Fairstein v. Netflix, Inc. et al
Filing
97
OPINION AND ORDER: re: #94 LETTER MOTION for Oral Argument. addressed to Judge P. Kevin Castel from Natalie Spears dated February 19, 2021. filed by Netflix Inc., Ava DuVernay, Attica Locke, #86 MOTION to Dismiss Defendants' Notice of Motion and Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim filed by Netflix Inc., Ava DuVernay, Attica Locke. Defendants' motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part. Specifically, the motion is denied as to the scenes described in paragraphs 77-85 (the creation of a timeline), 118-21 (the withholding of DNA evidence), 104-07 (the instructions to interrogate), 128 (Ryan's assertion that Fairstein "coerced" the Five into confessing), and 97-103 (the instructions to canvass Harlem). The motion to dismiss Fairstein's claim of civil conspiracy is also denied. (Compl't Paragraphs 375-82.) The motion is granted as to the scenes described in paragraphs 51-56 (the Central Park sequence), 59-61 (the drafting of the press release), 87-93 (Fairstein's bureaucratic infighting with Ryan), 108-15, 122 (debates between Lederer and Fairstein about the strength of evidence), 127-28 (statements in Fairstein's final meeting with Ryan that do not relate to "coerced" confessions), 64-66 (questioning about Antron McCray), and 94-96 (the reference to attackers as "animals"). The Clerk is directed to terminate the motion and the related letter-motion. (Docket # 86, 94.) SO ORDERED. (Signed by Judge P. Kevin Castel on 8/09/2021) (ama)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
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LINDA FAIRSTEIN,
Plaintiff,
-against-
20-cv-8042 (PKC)
OPINION
AND ORDER
NETFLIX, INC., AVA DUVERNAY and
ATTICA LOCKE,
Defendants.
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CASTEL, U.S.D.J.
On the night of April 19, 1989, a young woman was viciously beaten and raped in
Central Park. Five young men of color (the “Five”), ranging in age from 14 to 16, were arrested,
tried and convicted for the attack. They were exonerated in 2002, after the confession of a man
whose DNA matched a sample found near the victim. The case, which is known among the
press and public as the “Central Park Jogger” or “Central Park Five” case, drew intense public
interest in the immediate aftermath of the attack and remains the subject of scrutiny and debate.
Plaintiff Linda Fairstein was chief of the Sex Crimes Prosecutions Unit in the
District Attorney’s office of New York County during the investigation and prosecution of the
Five. According to her Complaint, Fairstein had supervisory authority over the case but was not
one of the prosecution’s trial attorneys. After a successful and high-profile legal career, Fairstein
remained in the public eye as a prolific mystery writer and public speaker. In the years following
the exoneration of the Five, Fairstein made public statements that defended the work of police
and prosecutors on the case, and she has publicly argued that the Five were hastily exonerated.
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In May 2019, the popular streaming service owned by defendant Netflix, Inc.
(“Netflix”) released a four-part dramatization of the arrest and prosecution of the Five, called
“When They See Us.” Produced by Oprah Winfrey, the limited series features high production
values that have become standard in subscription television, including a cast of famous actors, a
soundtrack of popular music, and atmospheric, hallucinatory sequences intended to reflect the
characters’ psychological states. “When They See Us” is also openly sympathetic to the Five. In
early scenes, it depicts the Five as typical teenagers negotiating the challenges of school, family
and social life before they are incorrectly and unjustly suspected of rape. The series then follows
the Five through trial and incarceration, and their later struggles as young adults adjusting to
post-release life. Throughout, “When They See Us” depicts the Five as innocent young men
who are harmed by an unjust prosecution and an unsympathetic and often brutal system bent on
incarcerating the Five.
Fairstein is portrayed as a central villain of “When They See Us.” As depicted in
the series, she quickly concludes that the Five are responsible for the attack, and is thereafter
portrayed as a zealous, win-at-all-costs prosecutor. In one sequence, she intentionally delays the
production of critical DNA evidence to defendants until the eve of trial, and in others, she
instructs members of the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”) to engage in harsh
investigative techniques. The series portrays her as the architect of various theories of the Five’s
guilt, and through the concluding scenes of the series, she remains persuaded of their
involvement in the face of countervailing evidence. Fairstein alleges that nearly every scene
depicting her is a fabrication that presents her in a false and defamatory light.
The Complaint brings claims of defamation against Netflix, series director and
producer Ava Duvernay, and series writer and producer Attica Locke. All defendants move to
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dismiss the Complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Fed. R. Civ. P., urging that it has not plausibly
alleged that the depictions of Fairstein are defamatory under New York law.
In deciding the motion to dismiss, the Court is limited to the factual allegations of
the Complaint, materials that are attached by the Complaint or integral thereto, and matters of
which the Court may take judicial notice. As defendants acknowledge, the issue of actual malice
is more appropriately weighed at a later stage of the proceedings. See, e.g., New York Times v.
Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270 (1964) (noting “the principle that debate on public issues should be
uninhibited, robust, and wide-open, and that it may well include vehement, caustic and
sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials.”). Similarly, on the
present motion, defendants are not permitted to offer evidence (except the limited materials that
may be considered on a motion to dismiss) to dispute Fairstein’s factual assertions that she
played only a limited role in the NYPD’s investigation. The arguments raised in defendants’
motion are therefore narrow and directed to whether Fairstein’s Complaint has plausibly alleged
a defamatory meaning to eleven scenes of “When They See Us.”
For the reasons that will be explained, defendants’ motion will be granted in part
and denied in part. Certain scenes alleged to be defamatory merely show routine and prosaic
activities that lack a plausible defamatory meaning. In other scenes, the depictions of Fairstein
are privileged against a claim of defamation because they convey the subjective opinions of
defendants and could not be understood by the average viewer to be a literal recounting of her
words and actions.
Fairstein has plausibly alleged a claim of defamation as to five scenes. These
scenes depict Fairstein as orchestrating acts of misconduct, including the withholding of
evidence, the existence of “tapes” showing that she “coerced” confessions from the Five, an
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instruction not to use “kid gloves” when questioning suspects, and directing a racially
discriminatory police roundup of young men in Harlem. The average viewer could conclude that
these scenes have a basis in fact and do not merely reflect the creators’ opinions about
controversial historical events. Separately, the Court concludes that defendants have not
demonstrated the substantial truth of a scene depicting Fairstein’s creation of an attack timeline
because they rely on public remarks that are inconsistent with her depiction in the scene.
BACKGROUND.
A. Overview of the Underlying Events Relating to the Five.
On the night of April 19, 1989, a jogger, Patricia or “Trisha” Meili, was beaten
and raped in Central Park. (Compl’t ¶ 37.) Five young men of color, ranging in age from 14 to
16, were arrested, charged, tried and convicted for their purported roles in the attack: Korey
Wise, Raymond Santana, Kevin Richardson, Yusef Salaam and Antron McCray. (Compl’t ¶¶ 4,
38.)
Fairstein was employed in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office from 1972 to
2002, and she was chief of its Sex Crimes Prosecution Unit during the events depicted in “When
They See Us.” (Compl’t ¶¶ 32, 39.) Along with District Attorney Robert Morgenthau and Trial
Division Chief John Fried, Fairstein was one of the decisionmakers who assigned Assistant
District Attorney Elizabeth Lederer to the case. (Compl’t ¶ 39.)
According to Fairstein, during the prosecution of the Five, she functioned as a
liaison to Morgenthau and gave technical assistance to Lederer. (Compl’t ¶¶ 39-40.) Fairstein
asserts that she was neither the lead prosecutor nor a courtroom litigator in the proceedings.
(Compl’t ¶¶ 39-40.) According to Fairstein, Lederer was responsible for the prosecution and
Fairstein acted principally as a technical adviser to Lederer and a liaison to Morgenthau.
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(Compl’t ¶ 39.) Fairstein also was a witness in suppression hearings and trial proceedings of the
Five. (Compl’t ¶ 39.)
In 2002, after the trial and conviction of the Five, a man named Matias Reyes
confessed to raping and attacking Meili. (Compl’t ¶ 41.) Testing showed that Reyes’s DNA
matched samples taken from Meili and her belongings. (Compl’t ¶ 41.) The convictions of the
Five were vacated on the basis of this newly discovered evidence. (Compl’t ¶ 41.)
The Five subsequently brought civil claims against the City and individual
defendants, including Fairstein. (Compl’t ¶ 42.) According to the Complaint, during the
pendency of this litigation, several books and films were published about the case, “some of
which falsely portrayed Ms. Fairstein as prosecuting The Five.” (Compl’t ¶ 42.) Fairstein states
that, at the direction of a federal district judge, she “was unable to comment on the case or
respond to any such false portrayals.” (Compl’t ¶ 42.) The Five’s civil claims settled for $41
million in 2014. (Compl’t ¶ 43.) When the settlement was announced, the Manhattan District
Attorney and the Corporation Counsel for the City publicly stated that the prosecutors acted
reasonably and did not engage in acts of wrongdoing. (Compl’t ¶ 43.)
B. Overview of “When They See Us” and Its Depiction of Fairstein.
On May 31, 2019, Netflix released “When They See Us” on its popular streaming
service. (Compl’t ¶ 1.) It was written, directed and produced by defendant Ava DuVernay and
co-written and produced by defendant Attica Locke. (Compl’t ¶¶ 2-3.) “When They See Us”
consists of four episodes of approximately 60 to 90 minutes in length. (Compl’t ¶ 44.) Fairstein
features prominently in Episode 1 and makes brief but memorable appearances in Episodes 2 and
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4. 1 The Complaint asserts that as to Fairstein, “[n]early every portrayal is false and defamatory.”
(Compl’t ¶ 44.)
