept a subpoena for Rider, and “on

information and belief, one of more of [the ESA plaintiffs and/or

the lawyers] procured Rider’s absence from the hearing [to which

the subpoena pertained] and told him not to attend.”     FAC ¶ 231.

Even assuming that this states a predicate act of racketeering

against Crystal, as opposed to group pleading, it is only a

single act, which is insufficient to meet RICO’s pattern element.

See H.J. Inc., 492 U.S. at 237.

                                  44
            4.   Pleading Predicate Offenses

            i.   Mail and Wire Fraud

       A plaintiff “alleging mail and wire fraud must establish two

essential elements: (1) a scheme to defraud; and (2) use of the

mails or wires for the purpose of executing the scheme.”      Bates

v. Nw. Human Servs., Inc., 466 F. Supp. 2d 69, 89 (D.D.C. 2006)

(citations omitted).    Mail and wire fraud claims are subject to

Rule 9(b) heightened pleading requirements; furthermore, these

claims require specific intent to defraud.     Id.   Defendants

assert three arguments in support of their claim that FEI failed

to meet the pleading requirements; none has merit.

       First, defendants claim FEI did not meet the particularity

requirement of Rule 9(b) because it failed to specify “what . . .

statements were made and in which context, when they were made,

who made them, and the manner in which these statements were

misleading.”     Bates, 466 F. Supp. 2d at 89 (citations omitted).

This is inaccurate.    The FAC explains the alleged scheme to

defraud generally, setting forth how some of the defendants

allegedly provided Rider with “grants” and “donations” through

the mail, and arranged a cover for their payments to induce him

to fraudulently participate in the ESA lawsuit.      See FAC ¶¶ 98-

112.   The FAC further sets out how those of the defendants who

are alleged to have committed wire fraud did so, with references

to specific communications, dates, senders and recipients.        Id.

                                  45
at ¶¶ 85, 95-97, 106, 113-20, 125-26 (WAP payments and

accompanying cover letters); id. ¶ 127-29 (Meyer sends fraudulent

solicitation); id. ¶¶ 132, 146, 158 (MGC invoices);    id. ¶¶ 136

(ASPCA payments); id. ¶ 148 (AWI payments); id. ¶¶ 159-60

(FFA/HSUS payments); id. ¶¶ 170, 172 (API payments); id. ¶¶ 179-

83 (July 2005 fundraising materials).

     Second, defendants argue that a finding of “specific intent”

to defraud requires the court to determine the state of mind of

the individual corporate officers or employees who made or

approved the fraud.   Defs.’ Mem. at 64.   Defendants, who cite

Philip Morris for the state of mind requirement, omit the very

next sentence of the Circuit’s analysis: “[a] person’s state of

mind is rarely susceptible of proof by direct evidence, so

specific intent to defraud may be, and most often is, inferred

from the totality of the circumstances, including indirect and

circumstantial evidence.”   Philip Morris, 566 F.3d at 1118.      The

FAC alleges the defendants knew Rider was being paid to anchor

the lawsuit and to fabricate his injury, and they attempted to

cover up the payments by, variously, denying the payments

existed, attempting to hide the source of the money, and mis-

characterizing the payments.   At the pleading stage, FEI has met

its burden to plead specific intent.

     Finally, defendants claim the mail and wire fraud claims

fail because defendants did not “obtain” for themselves the fees

                                46
that FEI paid to its attorneys to defend the ESA case.     This is

incorrect as a matter of law.     Mail fraud lies whether or not the

perpetrator ends up with the victim’s property or money.      Schmuck

v. United States, 489 U.S. 705, 707, 711 (1989) (defendant used

car salesman guilty of mail fraud even though he had no contact

with, and received nothing from, ultimate car purchasers he

victimized).

             ii.   Obstruction of Justice, Money Laundering and
                   Bribery

        Defendants claim there are two deficiencies in how FEI has

pled obstruction of justice, money laundering and bribery.

First, defendants argue that plaintiff is attempting to

“bootstrap” into a RICO case a series of discovery disputes or

litigation activity that cannot form the basis for RICO predicate

acts.    Defs.’ Mem. at 66; Defs.’ Reply at 29-32.   Defendants are

correct that courts have refused to allow “litigation activities”

such as filing fraudulent documents or engaging in baseless

litigation to serve as predicate acts for RICO, but only in

circumstances where such acts constitute “the only allegedly

fraudulent conduct.”      Daddona v. Gaudio, 156 F. Supp. 2d 153, 162

(D. Conn. 2000).     In such circumstances, courts have found that

these allegations of litigation misconduct may be grounds for

malicious prosecution or abuse of process claims, but not for a

RICO case.     See, e.g., Curtis & Associates, P.C. v. Law Offices

of David M. Bushman, Esq., 758 F. Supp. 2d 153, 171-72 (E.D.N.Y.

                                   47
2010).    On the other hand, where “additional allegations of

extortion or some other pattern of racketeering activity” are

involved, courts “have found that alleged mail and wire fraud

violations arising out of malicious prosecution or abuse of

process could be RICO predicate acts.”       Daddona, 156 F. Supp. 2d

at 163 (collecting cases).    This case, at least at the pleading

stage, falls into the latter category.      Plaintiff’s allegations

in the FAC are not limited to claims that defendants

filed false documents with the Court or otherwise engaged in

frivolous and harassing litigation; they claim the entire lawsuit

was based on bribery of the lead plaintiff and witness.

        Second, defendants allege that plaintiff’s allegations of

money laundering, bribery and obstruction of justice should be

dismissed because violations of these statutes depend on secrecy

or concealment from public view.       Defs.’ Mem. at 66-68.

Reprising the factual arguments asserted in support of their

compulsory counterclaim and statute of limitations defenses,

defendants argue that FEI knew the defendants were supporting

Rider because Rider and the other defendants told FEI.         Id.

Therefore, according to defendants, FEI can satisfy neither the

‘secrecy’ nor the ‘specific intent’ elements of these predicate

acts.

        The Court finds FEI has adequately pled the elements of

money laundering, bribery and obstruction.      “The money laundering

                                  48
statute criminalizes behavior that masks the relationship between

the individual and his illegally obtained proceeds.”      U.S. v.

Adefehinti, 510 F.3d 319, 322 (D.C. Cir. 2007); 18 U.S.C. § 1956.

The FAC alleges that the defendants bribed Rider, and that the

bribes were falsely characterized as grants or reimbursement of

expenses for media work to disguise their origins, their true

nature and purpose, and to assist Rider in evading taxes.     FAC ¶¶

24, 28-29, 72-178.

     The bribery statute requires that payments be given or

accepted “corruptly” to influence testimony under oath or

affirmation.   18 U.S.C. § 201(b)(3), (4).   FEI alleges that the

defendants paid Rider approximately $200,000 in order to

influence Rider to participate in the lawsuit and to fabricate

his claim of standing, upon which the lawsuit was ultimately

based.   FEI further alleges that the defendants tried to hide the

payments themselves, as well as their nature and purpose.     FAC ¶¶

20-32.

     Finally, the obstruction of justice statute prohibits, in

relevant part, “corruptly . . . influenc[ing], obstruct[ing], or

imped[ing], or endeavor[ing] to influence, obstruct, or impede,

the due administration of justice.”   18 U.S.C. § 1503.    “There

must be a nexus in time, causation or logic between the conduct

and its effect on the proceeding:    A defendant must know that his

corrupt actions ‘are likely to affect the . . . proceeding.’”

                                49
United States v. Jahedi, 681 F. Supp. 2d 430, 434 (S.D.N.Y. 2009)

(quoting United States v. Aguilar, 515 U.S. 593, 599 (1995)).

Although obstruction of justice charges are not often applied to

lies or misrepresentations in the course of civil discovery,

courts have permitted parties to pursue it under certain

circumstances.   See, e.g., In re Sealed Case, 162 F.3d 670, 674

(D.C. Cir. 1998) (non-party’s submission of false affidavit in a

motion to quash a subpoena in civil litigation); United States v.