The series primarily centers on the individual experiences of each of the Five,
beginning with their everyday lives as adolescents prior to the events of April 19, 1989, and then
following them through their arrest, trial, incarceration and exoneration. In the first two
episodes, the Five are shown as young teenagers, and in the final two episodes they are shown as
young adults. Episodes 3 and 4 depict their struggles adjusting to post-prison life and their
eventual exoneration following the confession of Reyes.
Fairstein is played by the Oscar-nominated actress Felicity Huffman, and the cast
includes several other well-known actors, such as Vera Farmiga, John Leguizamo and Michael
K. Williams. The series prominently features popular music and an orchestral score. Certain
scenes are highly stylized, including the intense depiction of a character’s hallucinations during
his incarceration. The average viewer would not perceive “When They See Us” as a
documentary, and would instead understand it as a dramatization drawn from historical events.
In comparison to the Five, Fairstein’s screen-time is limited, but she plays a
critical role in the series. She appears principally in Episode 1, where she is depicted as an
aggressive and capable prosecutor who is quickly convinced that the Five are responsible for the
attack on Meili. The visual style and pacing of Episode 1 would be familiar to viewers of
scripted, prime-time programs that purport to show the work of New York’s police and
prosecutors. The episode depicts Fairstein as the principal architect of the Five’s investigation
and prosecution. She instructs members of the NYPD on their investigation tactics, develops a
As will be discussed below, the Court will treat the episodes of “When They See Us” as a matter incorporated by
reference into the Complaint, and will consider them in connection with this Rule 12(b)(6) motion without
converting the motion into one for summary judgment.
1
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timeline for the attack on Meili, and urges on the prosecution of the Five, despite evidence that
the series depicts as highly ambiguous and even incompatible with their guilt.
Fairstein appears only briefly in Episodes 2 and 4, but her scenes are memorable.
In Episode 2, Fairstein and Lederer discuss DNA found through a semen sample on the crime
scene, and Fairstein suggests that the existence of this evidence and tests conducted on the eve of
trial will “surprise” defendants. Fairstein also appears late in Episode 4, in one of the series’
final scenes, where she maintains that the Five were appropriately tried and convicted, in spite of
their exoneration.
The following disclaimer appears in the closing credits of each episode:
While the motion picture is inspired by actual events and persons,
certain characters, incidents, locations, dialogue and names are
fictionalized for the purposes of dramatization. As to any such
fictionalization, any similarity to the name or to the actual character
or history of any person, living or dead, or actual incident is entirely
for dramatic purposes and not intended to reflect on any actual
character or history.
(Compl’t ¶ 228.) The Complaint notes that the disclaimer is inconspicuous and appears in a
small font late in the credit rolls. (Compl’t ¶¶ 225-29.)
Broadly summarized, Fairstein alleges that the series falsely portrays her
participation in the prosecution of the Five, and depicts her uttering comments that are “racist
and unethical.” (Compl’t ¶ 45.) She alleges that the series falsely shows her using
“inflammatory language” by “referring to young men of color as ‘thugs,’ ‘animals’ and
‘bastards,’” terms that she states she never used. (Compl’t ¶ 45.) She also alleges that the series
falsely shows her “as the singular mastermind behind a racist plot to obtain convictions of The
Five at any cost.” (Compl’t ¶ 46.)
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The Complaint identifies individual scenes that purportedly show Fairstein in a
false and defamatory light. (Compl’t ¶¶ 51-130.) The Court will discuss each of these scenes in
detail, but, as examples, Fairstein alleges that the series falsely depicts her as encouraging
coercive and unconstitutional investigative techniques and shows her “as singularly responsible
for jailing innocent young men of color” after devising the prosecution’s theory of the case.
(Compl’t ¶¶ 46, 126.) Fairstein asserts that, in truth, the NYPD was responsible for investigating
the Five and that she played no significant role in developing a theory of the case.
Fairstein alleges that she attempted to warn defendants to avoid inaccuracies in
her portrayal, but that her suggestions were ignored. (Compl’t ¶¶ 131-51.)
C. Defendants’ Statements about the Contents of “When They See Us.”
Fairstein asserts that defendants marketed and promoted “When They See Us” as
a fact-based version of the events surrounding the Five. (Compl’t ¶¶ 165-231.) Netflix social
media posts and advertising trailers described “When They See Us” as “[t]he truth you haven’t
heard” and “based on the true story of the Central Park Five.” (Compl’t ¶¶ 166-67.) The
Complaint quotes multiple statements made by DuVernay on social media, in interviews and in
public appearances that characterized “When They See Us” as fact-based, referring to it as “the
real story of The Central Park 5” and “100% real.” (Compl’t ¶¶ 171-86.) The Complaint also
quotes from public statements that DuVernay specifically made about Fairstein, including a
remark in an interview with Oprah Winfrey where she stated, “And so the goal of this – okay,
Linda Fairstein, okay Elizabeth Lederer, okay, all of these people on this particular case we need
to be held accountable.” (Compl’t ¶ 182.)
Locke made similar public statements, such as, “[a] piece of American History
gets rewritten with the truth,” and “You can’t argue with facts.” (Compl’t ¶¶ 187, 192.) Locke
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also made sharply critical statements about Fairstein, including, “I am generally someone who
always tries to find the humanity in people, to understand the psychology behind what makes
even people I hate act the way they do. But fuck it: Linda Fairstein is trash, was trash, will
always be trash.” (Compl’t ¶ 194.) In response to an op-ed piece written by Fairstein, Locke
tweeted, “This morning she showed us exactly why she deserves all the rage and hate and
consequences that are coming her way. She is an unrepentant liar. Fuck her.” (Compl’t ¶ 195.)
Prior to the release of “When They See Us,” Locke also successfully campaigned for the
Mystery Writers of America to withdraw an award it planned to give Fairstein. (Compl’t ¶¶ 15264.)
D. Fairstein’s Damages Allegations.
The Complaint asserts that following the release of “When They See Us,”
Fairstein has been publicly vilified, resulting in damage to her reputation and forcing her
resignation from non-profit organizations. (Compl’t ¶¶ 232-57.) The Complaint points to the
hashtag “#CancelLindaFairstein” that came into use on Twitter, and it quotes negative, often
profane tweets that were posted with that hashtag. (Compl’t ¶ 237.) Following release of the
series, petitions circulated online, demanding Fairstein’s removal from various board, the
cancellation of her publishing contracts and a halt to the retail sales of her books. (Compl’t ¶¶
240-43.) After the release of “When They See Us,” Fairstein’s publishers terminated her
publishing agreement and her literary agents dropped her as a client. (Compl’t ¶¶ 244-46.) At
the suggestion of campus administrators, Fairstein resigned from the Board of Trustees for
Vassar College, and she also resigned from the boards of three non-profit organizations.
(Compl’t ¶¶ 250-54.) The editor-in-chief of Glamour magazine also published a statement
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expressing regret that the magazine named Fairstein its Woman of the Year in 1993. (Compl’t ¶
255.)
E. Overview of the Complaint.
The Complaint consists of 382 paragraphs, plus 221 footnotes that cite to public
records, social media posts, news reports and a variety of websites. It brings seven causes of
action. For each defendant, the Complaint brings separate claims of defamation per se and
defamation per quod. (Compl’t ¶¶ 258-374.) Count VII of the Complaint is brought against all
defendants and alleges that they engaged in a conspiracy to defame Fairstein. (Compl’t ¶¶ 37582.)
In addition to seeking money damages, the Complaint seeks sweeping injunctive
relief, including defendants’ removal of certain social media posts, an order restraining
defendants from making future public statements that attribute the prosecution of the Five to
Fairstein, an order directing that defendants make a public statement that they had a “desire to
create a fictional villain, in Ms. Fairstein, for the public to hate, that never existed in reality,” and
the removal and/or re-editing of portions of “When They See Us.” (Compl’t at pp. 110-18.)
RULE 12(b)(6) STANDARD.
Rule 12(b)(6) requires a complaint to “contain sufficient factual matter, accepted
as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662,
678 (2009) (quoting Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007)). In assessing
the sufficiency of a pleading, a court must disregard legal conclusions, which are not entitled to
the presumption of truth. Id. Instead, the Court must examine the well-pleaded factual
allegations and “determine whether they plausibly give rise to an entitlement to relief.” Id. at
679. “Dismissal is appropriate when ‘it is clear from the face of the complaint, and matters of
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which the court may take judicial notice, that the plaintiff’s claims are barred as a matter of
law.’” Parkcentral Global Hub Ltd. v. Porsche Auto. Holdings SE, 763 F.3d 198, 208-09 (2d
Cir. 2014) (quoting Conopco, Inc. v. Roll Int’l, 231 F.3d 82, 86 (2d Cir. 2000)).
“A motion brought under Rule 12(b)(6) challenges only the ‘legal feasibility’ of a
complaint. The test of a claim’s ‘substantive merits’ is ‘reserved for the summary judgment
procedure, governed by [Rule] 56, where both parties may conduct appropriate discovery and
submit the additional supporting material contemplated by that rule.’” Goel v. Bunge, Ltd., 820
F.3d 554, 558-59 (2d Cir. 2016) (quoting Global Network Commc’ns, Inc. v. City of New York,
458 F.3d 150, 155 (2d Cir. 2006)). A court reviewing a motion to dismiss “take[s] no account of
[the complaint’s] basis in evidence” and “may review only a narrow universe of materials.” Id.
at 559. Such materials include documents incorporated in the complaint, matters of which
judicial notice may be taken, and documents that are “integral” to the complaint, even if they are
not expressly incorporated. Id.
The Complaint extensively references the contents of “When They See Us,”
including quotations of dialogue and descriptions of scenes, accompanied with timestamps of the
relevant sequences. As part of their motion papers, defendants have submitted an electronic
copy of “When They See Us.” (Docket # 87-A.) In her opposition memo, Fairstein states that
“[t]he Series is an integral part of the Complaint and may be considered by the Court,” and
“respectfully requests that the Court view the Series when evaluating Defendants’ Motion.”
(Opp. Mem. at 1 n.2.) Because the episodes of “When They See Us” are integral to the
Complaint and the parties agree that they are properly considered in connection with the motion,
the Court may rely on the episodes without converting the motion to dismiss into a motion for
summary judgment. See, e.g., Tannerite Sports, LLC v. NBCUniversal News Grp., a division of
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NBCUniversal Media, LLC, 864 F.3d 236, 247 (2d Cir. 2017) (considering a news
organization’s video report in the adjudication of a motion to dismiss a defamation claim);
Stepanian v. City of New York, 2015 WL 5350801, at *3 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 14, 2015) (“Since the
video is incorporated into the complaint, I am allowed to consider it on a motion to dismiss.”)
(Gleeson, J.).
The parties have also submitted a large number of exhibits in connection with this
motion. Defendants’ motion cites to materials that they urge should be subject to judicial notice,
and they have submitted an appendix containing nineteen exhibits. (Docket # 88.) In opposition
to the motion, Fairstein has submitted an appendix containing 78 exhibits. (Docket # 90.) A
court “must take judicial notice if a party requests it and the court is supplied with the necessary
information.” Rule 201(c)(2), Fed. R. Evid. “The court may judicially notice a fact that is not
subject to reasonable dispute because it . . . can be accurately and readily determined from
sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” Rule 201(b)(2). As will be discussed
below, the Court takes judicial notice of public remarks that Fairstein made to the Public Safety
Committee of the New York City Council on January 30, 2003. (Docket # 88-1.) An official’s
statements to a governmental body “are precisely the sort of materials of which [courts] may take
judicial notice.” ACLU v. Nat’l Sec. Agency, 925 F.3d 576, 599 n. 126 (2d Cir. 2019); see also
Schubert v. City of Rye, 775 F. Supp. 2d 689, 695 n.3 (S.D.N.Y. 2011) (“[T]he minutes and
recordings of the City Council meetings are matters of public record and therefore are the types
of materials of which a court may take judicial notice.”) (Karas, J.).
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DISCUSSION.
I.
The Law of Defamation in New York.
A. Whether a Statement Is Capable of Defamatory Meaning Is an Issue of
Law for the Court.
The Complaint alleges that eleven scenes in “When They See Us” depict Fairstein
in a false and defamatory light. (Compl’t ¶¶ 49-130.) Defendants urge that the Complaint does
not plausibly allege that the scenes are defamatory and that Fairstein’s claims can therefore be
dismissed as a matter of law. The parties do not dispute that New York law governs plaintiff’s
claims. (See, e.g., 11/16/20 Tr. at 5-6.)
“Allegations of defamation present, in the first instance, an issue of law for
judicial determination.” Dillon v. City of New York, 261 A.D.2d 34, 39 (1st Dep’t 1999).
Defamation “is defined as the making of a false statement which tends to ‘expose the plaintiff to
public contempt, ridicule, aversion or disgrace, or induce an evil opinion of him in the minds of
right-thinking persons, and to deprive him of their friendly intercourse in society.’” Foster v.
Churchill, 87 N.Y.2d 744, 751 (1996) (quoting Rinaldi v. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 42 N.Y.2d
369, 379 (1977)). “‘The elements are a false statement, published without privilege or
authorization to a third party, constituting fault as judged by, at a minimum, a negligence
standard, and it must either cause special harm or constitute defamation per se.’ A statement is
defamatory on its face when it suggests improper performance of one’s professional duties or
unprofessional conduct.” Frechtman v. Gutterman, 115 A.D.3d 102, 104 (1st Dep’t 2014)
(quoting Dillon, 261 A.D.2d at 38); see also Laguerre v. Maurice, 192 A.D.3d 44, 50 (2d Dep’t
2020) (“A statement is defamatory per se if it . . . tends to injure the plaintiff in her or his trade,
business, or profession . . . .”). “Not all (or even most) maligning remarks can be considered
defamatory. A statement is defamatory if it exposes an individual ‘to public hatred, shame,
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obloquy, contumely, odium, contempt, ridicule, aversion, ostracism, degradation or disgrace,
or . . . induce[s] an evil opinion of one in the minds of right-thinking persons, and . . . deprive[s]
one of their confidence and friendly intercourse in society.’” Chau v. Lewis, 771 F.3d 118, 127
(2d Cir. 2014) (quoting Kimmerle v. N.Y. Evening Journal, Inc., 262 N.Y. 99, 102 (1933)).
New York recognizes a defamation claim when a statement is not defamatory on
its face and instead alleges “an innuendo” that attaches “a defamatory meaning” to language
referencing a plaintiff. See, e.g., Cole Fischer Rogow, Inc. v. Carl Ally, Inc., 29 A.D.2d 423,
427 (1st Dep’t 1968). In a claim of defamation per quod, “no defamatory statement is present on
the face of the communication but a defamatory import arises through reference to facts extrinsic
to the communication.” Ava v. NYP Holdings, Inc., 64 A.D.3d 407, 412 (1st Dep’t 2009). “[A]
plaintiff would need to show that the challenged language was capable of communicating the
alleged defamatory idea when words were given meaning not ordinarily attributed to them or due
to external factors. . . . Whether the allegedly libelous language is capable of the libelous
meaning charged by innuendo is a matter of law for the courts to decide.” Idema v. Wager, 120
F. Supp. 2d 361, 368 (S.D.N.Y. 2000) (McMahon, J.). “The innuendo . . . may not enlarge upon
the meaning of words so as to convey a meaning that is not expressed.” Tracy v. Newsday, Inc.,
5 N.Y.2d 134, 136 (1959).
A plaintiff “must identify a plausible defamatory meaning of the challenged
statement or publication. If the statement is susceptible of only one meaning the court must
determine, as a matter of law, whether that one meaning is defamatory.” Celle v. Filipino Rep.
Enterprises Inc., 209 F.3d 163, 178 (2d Cir. 2000) (quotation marks omitted). “If the words are
reasonably susceptible of multiple meanings, some of which are not defamatory, it is then for the
trier of fact, not for the court acting on the issue solely as a matter of law, to determine in what
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sense the words were used and understood.” Id. (quotation marks omitted). In deciding whether
a statement is defamatory, courts “‘will not strain to interpret (allegedly defamatory works) ‘in
their mildest and most inoffensive sense to hold them nonlibelous,’” but they also “will not strain
to find a defamatory interpretation where none exists.” Cohn v. Nat’l Broadcasting Co., 50
N.Y.2d 885, 887 (1980) (quoting November v. Time Inc., 13 N.Y.2d 175, 178 (1963)).
In adjudicating this motion, the Court construes the words and actions attributed
to Fairstein in the context of the series as a whole, and weighs whether they are susceptible to a
defamatory interpretation from the perspective of the average viewer. Aronson v. Wiersma, 65
N.Y.2d 592, 593-94 (1985) (“The words must be construed in the context of the entire statement
or publication as a whole, tested against the understanding of the average reader, and if not
reasonably susceptible of a defamatory meaning, they are not actionable and cannot be made so
by a strained or artificial construction.”); Chau, 771 F.3d at 126 (“When deciding how to
construe allegedly defamatory words . . . courts must do so in the context of the publication as a
whole, not just the paragraph or chapter containing them, and do so ‘in the same way that the
reading public, acquainted with the parties and the subject would take [them].’”) (quoting
Sydney v. MacFadden Newspaper Publ’g Corp., 242 N.Y. 208, 214, (1926)).
The relevant context for Fairstein’s claims is a lengthy television drama starring
famous actors distributed to paying subscribers of a streaming service. As the Ninth Circuit once
observed by dictum: “Docudramas, as their names suggests, often rely heavily upon dramatic
interpretations of events and dialogue filled with rhetorical flourishes in order to capture and
maintain the interest of their audience. We believe that viewers in this case would be sufficiently
familiar with this genre to avoid assuming that all statements within them represent assertions of
verifiable facts. To the contrary, most of them are aware by now that parts of such programs are
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more fiction than fact.” Partington v. Bugliosi, 56 F.3d 1147, 1154-55 (9th Cir. 1995). The
Court in Partington added that the presenters of the docudrama “must attempt to avoid creating
the impression that they are asserting objective facts rather than merely stating subjective
opinions.” Id. at 1155.
Given the full content and context of the series at issue, the Court declines to
conclude that the average viewer would assume that “When They See Us” is “more fiction than
fact,” a proposition that the defendants do not advance. But it is reasonable to expect that the
average viewer of “When They See Us” would understand that dialogue in the dramatization is
not a verbatim recounting of the real-life participants and is intended to capture the essence of
their words and deeds.
B. The “Substantial Truth” Defense to Defamation.
Defendants urge that certain of Fairstein’s claims should be dismissed because the
events depicted are substantially true. “Because the falsity of the statement is an element of the
defamation claim, the statement’s truth or substantial truth is an absolute defense.” Stepanov v.
Dow Jones & Co., 120 A.D.3d 28, 34 (1st Dep’t 2014). “A statement is substantially true if the
statement would not have a different effect on the mind of the reader from that which the pleaded
truth would have produced.” Franklin v. Daily Holdings, Inc., 135 A.D.3d 87, 94 (1st Dep’t
2015) (quotation marks and alteration omitted); see also Guccione v. Hustler Mag., Inc., 800
F.2d 298, 302 (2d Cir. 1986) (“New York law recognizes that an alleged libel is not actionable if
the published statement could have produced no worse an effect on the mind of a reader than the
truth pertinent to the allegation.”). “Courts typically compare the complained of language with
the alleged truth to determine whether the truth would have a different effect on the mind of the
average reader.” Franklin, 135 A.D.3d at 94. If “the truth is so near to the facts as published that
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fine and shaded distinctions must be drawn and words pressed out of their ordinary usage to
sustain a charge of libel, no legal harm has been done.” Cafferty v. Southern Tier Publishing
Co., 226 N.Y. 87, 93 (1919).