Abbell, 271 F.3d 1286, 1300-01 (11th Cir. 2001) (obtaining false

affidavits and deposition testimony for use in possible

extradition proceedings in Colombia); United States v. Lundwall,

1 F. Supp. 2d 249 (S.D.N.Y. 1998) (withholding and destroying

documents in employment discrimination case).   Moreover, bribery

of a witness can itself constitute obstruction of justice.     See,

e.g., United States v. LeMoure, 474 F.3d 37, 41 (1st Cir. 2007)

(citations omitted).   In this case, FEI has alleged that

defendants provided knowingly false responses to interrogatories

and knowingly false deposition testimony which were designed to

conceal the alleged bribery of Rider.   FAC ¶¶ 184-230.   In light

of the subject matter of the allegedly false information provided

in discovery-– information regarding bribery of a plaintiff and a

witness so that he would, in turn,   provide false testimony to

the Court regarding the merits of the underlying case-–the Court

finds that FEI has sufficiently pled the elements of obstruction

                                50
of justice, as well as money laundering and bribery, to survive a

motion to dismiss.

     5.     Standing

     Defendants argue that FEI cannot establish proximate cause

between the predicate acts alleged and its alleged RICO injury.

First, they claim FEI cannot show a legally sufficient connection

between its injuries and the predicate acts not directly related

to the ESA Action, specifically, bribery, illegal gratuity

payments, obstruction of justice, money laundering, mail fraud,

and wire fraud in connection with defendants’ legislative and

executive branch advocacy and fundraising efforts.      Second, they

argue that FEI cannot show that the lawsuit-related predicate

acts proximately caused its injuries.      The Court considers each

in turn.

             i.     Causation for Predicate Acts Not Directly Related
                    to Prosecution of the ESA Action.

     In order to state a claim under civil RICO, the plaintiff is

required to show that a RICO predicate offense “not only was a

‘but for’ cause of his injury, but was the proximate cause as

well.”     Holmes v. SEC Investor Protection Corp., 503 U.S. 258,

268 (1992).       “Proximate cause . . . requires ‘some direct

relation between the injury asserted and the injurious conduct

alleged.    A link that is ‘too remote,’ ‘purely contingent,’ or

‘indirec[t]’ is insufficient.”       Hemi Group, LLC v. City of New

                                    51
York, 130 S. Ct. 983, 989 (2008) (quoting Holmes, 503 U.S. at

268, 271, 274).

     Defendants note that the only injury FEI alleges is “the

substantial costs incurred by FEI to defend the ESA Action.”    FAC

¶ 273.   Accordingly, they argue that FEI cannot claim injury

related to defendants’ legislative and executive advocacy efforts

or to their fundraising efforts because any connection between

this conduct and FEI’s injury is far too remote to satisfy

proximate cause.   Turning first to their legislative and

administrative advocacy efforts to ban elephants in circuses,

defendants note that FEI has alleged no injury from these

actions.   Defs.’ Mem. at 52; see also Sedima v. Imrex, 473 U.S.
479, 496 (1985) (“[T]he plaintiff only has standing if, and can

only recover to the extent that, he has been injured in his

business or property by the conduct constituting the violation. .

. . [A] defendant who violates section 1962 is not liable for

treble damages to everyone he might have injured by other

conduct, nor is the defendant liable to those who have not been

injured.”).   Even if FEI claimed that there is somehow a

connection between defendants allegedly defrauding legislative or

administrative bodies and FEI losing money by defending the ESA

lawsuit, defendants argue that it is far too attenuated to

satisfy RICO’s causation requirement.   Id. at 53.

                                52
     The Court agrees with defendants.     Even assuming FEI was a

direct target of defendants’ administrative and legislative

efforts, it has not alleged that it suffered any injury from

these efforts.   FEI makes a cursory attempt to tie the ESA

litigation to defendants’ legislative efforts, stating,

“defendants sought discovery in the ESA case for use in the

legislative arena; Rider’s stature as a legislative witness was

enhanced by being a plaintiff in” the ESA Action.    Opp’n at 69.

Even assuming the truth of this assertion, the Court finds it

insufficient for the purpose of satisfying RICO’s standing

requirements.    The FAC contains no allegations that would create

the plausible inference that the defendants’ legislative and

administrative activity “led directly to [FEI’s] injur[y]” of

spending money to defend the litigation.     See Anza v. Ideal Steel

Group, 547 U.S. 451, 461 (2006) (“When a court evaluates a RICO

claim for proximate causation, the central question it must ask

is whether the alleged violation led directly to the plaintiff’s

injuries.”).    Accordingly, FEI does not have standing to maintain

a RICO claim with respect to this activity.

     Turning to the fundraising activity, FEI alleges that, in

July 2005, some of the organizational defendants violated mail

and wire fraud statutes by using false and misleading statements

in an invitation to a fundraiser to raise money to support the

ESA litigation. FEI alleges that the false information enticed

                                 53
defendants’ donors into giving money to support the ESA

litigation.   FAC ¶¶ 179-183.   FEI further alleges that at least

one of the defendants, API, “made two payments to WAP for Rider

using proceeds from the fundraiser.”     Id. ¶ 180.     Finally, FEI

alleges that it was the direct victim of the scheme because the

sole purpose of the fundraiser was to raise money for the ESA

Action.   Id. ¶ 183.

     Defendants argue that FEI has not established direct

causation between their fundraising activities and plaintiff’s

expenses litigating the ESA Action.     Id. at 54-55.    The Court

does not agree.   The Supreme Court has held that “[a] scheme that

injures D by making false statements through the mail to E is

mail fraud, and actionable by D through RICO, if the injury is

not derivative of someone else’s.”     Bridge v. Phoenix Bond &

Indem. Co., 553 U.S. 639, 645 (2008); see also Sandwich Chef v.

Reliance Nat’l Indem. Ins. Co., 319 F.3d 205, 223 (5th Cir. 2003)

(plaintiff need not prove direct reliance on defendant’s

fraudulent predicate act “when the plaintiff can demonstrate

injury as a direct and contemporaneous result of fraud committed

against a third party”); Mid Atlantic Telecom, Inc. v. Long

Distance Servs., Inc., 18 F.3d 260, 263 (4th Cir. 1994) (RICO

does not require that “only injuries suffered by the immediate

victim of a predicate act” may satisfy proximate cause,

particularly when the injuries suffered by others are not

                                 54
“derivative of any losses suffered by” the immediate victims).

Here, FEI claims that it was directly and contemporaneously

injured as a result of the alleged fraud committed against the

donors: the money defendants obtained via the alleged mail fraud

was directly used to pay Tom Rider for his participation in the

ESA Action.   Moreover, FEI’s injury is not derivative of the

alleged losses suffered by the donors.   Instead, it claims an

independent injury: lost revenue due to the necessity of

defending the ESA Action.

     Defendants argue that FEI cannot show that the donors “would

have withheld their contributions had they received different

information regarding the ESA case[.]”   Defs.’ Mem. at 54.    The

Court agrees that “it may well be that a RICO plaintiff alleging

injury by reason of a pattern of mail fraud must establish at

least third-party reliance in order to prove causation.”      Bridge,
553 U.S. at 659.   At this point, these claims are not

established, but they are alleged in the complaint, see FAC ¶¶

181-82, which is all that is required at the motion to dismiss

stage.   Accordingly, FEI has sufficiently alleged standing with

respect to the fundraising activity.

           ii.   Causation for Predicate Acts Directly Related to
                 Prosecution of ESA Action.

     Defendants also argue that “FEI cannot establish that it

would not have had to expend resources defending the ESA Action

but for Mr. Rider’s assertion of legal standing . . . [b]ecause

                                 55
of the independent assertion of organizational standing arguments

that were vigorously advanced throughout the entire ESA

litigation.”   Defs.’ Mem. at 56.    Because none of the alleged

predicate acts relate to the claims of organizational standing,

defendants assert FEI cannot show a direct connection between its

expenses in the lawsuit and the alleged predicate acts: it might

have had to defend a long and costly lawsuit anyway.    Plaintiff

responds that this Court found, in its 2009 Opinion deciding the

ESA case, that “the lawsuit could not have been maintained

without Mr. Rider’s participation as a plaintiff.”    Opp’n at 68

(quoting ASPCA v. Feld Entm’t, 677 F. Supp. 2d at 89).     FEI

argues that “organizational standing was never the sole standing

theory.   Rider was in this case from the outset, and FEI spent

legal fees dealing with his claims regardless of the fact that

the other plaintiffs continued to assert organizational standing

after the Court had rejected their arguments.”     Id. at 69.

     This Court has already decided that Rider’s standing was

essential to the prosecution of the ESA lawsuit, from which FEI’s

injuries directly flow.   In its 2009 Opinion, this Court made a

factual finding that:

     On June 29, 2001, the Court dismissed this case on the basis
     that neither Mr. Rider nor the organizational plaintiffs had
     standing to sue. The [ESA Action] was reinstated by the
     Court of Appeals in 2003, but solely on the basis of what
     had been alleged by Mr. Rider with respect to his personal
     and emotional attachment to the elephants with whom he had
     worked and the aesthetic injury he claims that he suffered
     as a result of FEI’s treatment of those elephants. Indeed,

                                56
     the Court of Appeals recognized that Mr. Rider presented the
     plaintiffs’ “strongest case for standing.” In order for
     this case to continue it was therefore crucial to the
     organizational plaintiffs that Mr. Rider remain a plaintiff.

ASPCA v. Feld, 677 F. Supp. 2d at 81.    Accordingly, FEI has

sufficiently alleged that the predicate acts related to the ESA

Action caused its injury and thus has standing to pursue its RICO

claims based on the litigation-related conduct.17

     6.     Humane Society of the United States (“HSUS”) Motion to
            Dismiss

     Having addressed the RICO claims raised in the omnibus

motion to dismiss, the Court turns to HSUS’s separate motion to

dismiss.    The FAC contains the following allegations with respect

to HSUS.    First, FEI claims that HSUS merged with FFA, a

plaintiff in the ESA case, on January 1, 2005.18    FAC ¶ 36.   The

     17
        Defendants argue that standing should not lie because it
would be hard for a court “to ascertain the amount of a
plaintiff’s damages attributable to the violation, as distinct
from other, independent factors” such as organizational standing
or, indeed, FEI’s own role in contributing to the delay and
expense of the litigation. Defs.’ Mem. At 56 (quoting Anza, 547
U.S. at 458).   The Court does not agree. Anza does not stand
for the proposition that no RICO injury could ever be asserted
unless it was solely attributable to the alleged unlawful
activity. Rather, it simply notes that “[t]he less direct an
injury is, the more difficult it becomes” to ascertain the source
of the injury. Anza, 547 U.S. at 458. In this case, the
asserted injury--FEI’s attorneys’ fees in the ESA litigation--is
the direct result of the alleged RICO offenses involving Rider’s
involvement in the litigation. The fact that the Court may at
some point need to determine which portion of the fees were spent
defending against Rider’s claims as opposed to the claims of the
organizations does not mean that FEI lacks standing to assert any
RICO injury.
     18
           HSUS was never a plaintiff in the ESA Action.

                                  57
FAC further alleges that FFA made money available to Rider on

several occasions before January 1, 2005, FAC ¶¶ 158-59, and that

FFA/HSUS made money available to Rider on several occasions after

January 1, 2005, as well.     Id. ¶ 160.    Second, FEI alleges that

Michael Markarian, an officer of FFA/HSUS, gave false deposition

testimony to conceal FFA/HSUS’s payments to Rider.       FAC ¶¶ 36,

217-22.   Finally, FEI claims that FFA/HSUS, operating under the

name HSUS, participated in the July 2005 fundraiser which

allegedly defrauded donors and FEI.        Id. ¶ 179.

     In its motion to dismiss, HSUS asserts that, although it

“join[ed] forces in a corporate combination” with FFA via an

asset purchase agreement, the two organizations did not merge;

therefore, FFA’s RICO liabilities cannot be imputed to HSUS.

HSUS Mot. To Dismiss (“HSUS Mem.”) at 2.       In support of its

motion to dismiss, HSUS filed the Asset Acquisition Agreement

(“Agreement”) between HSUS and FFA.        See HSUS Mem. Ex. A.    It

also filed excerpts of FFA’s tax returns from 2005, 2006 and

2007, as well as several excerpts of Markarian’s deposition

testimony in which he asserts that HSUS never made any money

available to Rider.     Id., Exs. B-E.   In its opposition, FEI

attached additional tax returns filed by FFA.       Opp’n to HSUS Mot.

to Dismiss, Exs. 1-4.

     As a threshold matter, the Court must determine whether it

may consider the attachments to the motion to dismiss without

                                  58
converting it into a summary judgment motion.   The Court

concludes it may consider the Agreement but not the remainder of

the exhibits.   Where an attachment to a motion to dismiss is a

document “upon which the complaint necessarily relies, and

because plaintiff does not dispute its authenticity, the Court

may consider [it] without converting [the] motion to dismiss into

a motion for summary judgment.”    Navab-Safavi v. Broad. Bd. of

Governors, 650 F. Supp. 2d 40, 56 n.5 (D.D.C. 2009); see also

Hinton v. Corrections Corp. Of Am., 624 F. Supp. 2d 45, 47 (2009)

(considering contract attached to motion to dismiss, noting that

“[b]y pleading that the defendant had the duty to provide him

with eye treatment and care, the plaintiff’s complaint

necessarily rests on the contract, although it did not

incorporate the contract.”).   In this case, by pleading that FFA

and HSUS merged, the FAC necessarily rests on the Agreement--the

contract memorializing the alleged merger--and it is integral to

FEI’s claims.   However, the FAC does not necessarily rely on the

incomplete portions of certain of FFA’s tax filings, or the other

documents attached to the motion to dismiss or the opposition.

The Court will therefore exercise its discretion not to consider

the remaining attachments, and accordingly need not convert the

motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment.    See

Robinson v. Dist. of Columbia, 736 F. Supp. 2d 254, 263 (D.D.C.

2010).

                                  59
     FEI asserts two theories under which HSUS may be liable:

merger and successor liability.    “A corporate merger consists of

a combination whereby one of the constituent corporations remains

in being, absorbing in itself all the other constituent

corporations, which cease to exist.”    See, e.g., 20 Am. Jur.

Proof of Facts 2d 609; see also N.Y. Not-for-Profit Corp. Law §

905.19    In its opposition, FEI does not seriously contest that FFA

continues to exist following the asset purchase.    Indeed, it has

sued FFA separately as a co-defendant in these actions.

Accordingly, no statutory merger occurred.

     Under the doctrine of successor liability, a corporation

acquiring assets of another corporation takes on its liabilities

if, inter alia, there was a de facto merger of the companies, or

if there is an expressed or implied agreement.     R.C.M. Exec.

Gallery Corp. v. Rols Capital Co., 901 F. Supp. 630, 635-36

(S.D.N.Y. 1995).    FEI claims that HSUS may be held liable under

either of these theories of successor liability.    Opp’n to HSUS

Mot. at 4.    The Court finds that the FAC, in conjunction with the

Agreement, adequately alleges a de facto merger; accordingly, it

need not reach the question of whether HSUS agreed to take FFA’s

liabilities in this lawsuit.

     19
        The parties agree that New York law governs the
Agreement. See Agreement, HSUS Mot. Ex. A., § 11.9.

                                  60
     “A de facto merger occurs when a transaction, although not

in form a merger, is in substance a consolidation or merger of

seller and purchaser.”    Cargo Partner AG v. Albatrans, Inc., 352
F.3d 41, 45 (2d Cir. 2003) (citations omitted).     The hallmarks of

a de facto merger are “(1) continuity of ownership; (2) cessation

of ordinary business and dissolution of the acquired corporation

as soon as possible; (3) assumption of the purchaser of the

liabilities ordinarily necessary for the uninterrupted

continuation of the business of the acquired corporation; and (4)

continuity of management, personnel, physical location, assets,

and general business operation.”      New York v. Nat’l Serv. Indus.,

Inc., 460 F.3d 201, 209 (2d Cir. 2006) (Sotomayor, J.)