The issue of whether a statement is substantially true may present an issue of law
properly decided on a motion to dismiss, provided that the Court limits its consideration to
materials appropriately considered on such a motion. See Tannerite Sports, 864 F.3d at 247
(“Because falsity is an element of New York’s defamation tort, and ‘falsity’ refers to material not
substantially true, the complaint in this case must plead facts that, if proven, would establish that
the defendant’s statements were not substantially true.”); Verragio, Ltd. v. AE Jewelers, Inc.,
2017 WL 4125368, at *6-8 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 23, 2017) (dismissing defamation claim on grounds
of substantial truth) (McMahon, J.).
C. Statements of Pure Opinion Are Privileged Against a Claim of
Defamation.
Defendants also urge that certain of Fairstein’s claims should be dismissed
because she challenges statements of pure opinion, which are privileged against claims of
defamation. Under New York law, a “defamatory statement of fact is in contrast to
‘pure opinion’ which under our laws is not actionable because expressions of opinion, as
opposed to assertions of fact, are deemed privileged and, no matter how offensive, cannot be the
subject of an action for defamation.” Davis v. Boeheim, 24 N.Y.3d 262, 269 (2014) (quotation
marks and alteration omitted). “A pure opinion may take one of two forms. It may be a
statement of opinion which is accompanied by a recitation of the facts upon which it is based, or
it may be an opinion not accompanied by such a factual recitation so long as it does not imply
that it is based upon undisclosed facts.” Id. Statements of “imaginative expression” or
“rhetorical hyperbole” are “entitled to constitutional protection as opinion . . . .” Daniel
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Goldreyer, Ltd. v. Van de Wetering, 217 A.D.2d 434, 434-35 (1st Dep’t 1995) (holding that trial
court should have dismissed as a matter of law a defamation claim directed to a statement in an
art review that “does not have a precise meaning, cannot be objectively characterized as true or
false, appears in an immediate context, the ‘Art’ section of defendant Time Magazine, where the
average person would understand it as, or expect to find, expression of opinion or personal taste,
and appears in a broader context of the public debate over the artistic merit of the restoration.”).
“While a pure opinion cannot be the subject of a defamation claim,
an opinion that implies that it is based upon facts which justify the opinion but are unknown to
those reading or hearing it, is a ‘mixed opinion’ and is actionable.” Davis, 24 N.Y.3d at 269.
(quotation marks and alterations omitted). “What differentiates an actionable mixed opinion
from a privileged, pure opinion is the implication that the speaker knows certain facts, unknown
to the audience, which support the speaker’s opinion and are detrimental to the person being
discussed.” Id. (quotation marks and alterations omitted). “‘The actionable element of a ‘mixed
opinion’ is not the false opinion itself – it is the implication that the speaker knows certain facts,
unknown to his audience, which support his opinion and are detrimental to the person about
whom he is speaking.’” Frechtman, 115 A.D.3d at 105-06 (quoting Steinhilber v. Alphonse, 68
N.Y.2d 283, 290 (1986)).
The distinction between fact and opinion is an issue of law for the courts, based
on the court’s assessment of how the statement would be understood by the average person
exposed to the statement in its full context. Id. New York courts weigh three factors to decide
whether the disputed statement is fact-based or non-actionable opinion:
“(1) whether the specific language in issue has a precise meaning
which is readily understood; (2) whether the statements are capable
of being proven true or false; and (3) whether either the full context
of the communication in which the statement appears or the broader
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social context and surrounding circumstances are such as to
signal . . . readers or listeners that what is being read or heard is
likely to be opinion, not fact.”
Id. at 270 (quoting Mann v. Abel, 10 N.Y.3d 271, 276 (2008)). The third factor “requires that
the court consider the content of the communication as a whole, its tone and apparent purpose.”
Id. Courts should not focus on statements in isolation and instead look to the overall context to
decide whether the average viewer would conclude that challenged statements conveyed facts
about a plaintiff. Id.
For example, the New York Court of Appeals heavily weighed the context of a
heated labor dispute in concluding that a recording of “invective expressed in the form of heavyhanded and nonsensical humor” should be understood as a statement of opinion, not fact.
Steinhilber, 68 N.Y.2d at 293; see also Brian v. Richardson, 87 N.Y.2d 46, 53 (1995) (“[T]he Op
Ed page is a forum traditionally reserved for the airing of ideas on matters of public concern.
Indeed, the common expectation is that the columns and articles published on a newspaper's Op
Ed sections will represent the viewpoints of their authors and, as such, contain considerable
hyperbole, speculation, diversified forms of expression and opinion.”). “[E]ven apparent
statements of fact may assume the character of statements of opinion, and thus be privileged,
when made in public debate, heated labor dispute, or other circumstances in which an audience
may anticipate [the use] of epithets, fiery rhetoric or hyperbole.” Steinhilber, 68 N.Y.2d at 294
(quotation marks omitted). “The essential task is to decide whether the words complained of,
considered in the context of the entire communication and of the circumstances in which they
were spoken or written, may be reasonably understood as implying the assertion of undisclosed
facts justifying the opinion.” Steinhilber, 68 N.Y.2d at 290.
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II.
Whether the Complaint Plausibly Alleges a Defamatory Meaning to
Certain Scenes.
A. The Complaint Does Not Plausibly Allege a Defamatory Meaning to
Routine or Inoffensive Workplace Activities.
1. Fairstein Does Not Plausibly Allege a Defamatory Meaning to Her
Depiction at the Central Park Crime Scene.
The Complaint alleges that Fairstein is falsely depicted in the portrayal of the
events of the early morning of April 20, 1989, where she arrives at the crime scene in the predawn aftermath of the attack on Meili. (Compl’t ¶¶ 51-56; Ep. 1, 7:30-8:50.) The scene appears
immediately after the series title card and is the first time Fairstein is shown. After asking
NYPD officers about Meili’s condition and whether members of the press are present, she
visually surveys the densely wooded area of the park where the victim was found, and states,
“What the fuck was she doing here?” and “Let’s make sure to get those drag marks. He dragged
her in, just like right there. Look, clear as day. His footsteps, her body. Fucking hell.”
(Compl’t ¶ 52; Ep. 1, 7:30-8:50.)
According to the Complaint, the scene falsely depicts Fairstein as leading the
Crime Scene Unit of the NYPD, and also falsely depicts her as concluding that only one
individual was involved in the Meili rape. (Compl’t ¶¶ 53-54.) Fairstein alleges that, in truth,
she was not at the crime scene on that date and that she did not direct police activity in the case.
(Compl’t ¶¶ 55-56.)
Viewing the scene in the context of the entire series and construing the allegations
in the light most favorable to Fairstein, the Complaint does not allege a defamatory meaning to
the scene. Fairstein’s presence on the crime scene, her confusion and concern as to how the
victim arrived at an isolated area of Central Park, and the implication that at this early point in
the investigation she considered the possibility of a single attacker could not plausibly expose
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Fairstein to public contempt, ridicule, or disgrace, or an induce an evil opinion of her. Foster, 87
N.Y.2d at 751. The scene orients the viewer to the circumstances of the attack and introduces
Fairstein’s character as an influential presence in the investigation. The average viewer would
not understand Fairstein’s reference to “his” footsteps as indicating a studied and firm conclusion
that a single individual was responsible for the attack. The remark is a passing observation about
the crime scene and only vaguely implies that one man apparently left “dragmarks.” The scene
does not negatively portray Fairstein, and the Complaint does not plausibly allege a basis to
conclude that the average viewer would attach a defamatory meaning to her depiction in this
scene.
Because the Complaint does not plausibly allege a defamatory meaning as to
Fairstein’s presence at the crime scene in Central Park, the defamation claims directed to this
scene will be dismissed. (Compl’t ¶¶ 51-56.)
2. Fairstein Does Not Plausibly Allege a Defamatory Meaning to Her
Role in Drafting a Press Release.
The Complaint alleges that the series falsely depicts Fairstein’s participation in
drafting a press release about the case. (Compl’t ¶¶ 59-61; Ep. 1, 8:50-9:19.) Shortly after the
Central Park sequence, Fairstein arrives to the 24th Precinct police station and begins to draft a
press release. (Compl’t ¶ 59; Ep. 1, 8:50-9:19.) She then says, “Got to get this statement out, a
few reporters out there.” (Id.)
According to the Complaint, Fairstein was not present at any precinct on the
morning of April 20, and instead learned about the attack after receiving a call from a police
lieutenant that morning. (Compl’t ¶ 57, 60.) The Complaint states that Fairstein never drafted a
press release about the case and that the district attorney’s office had a policy against lawyers
speaking to the press. (Compl’t ¶ 61.) It also states that the depiction of Fairstein’s involvement
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in drafting a press release “is significant because the press has been widely criticized as fueling
racial tensions” following the attack on Meili. (Compl’t ¶ 61.)
The Complaint does not plausibly allege a defamatory meaning to Fairstein’s
presence at the precinct station or her participation in drafting a press release. The contents of
the press release are not revealed and the release is mentioned in passing, with no larger
relevance to the series. An average viewer is unlikely to know the district attorney’s internal
policies about employee communications with the press, let alone that the series shows Fairstein
acting contrary to such a policy. An average viewer also would not interpret Fairstein’s remark
to “get this statement out” as an effort to incite the press or to stoke public anger. Accepting
Fairstein’s allegations that she was not present at the 24th Precinct and played no role in the
drafting of a press release, a depiction of her participation in such a banal, administrative activity
could not plausibly expose her to public contempt, ridicule, or disgrace, or an induce an evil
opinion of her. See Foster, 87 N.Y.2d at 751.