(citations omitted).   “[T]he de facto merger exception derives

from the concept that a successor that effectively takes over a

company in its entirety should carry the predecessor’s

liabilities in order to ensure that a source remains to pay for

the victim’s injuries.”     Nettis v. Levitt, 241 F.3d 186 (2d Cir.

2001) (overruled on other grounds by Slayten v. Am. Ex., 460 F.3d
215 (2d Cir. 2008)) (internal citations omitted); see also Matter

of N.Y. City Asbestos Litig., 15 A.D.3d 254, 258-59 (N.Y. App.

Div. 2005).   Accordingly, a de facto merger does not necessarily

require the presence of all four factors.      See AT&S Transp. LLC

v. Odyssey Logistics & Tech. Corp., 22 A.D.3d 750, 753 (N.Y. App.

Div. 2005); Fitzgerald v. Fahnestock & Co., 286 A.D.2d 573, 574

                                 61
(N.Y. App. Div. 2001); Sweatland v. Park Corp., 181 A.D.2d 243,

246 (N.Y. App. Div. 1992).

     HSUS does not dispute, at least for the purposes of its

motion to dismiss, that the transaction between it and FFA

satisfies the last two elements of the de facto merger test. The

first element, continuity of ownership, is not applicable to non-

profit corporations.   HSUS’s argument therefore hinges on the

second factor: it argues that there can be no de facto merger as

a matter of law because FFA has not dissolved.    However, New York

courts have not necessarily found this factor sufficient, without

more, to overcome a finding of de facto merger.   “So long as the

acquired corporation is shorn of its assets and has become, in

essence, a shell, legal dissolution is not necessary before a

finding of a de facto merger will be made.”   AT&S Transp., 22
A.D.3d at 753; see also Cargo Partner AG v. Albatrans, Inc., 207
F. Supp. 2d 86, 98 (S.D.N.Y. 2002); Fitzgerald, 286 A.D.2d at

575 (collecting cases).   “Courts will look to whether the

acquiring corporation was seeking to obtain for itself intangible

assets such as good will, trademarks, patents, customer lists and

the right to use the acquired corporation’s name.   The concept

upon which this doctrine is based is that a successor that

effectively takes over a company in its entirety should carry the

predecessor’s liabilities as a concomitant to the benefits it

                                62
derives from the good will purchased.”    Fitzgerald, 286 A.D.2d at

575 (citations omitted).

     In this case, although the Asset Purchase Agreement provides

for FFA to retain ownership of three real properties, HSUS

acquired substantially everything else.   Among other things, HSUS

acquired the good will, trademarks, logos, donor lists, creative

materials and name of FFA.   Asset Purchase Agreement § 1.1.   It

assumed the trade payables in the ordinary course of business, as

well as the liabilities and obligations under FFA’s agreements,

contracts, orders, leases, and other commitments.    Id. § 1.1.

HSUS offered employment to all of FFA’s employees, id. § 1.5(b),

and automatically extended membership in HSUS to anyone donating

$10 or more to FFA, id. § 1.5(e).    Taken together, particularly

given that the other factors in the de facto merger test weigh in

favor of finding a merger, these facts raise a plausible

inference that the corporate combination between FFA and HSUS

satisfies the requirements of a de facto merger.    It may be that

FEI will not be able to show that the corporate combination of

HSUS and FFA amounts to a de facto merger under New York law;

however, for the reasons stated above, the allegation is

sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss.20

     20
        In its Opposition to HSUS’s motion to dismiss, FEI for
the first time implies that even if HSUS and FFA did not merge,
HSUS is still separately liable under RICO. If indeed FEI is
making such an argument, the Court rejects it. While the Federal
Rules permit parties to plead more than one claim in support of

                                63
     Having found that FEI adequately alleges a de facto merger

of HSUS and FFA, the Court concludes that FEI also alleges the

merged entity conducted or participated in the affairs of the

enterprise.   According to the FAC, FFA/HSUS employed attorneys of

record in the litigation, knowingly paid Rider, on multiple

occasions, for his participation in the lawsuit, attempted to

obstruct FEI’s inquiry into the payments to Rider, and co-hosted

the July 2005 fundraiser.   FAC ¶¶ 44-45, 60-70, 156-60, 179-83,

217-22.   Based on the foregoing, the Court likewise concludes

that the FAC has adequately alleged the merged entity knowingly

agreed to the commission of a violation of § 1962(c), and

accordingly has pled the elements of a RICO conspiracy charge.

See, e.g., Salinas v. United States, 522 U.S. 52, 61-66 (1997).

Accordingly, the Court will deny HSUS’s motion to dismiss.

     7.    Lovvorn & Ockene Motion to Dismiss

     Jonathan Lovvorn and Kimberely Ockene, two attorneys of

record in the ESA Action, move separately to dismiss pursuant to

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).21     Lovvorn and Ockene

argue that they were merely members of a litigation team:     they

alternative theories of recovery, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(d)(3),
FEI has pled no claims against HSUS as an entity independent of
its merger with FFA.
     21
        Lovvorn and Ockene also move to strike FEI’s notice of
supplemental authority as to them. The Court finds FEI’s notice
of supplemental authority complies with the Court’s June 24, 2011
minute order permitting such filings; accordingly, the Motion to
Strike is DENIED.

                                64
committed no acts of racketeering; even if they did commit such

acts, the acts do not comprise a pattern of racketeering; and

they did not participate in the operation or management of the

enterprise.   FEI offers two arguments in response.   First, it

claims that as former partners in Meyer, Glitzenstein and

Crystal, Lovvorn and Ockene may be held jointly and severally

liable for the acts of the partnership during the time they were

partners.   Second, FEI argues that the complaint properly pleads

direct liability as to Lovvorn and Ockene, alleging that each

individually engaged in sufficient racketeering acts to

constitute a pattern under RICO, and each participated in the

operation or management of the enterprise.

     With respect to joint and several liability, the Court

reaches the same conclusion as to Lovvorn and Ockene as it did as

to Crystal (see supra section III.C.3); namely, as alleged

partners in MGC, they may be held jointly and severally liable

for the wrongful acts of the partnership or other partners taken

in the course of ordinary partnership business during the time

they were partners.   Lovvorn and Ockene respond that they were

“non-equity employees, not general partners,” and therefore

cannot be vicariously liable.   Lovvorn & Ockene Reply at 4.   FEI

will have the burden to show that these individuals were partners

to establish liability; however, at the motion to dismiss stage,

                                65
the Court finds that plaintiff has sufficiently pled joint and

several liability.   BCCI Holdings, 964 F. Supp. at 485-86.

     In addition to joint and several liability for his partners’

and law firm’s actions, the Court finds FEI has plead direct

liability as to Lovvorn.   The FAC alleges that Lovvorn had actual

knowledge of the payments to Rider, that he participated in

discussions with other defendants to plan and execute the

payments to Rider, and he “directly participated in some or all

of the payments that FFA/HSUS made to or on behalf of Rider.”

FAC ¶ 44, see also id. ¶ 160 (detailing payments from FFA/HSUS to

Rider); FEI Opp’n to Lovvorn & Okene Mot. to Dismiss at 5 (citing

ESA Action, DE 166 Exs. 14, 19, 22, & 24; DE 459-12

(correspondence from Lovvorn, as representative of HSUS, to

Glitzenstein, enclosing payments to Rider on four separate

occasions).   For the reasons explained in section III.C.4.ii

supra, the Court finds that FEI has sufficiently pled the

elements of bribery, and, for the reasons explained in section

III.C.2 supra, finds that FEI has sufficiently alleged a closed-

ended pattern of racketeering activity sufficient to survive a

motion to dismiss.