Because the Complaint does not plausibly allege a defamatory meaning as to
Fairstein’s involvement in the drafting of a press release, the Complaint will be dismissed to the
extent that it asserts defamation based on that scene. (Compl’t ¶¶ 59-61.)
3. The Scene Depicting Bureaucratic Infighting over the Case Does
Not Portray Fairstein in a Defamatory Light.
The Complaint alleges that the series falsely depicted an internal rivalry within
the Manhattan district attorney’s office as to whether the attack on Meili would be prosecuted by
Fairstein’s Sex Crimes Prosecution Unit or whether the matter would be assigned to Nancy
Ryan, a prosecutor who led the Homicide Division. (Compl’t ¶¶ 87-93; Ep. 1, 16:53-19:48.) As
depicted in the series, on the morning of April 20, 1989, a police officer tells Fairstein that Ryan
had been assigned to the case, and Fairstein responds, “This is a sex crime not a homicide.”
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(Compl’t ¶ 88; Ep. 1, 16:53-17:03.) Ryan then arrives at the 24th Precinct, where she and
Fairstein call District Attorney Robert Morgenthau. (Compl’t ¶ 90; Ep. 1, 17:03-18:41.) In the
call, Ryan states that the homicide department had been handling the case and had been on the
scene before dawn, to which Fairstein replies, “Well I got there before you. I have had precinct
guys here interviewing suspects.” (Id.) Ryan replies, “Suspects? A dozen kids harassing
bicyclists.” (Id.) Fairstein replies, “These kids were on a rampage,” and then states, “3,412
rapes reported to the NYPD last year. 3,412 times someone was assaulted, held down,
threatened, degraded, forced. This is an epidemic, we are not in control and we can be.” (Id.)
Fairstein asserts that the scene is fabricated. She states that she was not present in
the 24th Precinct on April 20, and that she did not discuss the internal unit to which the case
would be assigned with Ryan or Morgenthau. (Compl’t ¶ 91.) Instead, she spoke privately to
Morgenthau on the morning of April 20 to notify him of the rape. (Compl’t ¶ 91.) Fairstein
asserts that, at the time, the chief of the trial division believed that his unit would handle the case
because it might become a homicide, but that Ryan had no role in the case at that time. (Compl’t
¶¶ 91-92.) Fairstein asserts that the inclusion of Ryan in these scenes is significant because Ryan
ultimately was involved in vacating the convictions of the Five, and these scenes left viewers
with the impression that if Ryan had been assigned to the case, the Five would not have been
charged with the rape of Meili. (Compl’t ¶ 92.)
The Complaint does not plausibly allege a defamatory meaning to Fairstein’s
interactions with Ryan or the fictional portrayal of their administrative jockeying over who
would supervise the case. The scenes depict Fairstein and Ryan as driven prosecutors competing
to take the lead in a high-profile matter. Fairstein is depicted as emphasizing the importance of
lowering the incidents of rape in the City, which would be consistent with her role as chief of the
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unit responsible for prosecuting sex crimes. Fairstein’s disagreement with Ryan over suspects
“on a rampage” employs provocative language, but the language is not so inflammatory that it
would plausibly expose her to public contempt, ridicule, or disgrace, or an induce an evil opinion
of her. See Foster, 87 N.Y.2d at 751. Accepting Fairstein’s assertion that the depiction of her
conflict with Ryan has no basis in fact, the scene merely depicts a type of departmental turf war
typical of many television dramas set in the workplace. The Complaint has not plausibly alleged
a defamatory meaning to the scene.
Because the Complaint does not plausibly allege a defamatory meaning as to
Fairstein’s jockeying for supervisory control of the case, refences to an “epidemic” of rapes or
“kids . . . on a rampage” or “harassing bicyclists,” the Complaint will be dismissed to the extent
that it asserts defamation based on that scene. (Compl’t ¶¶ 87-93.)
B. Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Fairstein’s Claim Related to the Creation
of an Attack Timeline on Grounds of Substantial Truth Will Be Denied.
Defendants urge that Fairstein has not plausibly alleged a claim of defamation as
to her depiction in creating an attack timeline, they describe as “substantially true.” They urge
that the scene is consistent with viewpoints that Fairstein has publicly espoused over the past
thirty years. Defendants therefore argue that even if certain actions depicted in the series varied
in detail from Fairstein’s actions in 1989, they are not defamatory because they are substantially
true.
As characterized by defendants, Fairstein “has been an outspoken public face” for
prosecution of the Five and has publicly defended the theory behind their prosecution. (Def.
Mem. 16.) Defendants assert that the Court can properly take judicial notice of public remarks
that Fairstein delivered to a committee of the New York City Council in 2003. (Def. Mem. at
10.) As will be explained, however, Fairstein’s remarks in 2003 do not render the depiction of
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her role in the creation of the timeline as substantially true and contradict the scene in important
respects. Defendants’ motion to dismiss this aspect of Fairstein’s claim on grounds that the
scene is based in substantial truth will therefore be denied.
Fairstein asserts that the series includes a false and defamatory depiction of her
attempt to create a timeline for the attack on Meili. (Compl’t ¶¶ 77-86.) In the series, Fairstein
states to a detective, “So you were just going to let possible witnesses to a rape go on a family
court ticket? Wake these kids up and start getting some information. We’ve got a lady raped
and clinging to life here. I want their interviews on my desk immediately so I can put together a
timeline. Let’s work.” (Compl’t ¶ 77; Ep. 1, 12:39-13:03.) Later that day, Fairstein is shown
reviewing papers alone and muttering certain times and incidents, such as, “9:10. Okay,
bicyclists confirmed on East Drive.” (Ep. 1, 15:58-16:52.) A detective enters the room, and
Fairstein states, “Farrell’s interviews with the boys are in. . . . All this is happening in the Park
and it’s not connected?” (Compl’t ¶ 79; Ep. 1, 15:58-16:52.) Fairstein places a Post-It note on a
map of Central Park that reads “RAPE,” and states, “They’re not witnesses, they’re suspects.”
(Id.) In a later scene, Fairstein is near a map that charts the victim’s jogging path, while the
series shows flashbacks to Meili jogging and a detective summarizes known details of the
timeline of Meili’s activities. (Compl’t ¶ 83; Ep. 1, 34:45-36:24.) Fairstein notes a 45-minute
gap in the timeline and states, “How can the same kids be raping her at the same time they are
jumping bicyclists way over there?” (Id.) A detective in the room responds, “Nothing on the
weapon. Question marks on the timeline. I mean, we got problems.” (Id.) Fairstein then
proposes a different sequence of events while a detective appears to remain skeptical, and
Fairstein states that because the rape occurred, there “obviously” must be a feasible timeline.
(Id.)
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Fairstein asserts that this portrayal falsely depicts her as “imbuing urgency” to the
investigation and “hastening the interviews of unaccompanied minors.” (Compl’t ¶ 77.) She
asserts that she was not present in any precinct at the times depicted, never questioned
unaccompanied minors, never directed the NYPD’s investigation, never discussed which
individuals should be held in custody or who should be released with a family court ticket, and
did not plot the events of April 19 on a map. (Compl’t ¶¶ 78, 80-82, 84.) She asserts that the
depiction is inaccurate because Lederer led the investigation for the Manhattan District
Attorney’s office. (Compl’t ¶¶ 82, 85.) Fairstein further asserts that, in the days immediately
following the attack, Meili’s route through Central Park was largely unknown because she
remained in a coma. (Compl’t ¶ 84.)
Defendants urge that this depiction cannot be defamatory because it is
substantially true and point to a written statement submitted by Fairstein to the Public Safety
Committee of the New York City Council on January 30, 2003. (Docket # 88-1.) As noted,
public statements made to a governmental body “are precisely the sort of materials of which
[courts] may take judicial notice.” ACLU, 925 F.3d at 599 n. 126.
In her remarks, Fairstein stated in part:
Some critics have questioned the timeline in the case, talking about
exoneration as something to be determined by discrepancies of two
or three minutes. This was a rampage inside the park – it was mob
violence, moving in the erratic and uneven way that a deadly pack
does, under cover of darkness. It was not a carefully sequenced and
orchestrated event. . . . None of the victims who testified was
looking at a watch when he or she was assaulted, nor did the jogger
have any memory of the exact time she left her apartment. And the
rioters didn’t punch time cards as they took off across roadways and
ball fields looking for more blood to spill.
(Docket # 88-1 at NYCLD_039835-36; emphasis in original.) As part of her remarks, Fairstein
explained her view that the Five had been hastily exonerated without the appropriate scrutiny of
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Reyes, and advanced an argument that the Five acted in concert with Reyes. (See id. at
NYCLD_039829-30 (“The DNA match between the crime scene evidence involving the jogger
and Matias Reyes does not exonerate any of the others convicted of her attack. . . . It was
obvious that some were guilty of rape because they ‘acted in concert’ by striking her on the head
or by holding down her flailing arms and legs.”) (emphasis in original).) Fairstein’s statement
also included the following praise of Lederer and the NYPD:
More than one of the defense counsels has alleged that I was the
“architect” of what they claim was a miscarriage of justice. By the
time Lederer and I were invited to the precinct – twenty-one hours
after the first arrests – most of the suspects had already made oral
and written admissions. Lederer then did an absolutely stunning job
of questioning the attackers again, on videotape, with parents
cooperating fully and sitting in on the process with their sons. When
I first got to the station house, I took note of how careful the police
had been to bend over backwards to accommodate the special
circumstances of so many juvenile suspects.
(Docket # 88-1 at NYCLD_039833.)