     The FAC also adequately pleads Lovvorn “participated in the

operation or management of the enterprise itself” and therefore

may be liable under § 1962(c).   Reves, 507 U.S. at 179, 183-84

(“[T]he word ‘participate’ makes clear that RICO liability is not

                                 66
limited to those with primary responsibility for the enterprise’s

affairs . . . but some part of directing that enterprise’s

affairs is required.”).   Lovvorn echos the argument, raised in

the defendants’ omnibus motion to dismiss, that attorneys

providing traditional legal services are not accorded

‘participant’ status in a RICO enterprise.   Lovvorn & Ockene Mot.

at 5-6.   “However, Reves provides no blanket immunity for

professionals regardless of their involvement in a criminal

enterprise . . . where professionals are alleged to have exceeded

the mere rendering of legitimate professional service, the

‘operation or management’ requirement will be pleaded

adequately.”    JSC Foreign Econ. Ass’n Technostroyexport, 2007
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28954, at *28 (collecting cases).   In JSC, the

defendant accounting firm was found to participate in the

operation and management of the enterprise when it was the

alleged architect of some of the money laundering activities and

devised and managed a scheme to carry out some of the fraudulent

transactions.   Other courts have likewise found that lawyers may

be liable for operating or managing the enterprise when they

participate in the central activities of the enterprise.     See,

e.g., Napoli v. United States, 32 F.3d at 36 (enterprise was

fraudulent litigation, attorneys who conducted the litigation,

bribed witnesses and suborned perjury operated the enterprise);

Handeen, 112 F.3d at 1349-50 (when purpose of the enterprise was

                                 67
to manipulate bankruptcy process, attorneys who created and

executed plan to fraudulently hide assets and inflate debt and

made representations to bankruptcy court based on that plan are

liable; court found “an underlying distinction between acting in

an advisory professional capacity . . . and acting as a direct

participant in [an enterprise’s] affairs”).

     Here, FEI has alleged that the enterprise was the

plaintiffs’ side of the ESA litigation, which was managed and

controlled by the lawyers in the case.    FEI has alleged that

Lovvorn, among other attorneys, participated in the core

activities that constituted the affairs of the enterprise,

namely, litigating the ESA case and planning and executing the

payments to Rider.   Moreover, FEI has alleged that he did so

through a pattern of illegal acts, including knowingly procuring

false testimony through bribery.     Even if he did so at the

direction of others, Lovvorn may still be liable for

participation in the conduct of an enterprise as a lower-rung

participant “by knowingly implementing decisions, as well as by

making them.”   United States v. Oreto, 37 F.3d 739, 750 (1st Cir.

1994), cert. denied, 513 U.S. 1177 (1995); see also MCM Partners

v. Andrews-Bartlett & Assocs., 62 F.3d 967, 978-79 (7th Cir.

1995) (collecting cases).

     By contrast, the FAC does not plead direct liability under §

1962(c) as to Ockene.   The FAC pleads only one alleged act of

                                68
racketeering specifically involving Ockene: the alleged refusal

of “MCG and the lawyer defendants,” to accept a subpoena for

Rider, and “on information and belief, one of more of [the ESA

plaintiffs and/or the lawyers] procured Rider’s absence from the

hearing [to which the subpoena pertained] and told him not to

attend.”   FAC ¶ 231.   Even assuming that this states a predicate

act of racketeering against Ockene, as opposed to group pleading,

it is only a single act, which is insufficient to meet RICO’s

pattern element.   See H.J. Inc., 492 U.S. at 237.   In its

opposition to her motion to dismiss, FEI claims that it alleged

additional acts of racketeering by Ockene: specifically that she

provided misleading and/or false interrogatory answers in order

to cover up the payments to Rider, and defended a deposition in

which the deponent gave false testimony about the Rider payments.

Opp’n to Lovvorn & Ockene Mot. To Dismiss at 4-5.    This is

inaccurate; the FAC contains no such allegations as to Ockene.22

     22
        In its Opposition to her Motion to Dismiss, FEI cites to
documents in the record of the ESA case which purport to show
Ockene’s involvement in these events. In the absence of any
allegations in the FAC naming her on these issues, this is simply
insufficient to meet the requirements of notice pleading pursuant
to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a). Even assuming FEI did
plead Ockene’s involvement in these acts, the Court is skeptical
that her involvement would comprise operation or management of
the enterprise, either as an upper-rung manager or a lower-rung
participant, as a matter of law. Unlike Lovvorn, Ockene is not
alleged to have participated in bribery of a witness. Even if
her name appeared on interrogatories which contained false
information, or if she defended a deposition in which a witness
testified falsely, this does not establish that Ockene knew the
submissions or testimony were false, much less that she falsified

                                 69
     The Court does, however, find that FEI has adequately pled

RICO conspiracy as to Ockene.    Section 1962(d) of RICO states:

“It shall be unlawful for any person to conspire to violate any

of the provisions of subsection (a), (b), or (c) of this

section.” 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d).   A RICO conspirator need not

commit an overt act.   “[A] conspirator must intend to further an

endeavor which, if completed, would satisfy all of the elements

of a substantive criminal offense, but it suffices that he adopt

the goal of furthering or facilitating the criminal endeavor.”

Salinas, 522 U.S. at 64; see also United States v. Zichetello,

208 F.3d 72, 99 (2d Cir. 2000) (“We need inquire only whether an

alleged conspirator knew what the other conspirators were up to

or whether the situation would logically lead an alleged

conspirator to suspect he was part of a larger enterprise.”)

Moreover, “a conspiracy can be inferred from a combination of

close relationships or knowing presence and other supporting

answers or coached a witness to do the same. The cases FEI
relies on in support of a finding of attorney liability under
RICO involved attorney actions on a different scale than those
alleged against Ockene in the FAC or argued by FEI in its
opposition to her motion to dismiss. See, e.g., Napoli, 32 F.3d
at 36; Handeen, 112 F.3d at 1350; Garrett v. Cassity, Case No.09-
1252, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 134776 (E.D. Mo. Dec. 21, 2010)
(outside counsel, an individual, was sole trustee of the trust
that owned and controlled all the entities which committed the
alleged fraud, was also general counsel to many of those
entities, helped devise scheme regarding fraudulent promissory
notes, and signed at least one fraudulent note worth $ 6.3
million).

                                 70
circumstantial evidence.”   U.S. v. Mellon, 393 F.3d 175, 191

(D.C. Cir. 2004).

     Here, the FAC alleges that Ockene (1) was counsel of record

in the ESA Action both as an attorney at MGC and at FFA/HSUS, FAC

¶ 45, (2) “deliberately misrepresented Rider’s purported standing

in pleadings and other filings before this Court and the D.C.

Circuit in the ESA Action,” id. ¶ 329, and, (3) “during some or

all of the time period material to this lawsuit . . . had actual

knowledge of the payments to Rider,” id. ¶ 45.     Taking all of

these allegations together and construing them in the light most

favorable to FEI, the Court finds that plaintiff has alleged

Ockene “knew about and agreed to facilitate the scheme” of her

co-defendants, and therefore has alleged RICO conspiracy.

Salinas, 522 U.S. at 66.

     8.   Conclusion as to RICO Claims (Counts I and II)

     For the reasons set forth above, FEI lacks standing to bring

RICO claims regarding the defendants’ alleged legislative and

administrative advocacy efforts, as set forth in the FAC, Factual

Background, Sections VI and VII.     In addition, the allegations

that Rider and others made false or misleading statements, and

were compensated to do so, when they participated in press

conferences, made other statements to news outlets, and posted

letters on organizational web-sites, are entitled to Noerr-

Pennington immunity.   See, e.g., FAC ¶¶ 159, 161, 245, 252, 269-

                                71
71.   Finally, the FAC fails to allege direct liability under

section 1962(c) as to Howard Crystal or Kimberly Ockene.

Accordingly, the defendants’ motions to dismiss the RICO claims

are GRANTED IN PART as to these allegations.    In all other

respects, defendants’ motions to dismiss the RICO claims are

DENIED.

      E.   State Law Claims (Counts III-VII)

      In addition to their RICO claims, FEI has alleged violations

of the Virginia Conspiracy Act, and the torts of abuse of

process, malicious prosecution, champerty and maintenance.

Defendants have moved to dismiss all of these claims.    The Court

will address each in turn.