As noted, in deciding whether a statement is substantially true, “[c]ourts typically
compare the complained of language with the alleged truth to determine whether the truth would
have a different effect on the mind of the average reader.” Franklin, 135 A.D.3d at 94. The
defendants have not demonstrated that Fairstein’s remarks from 2003 render her portrayal in the
aftermath of the crime as substantially true. The remarks of 2003 were a retrospective defense of
work performed by Lederer and the NYPD: They did not describe Fairstein performing a handson role in assembling the timeline or directing suspect interviews, and instead credited the
performance of Lederer and the NYPD. Indeed, Fairstein’s remarks challenged the perception
that she was an “architect” of the case, and instead pointed to the work of Lederer and the
NYPD. (Docket # 88-1 at NYCLD_039833.)
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While Fairstein’s 2003 defense of the timeline’s accuracy is consistent with the
spirit of her dialogue in “When They See Us,” it does not render her portrayal in the series as
substantially true. If the portrayal of Fairstein in “When They See Us” were substituted with
some version of Fairstein’s 2003 remarks, it would have depicted Lederer and the NYPD leading
the investigation, and, at some later point, Fairstein’s agreement with the NYPD’s timeline of
events. Such a version of events would plausibly have had a different effect on the mind of the
viewer, one that did not depict Fairstein as the prime mover in marshalling evidence and drawing
conclusions about the events of April 19. See Franklin, 135 A.D.3d at 94.
Because defendants have not demonstrated that substantial truth as to Fairstein’s
role in the creation of the timeline, defendants’ motion to dismiss the defamation claims related
to this depiction will be denied. (Compl’t ¶¶ 77-85.)
C. Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Fairstein’s Claims on the Grounds that
They Are Privileged as Opinion Is Granted in Part and Denied in Part.
1. The Depictions of Fairstein and Lederer Discussing the Guilt of the
Five Are Non-Actionable Opinion, Except for the Depiction of
Fairstein Withholding DNA Evidence.
Fairstein asserts that Episodes 1 and 2 of the series contain defamatory depictions
of certain interactions that she had with Lederer. As noted, Lederer was the lead trial lawyer in
the case against the Five and worked in the Sex Crimes Prosecution Unit headed by Fairstein.
As depicted in the series, Lederer sometimes expresses doubt about the guilt of
the Five, while Fairstein consistently views the Five as responsible for the attack. In Episode 1,
Lederer notes that witness statements conflicted about the rape of Meili, and Fairstein describes
the witnesses as “lying.” (Compl’t ¶ 108; Ep. 1 at 47:42-49:28.) Lederer states, “I’ve got to face
a judge and prosecute this Linda . . . what is your case?” and Fairstein replies that “they’re all
guilty, each of these boys assaulted Patricia Meili, they all raped her and we know this because
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in each of these boys’ confessions, they all bear eyewitness against each other.” (Id.) Lederer
notes the difficulty of presenting a case with “wildly conflicting statements, no physical
evidence, no weapon,” and Fairstein replies that “all we need is for one of these little shits to tie
this whole thing together.” (Id.) Lederer later tells Fairstein that none of the Five’s statements
match “the central facts of the crime,” and a subsequent scene shows a detective coaching one of
the Five about changing his statement. (Compl’t ¶ 112 & Ep. 1, 49:59-50:29.)
Lederer later tells Fairstein that the Five’s accounts are inconsistent with the
victim’s location. (Compl’t ¶ 113 & Ep. 1 at 50:30-50:49.) Fairstein says that Korey Wise is
“the one, he’s the glue, we’ll make sure he sticks it together.” (Compl’t ¶ 114 & Ep. 1 at 50:4651:01.) Wise is then shown being struck by NYPD detectives. (Compl’t ¶ 115 & Ep. 1 at
52:25.)
The Complaint also alleges that the portrayal of Fairstein’s conversations with
Lederer about a semen-stained sock found near the rape scene are defamatory. The sock
contained a DNA sample that ultimately did not match any of the Five. Episode 2 depicts a
conversation between Fairstein, Morgenthau and Lederer, where Morgenthau states, “We have a
useless tape, we lost our gang narrative, we can’t find DNA.” (Compl’t ¶ 118 & Ep. 2, 16:3917:14.) Fairstein responds, “We have a sock. Those little bastards shot their wad into a sock
thinking we wouldn’t find it, but we found it.” (Compl’t ¶ 118 & Ep. 2, 16:39-17:14.)
Morgenthau then says, “We have DNA, good. The match will nail this thing down.” (Id.)
Lederer wonders aloud how the NYPD initially missed the sock, and Fairstein states, “Who
cares? We have it now. And the kicker is none of the defense is aware yet so we can test it right
before trial. Surprise!” (Id.) Appearing distressed, Lederer replies, “Surprise.” (Id.)
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Fairstein and Lederer later learn that the sock’s DNA does not match any member
of the Five. (Compl’t ¶ 120 & Ep. 2 at 29:51-31:23.) In a conversation between the two,
Lederer states, “I needed the DNA and the sock to nail all this down. It doesn’t match. So, five
defendants clean. Their DNA isn’t there. It’s not anywhere.” (Id.) Fairstein responds, “So
there must have been another attacker. One must have gotten away.” (Id.) Lederer states, “You
honestly believe that?” and Fairstein replies, “I do if it helps a jury believe what we know is
true.” (Id.) Lederer observes that this conflicts with their theory of the case, and states, “So, we
have semen in a sock and it isn’t theirs, any of them. So what are we doing here?” (Id.)
The two then discuss an inconclusive cervical DNA sample from the victim, and
Fairstein states the inconclusive sample “means the Five can’t be ruled out. Deal with the sock
DNA, play up the cervical DNA.” (Compl’t ¶ 121 & Ep. 2 at 29:51-31:23.) Lederer responds,
“Are you listening to yourself? You sound delusional. You want me to pretend that the sock
never existed? This is crossing a line.” (Id.) Fairstein replies, “What line, Elizabeth? Where is
the line for Patricia [Meili], huh? I’m sick of this shit. Where’s the line for her? . . . Fucking
City! We hear something gruesome, we grimace and we move on. Well not this time.” (Id.)
Lederer then expresses concern about the Five, and Fairstein replies, “They were
in the park beating people up the same night that she’s getting beat up and you’re telling me they
had nothing to do with it? Bullshit. They said it themselves, they told us what happened.”
(Compl’t ¶ 122 & Ep. 2, 31:24-32:23.) Lederer states, “They were told,” and Fairstein responds,
“Come on, the eye sees but it cannot see itself, they couldn’t see the whole picture of how their
one part fit into the whole. That is all we did. It’s too late for this. Like you said, the whole
country is watching. They are watching you. This is your opportunity. Remember her.” (Id.)
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Fairstein asserts that these scenes were designed to make her the villain in the
case, depict conversations that never occurred and falsely show her using “abusive and
derogatory language.” (Compl’t ¶¶ 109, 115.) She asserts that the scenes falsely depict her as
“desperate” to prosecute the Five and as permitting or encouraging coercive interrogation
practices. (Compl’t ¶ 116.)
Fairstein states that, in truth, it was Lederer who believed that the Five
participated in the Meili attack as part of a series of attacks in Central Park and that Fairstein
never had a personal “theory of the case.” (Compl’t ¶¶ 109, 116.) Fairstein also states that
Lederer provided the Five’s defense counsel with DNA results from the stained sock
immediately after its discovery. (Compl’t ¶ 119.) According to the Complaint, Lederer’s
reference to her as “delusional” portrayed Fairstein “as bordering on mental illness and lacking
any sense of rationality when making judgments about cases.” (Compl’t ¶ 125.)
As noted, statements of pure opinion are non-actionable, and the distinction
between statements of fact and opinion is an issue of law for the Court, which weighs “the
content of the communication as a whole, its tone and apparent purpose.” Davis, 24 N.Y.3d at
270. Here, defendants assert that in the context of a dramatization based on controversial
historical events, an average viewer would understand the scenes to be pure opinion reflecting a
dramatized debate over the strengths and weaknesses of the prosecution’s case. See John E.
Reid & Assocs., Inc. v. Netflix, Inc., 2020 WL 1330657, at *8 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 23, 2020) (noting
that an alleged defamatory statement in “When They See Us” was uttered by “by a fictionalized
character, during a fictionalized conversation, as part of series that uses actors and actresses,
music, and imagined dialogue to dramatize historical events.”); Lovingood v. Discovery
Commc’ns, Inc., 800 Fed. App’x 840, 847-48 (11th Cir. 2020) (in reviewing a defamation claim
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involving a dramatization of the Challenger space shuttle tragedy, observing that “[o]verall, a
reasonable viewer would understand the film as generally not purporting to present verbatim
dialogue from the pages of history.”) (summary order). The Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit has also observed that in a television dramatization, a character’s “use of hyperbolic
language” may be understood by viewers as “a rhetorical device” or “a dramatic passage of
dialogue designed to maintain the viewer’s attention” and not as “an objective statement of fact.”
Partington, 56 F.3d at 1157.
As has been discussed, the average viewer would not understand “When They See
Us” to be a documentary that depicts a strictly factual version of events. It stars famous actors,
incorporates popular music and includes heavily stylized, non-realistic visual sequences. The
average viewer would also understand that “When They See Us” advocates a point of view that
is sympathetic to the Five and critical of law enforcement. For example, the well-known protest
anthem “Fight the Power” by the hip-hop group Public Enemy plays in the early minutes of
Episode 1, and the final episode of the series concludes with a montage where images of the
actors portraying the Five dissolve into video portraits of their real-life counterparts. Viewing
the entire series in context, the average viewer would understand “When They See Us” to be a
Hollywood dramatization that builds its story around the premise that the Five were wrongly
prosecuted and convicted.