           1.   Count III: Virginia Conspiracy Act

      The Virginia Conspiracy Act prohibits actors from conspiring

to willfully and maliciously injure another in his reputation,

trade, business or profession by any means whatsoever, and, like

RICO, provides treble damages for violations.    Va. Code. Ann. §§

18.2-499; 18.2-500(A) (2010).    The statute of limitations under

the Virginia Conspiracy Act is five years.     Id. § 8.01-243(B).

      Defendants argue that this claim is barred by the statute of

limitations because Virginia follows the occurrence of injury

rule, rather than the discovery rule, for claims under the

Virginia Conspiracy Act.     See id. § 8.01.230 (“[T]he prescribed

limitations period shall begin to run from the date the injury is

                                  72
sustained . . . and not when the resulting damage is

discovered.”)   Defendants argue the sole injury claimed by FEI is

the attorneys’ fees it expended in defending the ESA Action, and

it began paying those fees on July 11, 2000, when the ESA Case

was originally filed.   Defs.’ Mot. To Dismiss at 81-82. FEI

responds that under Virginia law, regardless of when the injury

began, it may recover for the portion of injuries it sustained

within the five years preceding the filing of its complaint.

Opp’n at 52-53.   FEI also argues that the defendants fraudulently

concealed their payment scheme, thus tolling the statute of

limitations “through at least July 19, 2005.”   Id. 50-52.     For

the reasons explained below, the Court agrees with FEI that under

Virginia law it may recover damages for the five years preceding

suit, and accordingly the Virginia Conspiracy claim is timely as

to at least that portion of FEI’s injury.   Accordingly, the Court

declines to reach the issue of fraudulent concealment at this

stage of the litigation.

     Under the Virginia Conspiracy Act, “every action for injury

to property . . . shall be brought within five years after the

cause of action accrues.”   Va. Code. Ann. § 8.01-243(B).    The

question before the Court is when the cause of action accrues.

“If the wrongful act is of a permanent nature and one that

produces all the damages that can ever result from it, [then] the

entire damages must be recovered in one action and the statute of

                                73
limitations begins to run from the date of the wrongful act.

Conversely, when wrongful acts are not continuous but occur only

at intervals, each occurrence inflicts a new injury and gives

rise to a new and separate cause of action.”       Hampton Rds.

Sanitation Dist. v. McDonnell, 360 S.E.2d 841, 843 (Va. 1987)

(citations omitted).   In the latter situation, the plaintiff may

recover for “the damages sustained during the five years

immediately preceding the institution of the suit.”       Id. at 843-

44 (citation omitted); see also Union Labor Life Ins. Co. v.

Sheet Metal Workers Nat’l Health Plan, No. 90-2728, 1991 U.S.

Dist. Lexis 13613, at *15 (D.D.C. Sept. 30, 1991)(Virginia

statute of limitations accrued anew each time defendant was

unjustly enriched by underpaying its periodic insurance:

“wrongful acts or breaches of duty which occur in distinct

intervals or installments, as opposed to being continuous, cause

distinct and severable injuries.       Consequently, each breach gives

rise to new and separate causes of action and the statutes of

limitations . . . run separately for each.”)

     In this case, FEI claims each time the defendants paid Rider

constituted a new wrongful act which gave rise to a new injury to

FEI’s business, namely, a separate payment of fees to defend the

ESA Action.   The Court agrees.   According to the FAC, there was

no one permanent wrongful act, or one that produced all the

damages resulting to FEI.   Rather, FEI has alleged that over the

                                  74
course of several years, the defendants committed numerous

wrongful acts--mainly paying Rider every two weeks or every month

to continue to anchor the lawsuit and to testify falsely.

Defendants allege each wrongful act resulted in a separate injury

to FEI, namely, new legal bills.     Accordingly, the statute of

limitations does not bar FEI’s Virginia Conspiracy Act claim, at

least for the wrongful acts and injuries occurring within five

years before the filing of the Complaint, as to the original

defendants, or the FAC, as to the newly added defendants.23

     2.   Count IV:   Abuse of Process

     Abuse of process “lies where the legal system has been used

to accomplish some end which is without the regular purview of

the process, or which compels the party against whom it is used

     23
        The cases defendants cite are not to the contrary. In
the three principal cases cited by defendants, the damages all
arose from one unlawful act. The courts held that the statute of
limitations began to run from the time any injury was sustained
as a result of the unlawful act, even if the damages reverberated
from that one act for more than five years. See, e.g., Int’l
Surplus Lines Ins. Co. v. Marsh & McLennan Inc., 838 F.2d 124
(4th Cir. 1988) (plaintiff alleged defendant withheld information
material to its decision on the amount of insurance to purchase;
statute of limitations began to run when another entity first
made demand under that insurance policy), Eshbaugh v. Amoco Oil
Co., 360 S.E.2d 350 (Va. 1987) (conspiracy to injure plaintiff in
his business by removing him from the premises; statute of
limitations accrued when defendants fraudulently induced
plaintiff to cancel his lease, not the day plaintiff actually
vacated the premises); Stone v. Ethan Allen, Inc., 350 S.E.2d 629
(Va. 1986) (plaintiff alleged refrigerator was defective when
delivered, several years later, it caught fire, damaging their
home, court found statute of limitations for negligence accrued
the date of the fire, not the date it was delivered).

                                75
to do some collateral thing which he could not legally and

regularly be paid to do.”    Bown v. Hamilton, 601 A.2d 1074, 1079

(D.C. 1992) (quoting Morowitz v. Marvel, 426 A.2d 196, 198 (D.C.

1980)).    “There are two essential elements to an abuse of process

claim: ‘(1) the existence of an ulterior motive; and (2) an act

in the use of process other than such as would be proper in the

regular prosecution of the charge.’”    Houlahan v. World Wide

Ass’n of Specialty Programs & Schs., 677 F. Supp. 2d 195, 199

(quoting Hall v. Hollywood Credit Clothing Co., 147 A.2d 866, 868

(D.C. 1959)).   “Thus, in addition to ulterior motive, one must

also allege and prove that there has been a perversion of the

judicial process and achievement of some end not contemplated in

the regular prosecution of the charge.”    Hickey v. Scott, 738 F.

Supp. 2d 55, 71 (D.D.C. 2010)(quotation omitted).

     FEI alleges that the defendants had several ulterior motives

in prosecuting the ESA Action, including “to raise money for

their organizations . . . to publicize their cause and pursue

their legislative agendas . . . to drain FEI’s resources . . .

[and] to attempt to extort FEI into taking elephants out of its

circus.”   Opp’n at 84-85.   FEI also alleges a multitude of acts

in the litigation process which were improper and wholly outside

the “regular” prosecution of a civil action: namely, defendants

filed a lawsuit based on a knowingly fraudulent claim of

standing, and bribed their primary plaintiff to participate in

                                 76
the lawsuit and to testify falsely about his standing in order to

maintain the lawsuit.         Id.   And FEI has alleged that the

defendants used discovery in the ESA Case to achieve an end not

contemplated in the regular prosecution of the charge, namely, to

pursue their legislative attempts to ban the use of elephants in

circuses.    Id.    Taken together, these allegations are sufficient

to survive a motion to dismiss.         Accordingly, defendants’ motion

to dismiss the abuse of process claim is DENIED.

            3.     Count V:    Malicious Prosecution

     To succeed on a malicious prosecution claim under District

of Columbia law, a plaintiff “must plead and prove four things:

(1) the underlying suit terminated in plaintiff’s favor; (2)

malice on the part of defendant; (3) lack of probable cause for

the underlying suit; and (4) special injury occasioned by

plaintiff as the result of the original action.”          Morowitz v.

Marvel, 423 A.2d 196, 198 (D.C. 1980) (citations omitted).         In

the District of Columbia, “a termination is favorable only where

‘it tends to indicate the innocence of the accused.’”          Lucas v.

Dist. of Columbia, 505 F. Supp. 2d 122, 127 (D.D.C. 2007) (citing

Brown v. Carr, 503 A.2d 1241, 1245 (D.C. 1986)).

     It is apparent “favorable” termination does not occur merely
     because a party . . . has prevailed in an underlying action.
     While the fact he has prevailed is an ingredient of a
     favorable termination, such termination must further reflect
     on his innocence of the alleged wrongful conduct. If the
     termination does not relate to the merits–-reflecting on
     neither innocence of nor responsibility for the alleged

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        misconduct–-the termination is not favorable in the sense it
        would support a subsequent action for malicious prosecution.

Brown, 503 A.2d at 1245 n.2 (quoting Lackner v. LaCroix, 602 P.2d
393, 395 (Cal. 1979), and adopting the standard under California

law).        Courts have consistently dismissed malicious prosecution

claims when the prior suit was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction

or standing, as opposed to on the merits of the plaintiff’s

claims.        See Fish v. Watkins, 298 Fed. App’x 594, 597 (9th Cir.

2008); Hudis v. Crawford, 125 Cal. App. 4th 1586 (Cal. App. 4th

1586 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 2005); Parrish v. Marquis, 172 S.W.3d
526 (Tenn. 2005); Bearden v. Bellsouth Telecomm., Inc., 29 So. 3d
761 (Miss. 2010); see also Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 500

(1975) (“[Article III] standing in no way depends on the merits

of the plaintiff’s contention that particular conduct is

illegal.”).24

        By contrast, District of Columbia courts have found that

abandonment of an action, or voluntary dismissal for lack of

prosecution, can constitute a termination in plaintiff’s favor

for the purposes of malicious prosecution.        Lucas, 505 F. Supp.
2d at 127 (when underlying case was dismissed for lack of

        24
        The case cited by FEI is inapplicable in this
jurisdiction. In Levy v. Ohl, the court applied Missouri law,
which states that for the purposes of malicious prosecution,
“[t]ermination is effected by . . . a dismissal by the court with
prejudice[.]” 477 F.3d 988, 992 (8th Cir. 2006). As explained
above, this is not the standard for favorable termination in the
District of Columbia.

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prosecution, it may reflect on innocence of defendant); Brown,
503 A.2d at 1245 (“dismissal for failure to prosecute has ben

held to be a favorable termination where the facts of the case

indicate that such a disposition reflects on the innocence of the

defendant in the underlying suit.”) (citations omitted).

     The ESA Action implicates both standing and abandonment of

claims/lack of prosecution.   With respect to Tom Rider and API,

the Court dismissed the ESA case based on lack of standing and

did not reach the merits, namely, whether FEI’s treatment of

elephants violated the “take” provision of the ESA.    The Court

explicitly acknowledged that it was not reaching the merits of

the case:

     Based on the [Court’s] findings of fact and conclusions of
     law, the Court concludes that plaintiffs have failed to
     prove the standing required by Article III . . . . This
     Court therefore lacks jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ claims.
     Because the Court concludes that plaintiffs lack standing,
     the Court does not--and indeed cannot--reach the merits of
     plaintiffs’ allegations that FEI “takes” its elephants in
     violation of Section 9 of the ESA.

ASPCA v. Feld Entm’t, 677 F. Supp. 2d at 66.     Because the

termination of the ESA Action as to Rider and API did not reflect

on the merits of the underlying litigation, it was not favorable

in the legal sense required to support an allegation for

malicious prosecution.   Brown, 503 A.2d 1246.    Accordingly, the

Court will GRANT the motion to dismiss Count V with respect to

Rider and API.

                                79
     However, the other ESA plaintiffs, namely ASPCA, AWI and

FFA, abandoned their claims for relief before the Court took the

case under advisement.    ASPCA v. Feld Entm’t, 677 F. Supp. 2d at

66, n.10 (“While the ASPCA, AWI, and FFA apparently wish to

remain named plaintiffs in the caption of this case, plaintiffs'

counsel confirmed during closing arguments that those

organizations are no longer advancing a standing argument or

seeking relief in this case”).   Accordingly, the Court treated

these former plaintiffs as non-parties in its findings of fact

and conclusions of law.

     At this stage of the litigation, these defendants have

provided no “facts of the case” arising from their decision to

abandon their claims “from which the Court could find that the

disposition did not reflect on the innocence” of FEI.    Lucas, 505
F. Supp. 2d at 127.   Accordingly, the Court will DENY the motion

to dismiss the malicious prosecution claims with respect to the

remaining defendants.25

     25
        Defendants also argue, in a footnote, that FEI cannot
plead the fourth element of malicious prosecution, namely, that
it suffered “special injury . . . as the result of the original
action.” Defs.’ Mem. 73, n.38. The Court rejects this argument
at this stage of the proceedings. While it is true that “loss of
income and substantial expense in defending have [] been held
outside the scope of the definition of special injury,” Joekel v.
Disabled Am. Veterans, 793 A.2d 1279, 1282 (D.C. 2002), District
of Columbia courts have also found that, in exceptional cases,
“some sort of balance had to be struck between the social
interest in preventing unconscionable suits and in permitting
honest assertion of supposed rights.” Id. (quoting Soffos v.
Eaton, 152 F.2d 682, 683 (D.C. Cir. 1945)). In such cases, where

                                 80
     4.   Count VI: Maintenance

     Maintenance means “the act of one improperly, and for the

purpose of stirring up litigation and strife, encouraging others

either to bring actions or to make defense which they have no

right to make, and the term seems to be confined to the

intermeddling in a suit of a stranger or of one not having any

privity or concern in the subject matter, or standing in no

relation of duty to the suitor.”       Golden Commissary Corp. v.

Shipley, 157 A.2d 810, 814 (D.C. 1960).      In other words,

“[m]aintenance is helping another prosecute a suit” in which the

helping party has no bona fide interest.      14 C.J.S. Champerty &

Maintenance § 2 (2012).   The laws against [] maintenance . . .

are aimed at the prevention of multitudinous and useless

lawsuits. . . . [I]n some jurisdictions, actions for maintenance

[] have been supplanted by actions for malicious prosecution and

abuse of process . . . .” Id. § 4, see also JPMorgan Chase Bank,

N.A. v. KB Home, 740 F. Supp. 2d 1192, 1204 (D. Nev.

2010)(maintenance is “the prosecution of doubtful claims by

strangers.”) (citation omitted).

multiple unconscionable suits were filed or where the
unconscionability of the lawsuit was particularly egregious, the
courts have found that the costs of defending the suit may
satisfy the special injury requirement. Id. at 1282-83. In this
action, FEI has alleged that it was forced to defend a litigation
which spanned nine years, was not only baseless, but fraudulent
from its outset, and was premised on bribery and other alleged
criminal activity. Accordingly, the Court cannot find that FEI
suffered no special injury at this point in the litigation.

                                  81
     FEI claims that the organizational plaintiffs in the ESA

Action, as well as WAP, engaged in maintenance by financing

Rider’s participation in the ESA Action.    The FAC claims that

“WAP was never a party to the ESA Action.   WAP was a stranger to

any dispute between Rider and FEI concerning any aesthetic injury

suffered by Rider as a result of how Rider handles its Asian

elephants.   Although ASPCA, AWI, FFA/HSUS and API were parties to

the ESA Action, they also were in fact strangers to any dispute

between Rider and FEI.”   FAC ¶¶ 335-36.   Defendants respond that

maintenance is no longer a viable cause of action in the District

of Columbia, and also that WAP and the animal rights

organizations had a bona fide interest in the litigation because

their mission is to protect animals.   Defs.’ Mem. 79.26

     26
        Defendants also argue that the claim is barred by the
District of Columbia’s three year statute of limitations. FEI
responds that the statute of limitations has not run because (1)
the tort of maintenance is a continuing tort, and therefore FEI
can recover for at least three years’ worth of damages before it
filed the original RICO complaint or FAC; and (2) the defendants
fraudulently concealed their conduct, thus tolling the statute of
limitations. The Court agrees that the maintenance claim is not
barred under the continuing tort doctrine, accordingly, the Court
need not reach FEI’s fraudulent concealment argument. Under
D.C.’s continuing tort doctrine, FEI is entitled to recover
damages “attributable to the part of the continuing tort that was
committed within the limitations period immediately preceding the
date on which suit was brought.” Jung v. Mundy, Holt & Mance,
P.C., 372 F.3d 429, 433 (D.C. Cir. 2004).   A tortiously
prosecuted lawsuit is a continuing tort under D.C. law. Id.
(“[A] lawsuit is a continuous, not an isolated event, because its
effects persist from the initial filing to the final
disposition;” injury flows from “cumulative costs of defense”).
Accordingly, the statute of limitations is not a bar to FEI
seeking damages on its maintenance claim for, at a minimum, three

                                82
     It is unclear to the Court whether the District of Columbia

still recognizes the tort of maintenance.    Golden Commissary, 157
A.2d at 814 n.2.   However, the defendants have not shown that the

cause of action has been abandoned here.    Moreover, at this stage

of the proceedings, the Court cannot accept defendants’

representation that the organizations’ sincere passion for the

subject matter of a lawsuit, without more, constitutes the type

of “interest” in Rider’s particular claims sufficient to overcome

an allegation of maintenance.    Accordingly, defendants’ motion to

dismiss Count VI is DENIED.