But the scenes in Episode 2 related to the DNA-marked sock cannot be fairly
classified as pure opinion, and instead are actionable mixed opinion. In those scenes, Fairstein
explains that the prosecution is in possession of a DNA-marked sock that has not been disclosed
to the defense, and that the prosecution will “surprise” the defense by testing the sock on the eve
of trial. (Compl’t ¶ 118 & Ep. 2, 16:39-17:14.) After the sock is found not to match to any of
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the Five, Fairstein suggests that a sixth attacker must have been involved “if it helps a jury
believe what we know is true.” (Compl’t ¶ 120 & Ep. 2 at 29:51-31:23.) These statements and
actions attributable to Fairstein have a precise meaning, are capable of being proved or
disproved, and even allowing for the artistic context of “When They See Us,” the average viewer
could reasonably believe that these depictions were based on undisclosed facts known to the
filmmakers. Davis, 24 N.Y.3d at 270. These scenes depict Fairstein concealing evidence from
defense counsel – a likely violation of law and of professional responsibility – and manipulating
the timing of a DNA test with the goal of advantaging the prosecution. The average viewer
would not have a reason to conclude that such actions reflect a dramatized opinion of the
filmmakers and could fairly conclude that the depiction was based on undisclosed facts known to
the defendants.
The scenes described in paragraphs 118 to 121 of the Complaint are therefore not
statements of pure opinion and are actionable as defamation.
The remaining interactions with Lederer use the type of dramatized dialogue that,
in the full context of “When They See Us,” would not be understood by the average viewer as
representations of fact. (Compl’t ¶ 108; Ep. 1 at 47:42-49:28; Compl’t ¶ 112 & Ep. 1, 49:5950:29; Compl’t ¶ 113 & Ep. 1 at 50:30-50:49; Compl’t ¶ 114 & Ep. 1 at 50:46-51:01; Compl’t ¶
122 & Ep. 2, 31:24-32:23.) Fairstein’s assertions that “they’re all guilty” because “they all bear
eyewitness against each other,” that defendant Korey Wise is the “glue” of the prosecution’s
case, and that the prosecution needs “one of these little shits to tie this whole thing together”
would be understood by the average viewer as hyperbolic dialogue in service of the series
narrative. In the full context of the series, the dialogue between Fairstein and Lederer also
conveys the filmmakers’ opinions about the weaknesses of the case against the Five, using
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heightened and pithy rhetoric for dramatic effect. A work of popular entertainment cannot
reasonably capture the many fine points and nuances of a criminal proceeding, and the somewhat
simplistic dialogue between Fairstein and Lederer conveys to a general audience the filmmakers’
views of the flaws in the prosecution’s case. This is in marked contrast to the scenes involving
the DNA-marked sock, where Fairstein is depicted as taking direct actions to manipulate
evidence and impair the Five’s ability to defend themselves.
The Court therefore concludes that the Complaint has alleged actionable
defamation as to the depiction of Fairstein’s disclosure of the DNA-marked sock. (Compl’t ¶
118-21 & Ep. 2, 16:39-17:14, 29:51-31:23.) The scenes where Fairstein and Lederer debate the
strengths and weaknesses of the case are privileged as pure opinion and therefore are not
actionable. (Compl’t ¶ 108; Ep. 1 at 47:42-49:28; Compl’t ¶ 112 & Ep. 1, 49:59-50:29; Compl’t
¶ 113 & Ep. 1 at 50:30-50:49; Compl’t ¶ 114 & Ep. 1 at 50:46-51:01; Compl’t ¶ 122 & Ep. 2,
31:24-32:23.)
2. The Complaint Plausibly Alleges a Defamatory Meaning to Ryan’s
Statement that Fairstein “Coerced Those Boys” to Confess.
The Complaint also asserts that the series contains a defamatory depiction in a
scene in Episode 4 where Fairstein meets with Nancy Ryan following exoneration of the Five.
As previously discussed, an early scene of Episode 1 depicts a non-defamatory administrative
conflict about whether prosecution of the Five would be overseen by Fairstein’s unit or Ryan’s.
The series later depicts Ryan as an important figure in reexamining the case
against the Five. In one scene, Ryan and another assistant district attorney, Peter Casolaro, are
shown reviewing a case file. Casolaro states, “Fairstein acknowledged the track marks . . . ‘this
is where he pulled her in,’” and asks Ryan when the theory of the case changed. (Compl’t ¶ 127
& Ep. 4 at 1:04:11-1:04:35.) Ryan replies, “I was there when it changed.” (Id.)
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Fairstein’s final appearance in “When They See Us” occurs later in Episode 4,
where she and Ryan revisit the case following exoneration of the Five. Fairstein and Ryan meet
at an upscale restaurant, and Fairstein states to Ryan, “You’re here to gloat. It doesn’t matter,
you simply identified a sixth rapist. I always said there may be more.” (Compl’t ¶ 128 & Ep. 4
at 1:09:49-1:12:43.) Ryan responds, “You said that to cover because you knew you coerced
those boys into saying what they did.” 2 (Id.) Ryan later recites the titles of novels authored by
Fairstein while taking paperback copies from a bag, and states that while Fairstein was writing
crime novels, the Five were serving time in prison. (Compl’t ¶ 128 & Ep. 4 at 1:09:49-1:12:43.)
The scene includes a more extensive exchange between the two characters that is
not quoted in the Complaint. Fairstein maintains that the Five “said what they said freely” and
Ryan replies, “I actually think you convinced yourself of that. (Ep. 4 at 1:09:49-1:12:43.)
Fairstein then explains to Ryan that a police commission would soon issue a 43-page report
concluding that the Five were guilty of the attack. (Id.) Ryan expresses skepticism about the
police conducting a self-investigation and tells Fairstein, “We pored over your confession tapes.
We reconstructed the events of that night minute by minute. I know what was done.” (Id.)
Fairstein replies, “Oh, you know nothing,” and Ryan responds by citing the extensive presence
of Reyes’s DNA at the crime scene and stating, “It was him. Only him.” (Id.) Fairstein
maintains that Reyes “ran with that pack of kids. He stayed longer while others moved on.”
(Id.) After Ryan notes Fairstein’s work as an author, Fairstein appears frustrated, and states that
she watched while thirty NYPD detectives conducted a “brilliant” investigation to seek justice
The Complaint misquotes and condenses the exchange by quoting Ryan’s dialogue as, “You said that to cover
because you knew you coerced those boys into say what they did Linda, we pored over your confession tapes.”
(Compl’t ¶ 128.) However, Ryan’s assertion that Fairstein “coerced” the Five is made in response to Fairstein’s
reference to a “sixth rapist,” and Ryan’s assertion that “[w]e pored over your confession tapes” is raised separately,
in response to Fairstein’s mention of the NYPD’s internal investigation.
2
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for a woman who was brutally beaten and discarded, and states, “We helped make sure those
boys got what they deserved. And I’ll be damned if I’m going to lose a wink of sleep over it.”
(Id.) Fairstein then thanks Ryan for buying her books and leaves the restaurant table. (Id.)
The Complaint asserts that Fairstein has never spoken with Ryan about the Reyes
confession. (Compl’t ¶¶ 126, 129.) It asserts that these scenes falsely attribute the prosecution’s
theory of the case to Fairstein and falsely depicts her as responsible for implementing coercive
interrogation techniques by the police. (Compl’t ¶ 129.)
Viewed in context, the average viewer could reasonably interpret Ryan’s
statement that “you [Fairstein] coerced those boys into saying what they did” to be a factual
assertion. Ryan’s statement that her team “pored over your confession tapes” implies that
Ryan’s own investigation concluded that Fairstein directed the conduct of police interviews that
secured confessions that she described as “coerced.” This notion is underscored by Ryan’s
assertion that her team reconstructed the sequence of events and that, “I know what was done.”
The statements have a precise meaning and are capable of being proved true or false. The series
depicts Ryan as an authoritative public official who questions law enforcement’s approach to the
case. The damning judgment of Fairstein’s conduct voiced by a professional colleague could
plausibly hold Fairstein up to shame, ridicule and contempt. Because Ryan’s statements purport
to be based on facts that she uncovered during her investigation and are not couched in
subjective language, the average viewer could conclude that the defendants “know[ ] certain
facts, unknown to the audience, which support the speaker[s’] opinion and are detrimental to the
person being discussed.” Davis, 24 N.Y.3d at 269.
Defendants urge that the Ryan character merely engaged in “hyperbolic
expression” and that Ryan’s reference to “your” confession tapes “cannot be read as a factual
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statement that Plaintiff herself was responsible” for alleged coercive tactics. (Def. Mem. at 21;
emphasis in original.) For the reasons explained, the average viewer also could conclude that
Ryan’s statement was based in fact and implies that Fairstein had a personal role in securing the
confessions. If “words are reasonably susceptible of multiple meanings, some of which are not
defamatory, it is then for the trier of fact, not for the court acting on the issue solely as a matter
of law, to determine in what sense the words were used and understood.” Celle, 209 F.3d at 178
(quotation marks omitted). Defendants’ motion to dismiss will be denied as to this exchange.
However, similar to the depiction of Fairstein’s interactions with Lederer, other
aspects of the exchange reflect the filmmakers’ opinions about conflicting theories of the case
and the underlying evidence, including the reliability of the NYPD’s self-investigation, whether
the NYPD was “brilliant” in investigating the attack and whether Reyes plausibly acted in
concert with the Five. The average viewer would understand such lines of dialogue to be a
dramatized representation of the filmmakers’ view that the Five did not act in concert with Reyes
and that the NYPD’s internal report did not offer a reliable accounting of events. The Fairstein
and Ryan characters are depicted as having conflicting and subjective opinions about these
issues, and this scene functions in part as a closing summary of the filmmakers’ views of
weaknesses in the evidence. Even though the average viewer would likely view Fairstein as the
principal villain in the series, and would likely view Ryan as a fair-minded person who had been
consistently seeking the truth, such an interpretative gloss is the opinion-based prerogative of the
defendants as speakers.