     5.   Count VII: Champerty

     Champerty lies where there is “a bargain to divide the

proceeds of litigation between the owner of the litigated claim

and the party supporting or enforcing the litigation.”     Design

for Bus. Interiors, Inc. v. Hersons’s, Inc., 659 F. Supp. 1103,

1107 (D.D.C. 1986) (quoting 14 W. Jaeger, Willison on Contracts §

1711 at 857 (3d ed. 1972)).   “[T]here are three essential

elements of common law champerty: (1) the attorney’s fee must

come from the recovery in a successful lawsuit; (2) the lawyer

must have no independent claim to the recovery fund; and (3) the

costs and expenses must be borne by the attorney with no

expectation of reimbursement from the client.”    Marshall v.

years preceding the filing of the FAC.

                                 83
Bickel, 445 A.2d 606, 609 (D.C. 1982) (citing Merlaud v. Nat’l

Metrop. Bank of Washington, D.C., 84 F.2d 238, 240 (D.C. 1936)).

       FEI claims that the arrangement between the attorneys of

record in the ESA case and Rider was champertous; the attorneys

allegedly “pursued his claim in the ESA case at their own expense

and at no expense to Rider.   Rider has never paid any attorneys

fees or costs to [the attorneys] with respect to their

representation of him in the ESA Action.   Upon information and

belief . . . Rider is not obligated to pay them back[.]” FAC ¶

347.

       The defendants raise three arguments in support of their

motion to dismiss the champerty claim.   First, they argue the

case was brought for injunctive, not monetary, relief; therefore,

there are no proceeds at stake in the litigation.   Defs.’ Mem.

77.    Second, they argue that champerty is solely a contract claim

in the District of Columbia; therefore, only parties to the

contract and third party beneficiaries have standing to sue to

challenge the terms of the retention agreement. Id.    Finally,

they argue the champerty claim is barred by the statute of

limitations.    Id. 78.

       The Court agrees with defendants that the champerty claim

must be dismissed.   First, as defendants point out, this was a

claim for injunctive, not monetary relief, therefore there are no

“proceeds” at stake to share and champerty does not lie.   FEI

                                 84
responds that Rider sought recovery of a statutory reward under

Section 11 of the ESA, therefore, he “expected to get money out

of the case.”   Opp’n at 86.   This fact is unavailing in the

context of the champerty claim; the FAC explicitly states that

the parties agreed among themselves that “if the ESA Action were

successful for the plaintiffs in that case, Rider would claim a

statutory reward under the ESA, and the attorneys would claim

[statutory] attorneys’ fees under the . . . ESA.”   FAC ¶ 348.

Therefore, the FAC does not allege that the parties agreed to

divide the proceeds of the claim between Rider and the attorneys.

And, contrary to FEI’s claim, the mere fact that the statute

under which the claim was brought allows for an award of

attorneys’ fees to the prevailing party does not convert the

claim into one for monetary relief.    See Kerner v. Cult Awareness

Network, 843 F. Supp. 748, 749, 751 (D.D.C. 1994) (finding no

champerty because the underlying action was for injunctive

relief, even though it was brought under a provision of the Civil

Rights Act of 1964 which allows for recovery of attorneys’

fees).27

     27
        FEI claims that the attorneys also stood to gain
financially because “any FEI elephant that plaintiffs could have
succeeded in having the Court in the ESA Action order forfeited
and transferred to [The Elephant Sanctuary, a client of MGC],
would have been beneficial to MGC and/or Meyer in their ongoing
attorney-client or other relationship with” The Elephant
Sanctuary. FAC ¶ 349. This claim in no way meets the elements
of champerty: The Elephant Sanctuary was not a plaintiff in the
litigation, and transfer of any elephants there would constitute,

                                 85
     Even if FEI could show that the lawyers planned to take their

fees from the “proceeds” of the ESA Action, which it has not, it has

not shown that it may bring a cause of action for the tort of

champerty in the District of Columbia.       FEI has identified no

authority indicating that the District recognizes champerty as a

cause of action in tort, and the Court is aware of none.      To the

contrary, courts applying District of Columbia law in champerty

claims have identified it solely as a defense to a contract claim.28

FEI does not acknowledge any of this authority, citing instead two

decisions from other jurisdictions applying North Carolina and

again, solely injunctive relief.
     28
        See Marshall, 445 A.2d at 609 (denying attorney’s claim
to enforce agreement between him and his client; where agreement
is “unlawful and void for champerty . . . District of Columbia
courts will not enforce it, and the attorney will be denied even
quantum meruit recovery.”)(citing Merlaud, 84 F.2d at 240;
Willison on Contracts §§ 1711-12 (3d ed. 1972)); Design for Bus.
Interiors, 659 F.2d at 1107-08 (denying plaintiff’s claim for
breach of contract, finding champerty in the District comes from
the common law of contracts and champertous contracts will not be
enforced); Columbia Hosp. for Women Med. Ctr. v. NCRIC, Inc., 481
B.R. 648, 677-78 n.22 (Bankr. D.C. 2011) (explaining champerty
doctrine, and its history in the District of Columbia as a “valid
defense” to a contract claim under D.C. law); Johnson v. Van
Wyck, at 4 Ohio App. DC. 294, 316-20 (D.C. 1894) (affirming trial
court’s judgment against plaintiff trustee in action to eject
landowner from property, also affirming court’s exclusion from
evidence as champertous a contract under which trustee claimed
title to property; the champerty doctrine is one of contract, and
when a contract is champertous it will not be enforced); cf.
Golden Commissary Corp. v. Shipley, 157 A.2d 810, 814 (D.C. 1960)
(stating that “the common law action for [] champerty, in some
modified form, probably exists in this jurisdiction,” but citing
only to cases in which champerty was asserted as a defense, and
not discussing champerty in remainder of opinion).

                                 86
Nevada    law,    both   of    which   explicitly     recognize   the   tort   of

champerty.       High Voltage Beverages LLC v. Coca-Cola Co., No. 08-

367, 2010 U.S. Dist. Lexis 63308, *8-*9 n.3 (W.D.N.C. June 8, 2010),

Del Webb Communities, Inc. v. Partington, No. 08-571, 2009 U.S.

Dist. Lexis 85616, *14-*16 (D. Nev. Sept. 18, 2009).              FEI offers no

reason why this court should ignore District of Columbia law, which

it concedes controls its common law claims, and apply Nevada or

North Carolina law in this action.

      For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that FEI has not met

its burden to plead a plausible claim for relief in its champerty

claim, and therefore will GRANT defendants’ motion to dismiss the

champerty claim.

IV.   CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motions to dismiss

Counts I and II and V are GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART;

defendants’ motion to dismiss Counts III, IV, and VI is DENIED,

defendants’ motion to dismiss Count VII is GRANTED.                 Defendants

Lovvorn    &     Ockene’s     Motion   to    Strike   Plaintiff’s   Notice     of

Supplemental Filing is DENIED.              Defendants shall respond to the

First Amended Complaint by no later than August 9, 2012. A separate

Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.

Signed:      Emmet G. Sullivan
             United States District Judge
             July 9, 2012

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