Defendants’ motion to dismiss will therefore be denied to the extent that it
plausibly alleges a defamatory meaning to Ryan’s assertion in Episode 4 that the police
interviews resulting in the taped confessions were coerced and made at Fairstein’s direction, but
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will otherwise be granted as to the scene depicting Fairstein’s final conversation with Ryan.
(Compl’t ¶¶ 126-30.)
D. The Motion to Dismiss Fairstein’s Claims Directed to Her Instructions to
the NYPD Is Denied.
1. The Complaint Plausibly Alleges a Defamatory Meaning to Fairstein’s
Instructions for Interrogation.
Fairstein alleges that the series falsely depicts her as instructing NYPD officers to
harshly interrogate suspects. (Compl’t ¶¶ 104-07.) In the series, she instructs members of the
NYPD as follows: “We’ve got suspects. We’ve got kids in custody. Interrogate. Make them
name their accomplices. This is not business as usual. The press is crawling all over this. No
kid gloves here. These are not kids. They raped this woman. Our lady jogger deserves this.”
(Compl’t ¶ 104 & Ep. 1 at 22:35-22:53.) The next scene shows Kevin Richardson alone in a
room and handcuffed to a chair with a black eye. (Ep. 1 at 22:54-24:17.) Outside of Fairstein’s
presence, detectives of the NYPD observe that Richardson’s mother left voluntarily, and one
states that it “feels like Christmas.” (Id.) Detectives begin to question Richardson, and one tells
him, “The sooner you tell us what you know, the sooner you go home.” (Id.) Richardson then
asks for his mother and is told that she left. (Id.) A detective tells him, “It’s just us. You and
us.” (Id.) The series then shows detectives questioning members of the Five and others with
varying levels of verbal aggression and what appears to be non-injurious physical contact. (Ep. 1
at 24:17-33:30.)
The Complaint alleges that this sequence “portrays Ms. Fairstein not only as a
racist, but unethical as well.” (Compl’t ¶ 105.) It alleges that Fairstein was not involved in the
NYPD’s questioning of witnesses or suspects at any precinct and had no supervisory role in the
police investigation. (Compl’t ¶¶ 105-07.)
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Defendants urge that phrases like “not business as usual” and “no kid gloves
here” are typical heated rhetoric used for dramatic purposes to depict authorities are under
pressure. (Def. Mem. at 24.) Defendants urge that such a “dramatic trope” cannot support the
conclusion that Fairstein directed NYPD officers to bend rules or alter procedures. (Id.)
As depicted in the series, however, Fairstein had a hands-on role in supervising
the early stages of the investigation, and the series strongly suggests that she had the authority to
direct the actions of the NYPD. She expressly instructs officers to “make” the suspects name
their accomplices and orders them not to use “kid gloves” on the suspects because they “raped
this woman” and are “not kids.” This language goes beyond dramatic trope or rhetorical
hyperbole: The average viewer could understand her comments as an instruction to coerce
suspects into naming accomplices, and to treat the suspects as adults rather than minors because
Fairstein considers them rapists. The episode immediately shows officers using rhetorical and
physical intimidation against various suspects, who are minors. The words and actions depicted
have a precise meaning and are capable of being proved true or untrue, and in context, the
average viewer could reasonably perceive this sequence to show members of the NYPD acting
pursuant to Fairstein’s instruction. The average viewer could reasonably believe that this
depiction is based on facts known to defendants but unknown to the audience. Davis, 24 N.Y.3d
at 269.
The Court concludes that the Complaint plausibly alleges a defamatory meaning
to Fairstein’s instructions about suspect interrogation. The Complaint plausibly alleges that the
depiction is false. In full context, the average viewer would conclude that Fairstein was
responsible for instructing members of the NYPD to use harsh and coercive interrogation
practices against minors. The use of false confessions brought about through law enforcement
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pressure and duplicity is a significant theme in later portions of the series. The average viewer
could therefore interpret Fairstein’s interrogation instructions as beginning the chain of events
that resulted in the unjust conviction of the Five, such that the depiction could plausibly expose
Fairstein to public contempt, ridicule, or disgrace, or an induce an evil opinion of her. See
Foster, 87 N.Y.2d at 751.
The Court therefore concludes that Fairstein has plausibly alleged a defamatory
meaning to her interrogation instructions. (Compl’t ¶ 104 & Ep. 1 at 22:35-22:53.) Defendants’
motion to dismiss will therefore be denied as to this scene.
2. The Complaint Plausibly Alleges Defamation Based on Fairstein’s
Instructions to Investigate Young Black Males.
Fairstein alleges that the series includes a defamatory depiction of her instructions
to investigate young, black males in Harlem. (Compl’t ¶¶ 97-103.) In a scene set at the 24th
Precinct, she instructs a group of assembled NYPD officers as follows:
I need that whole group. I have some of them, and descriptions of
others, but I need all of them. Every young black male who was in
the park last night is a suspect in the rape of that woman who is
fighting for her life right now. I want units out strong. Come on,
guys. What did we miss? Let’s get an army of blue up in Harlem.
You go into those projects and you stop every little thug you see.
You bring every kid who was in the park last night.
(Compl’t ¶ 97 & Ep. 1 at 19:54-20:30.) During portions of Fairstein’s remarks, the series shows
NYPD officers lining young men against a fence and searching them. (Ep. 1 at 19:54-20:30.)
The scene immediately following her remarks shows a group of seemingly frustrated officers,
two of whom see Salaam and Wise on the street by chance, demand their ID, and take them into
custody. (Ep. 1 at 20:31-22:20.)
Fairstein asserts that she did not instruct officers to round up young black men
who were in Central Park and that she did not instruct officers in the case. (Compl’t ¶¶ 98-102.)
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She asserts that the scene is also defamatory because the word “thug” has racist connotations and
therefore depicts her as a racist. (Compl’t ¶ 103.)
As depicted in “When They See Us,” the average viewer could conclude from the
scene that Fairstein directed NYPD officers to conduct a discriminatory canvas in Harlem. The
depiction has a precise meaning and is capable of being proved or disproved. The instructions to
“get an army of blue up in Harlem” in pursuit of “young black male[s]” and to “go into those
projects and you stop every little thug you see” could reasonably be understood by a viewer as a
directive to indiscriminately canvass and search young black men. The term “thug” is not used
to describe individuals who were believed, rightly or wrongly, to have committed the brutal rape.
Rather, it implies that the “projects” in Harlem are populated with “thugs” (“stop every little thug
you see”) and among those stopped, one or more may know something about the rape.
Fairstein’s words are spoken against images of police searching young men along a fence and the
series immediately transitions to the depiction of officers demanding ID from Salaam and Wise.
Viewed in context and taken as a whole, the Complaint plausibly alleges that the dialogue
attributed to Fairstein advocates unlawful police stops of young black males without reasonable
suspicion, thereby subjecting her to hatred and contempt. The average viewer would not
necessarily conclude that her remarks were merely a reflection of the filmmakers’ opinions about
the perspective of law enforcement, and could instead conclude that Fairstein directed
discriminatory policing practices. The average viewer could reasonably believe that this
depiction is based on facts known to defendants but unknown to the audience. Davis, 24 N.Y.3d
at 269.
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Defendants’ motion to dismiss Fairstein’s defamation claims directed to her
character’s remarks urging the police to canvass the projects in Harlem and stop “every little
thug” will therefore be denied. (Compl’t ¶¶ 97-103.)
E. The Complaint Does Not Allege Defamation as to Fairstein’s Questions
about Antron McCrae.
Defendants urge that Fairstein has not alleged a defamatory meaning to a scene
where she is shown as directly questioning young suspects. Because Fairstein’s claim is based
on various inferences that lack support in the events depicted, her defamation claims will be
dismissed as to this scene.
In Episode 1, on the morning of April 20, 1989, Fairstein is shown reading from a
folder and asking police officers about the definition of “wiling out” or “wilding out,” while
struggling with the pronunciation. (Compl’t ¶ 63 & Ep. 1, 9:46-9:55.) Fairstein is then shown in
a room full of young men of color who are suspected of participating in or having knowledge
about the attacks in Central Park. (Compl’t ¶ 65 & Ep. 1, 11:00-12:38.) She points to a black
eye on Kevin Richardson, who is one of the Five, and says, “What happened to that one?” and
asks a member of law enforcement what constitutes “wilding,” who replies that he does not
know. (Id.) Fairstein then questions an unidentified young man who is present in the room. 3
(Compl’t ¶ 66 & Ep. 1, 11:00-12:38.) She asks if he saw people doing bad things in the park,
and he responds that he was with his “boy Tron.” (Id.) Fairstein asks the boy if he was “out
wilding with Tron” before inquiring about Tron’s name and address. (Id.) The Complaint notes
The Complaint asserts that Fairstein is depicted as questioning an individual named Clarence Thomas, who was
not a member of the Five. (Compl’t ¶¶ 69-72.) The Complaint asserts that public records indicate that on the night
of April 19, 1989, Thomas was in a police van when he identified Antron McCray as responsible for a “murder” in
Central Park, and that he later described attacks purportedly committed by McCray. (Compl’t ¶¶ 69, 71.)
3
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that the young men are not shown being read Miranda rights and that questioning persons
younger than sixteen outside the presence of their parents violates New York law. (Id.)
The Complaint asserts that Fairstein never questioned suspects on April 20,
including members of the Five, and that she was not familiar with the terms “wiling out” or
“wilding out.” (Compl’t ¶¶ 67-68.) The Complaint asserts that based on publicly available
documents, Antron McCray was first named by two persons who claimed that he was
responsible for a “murder” in Central Park. (Compl’t ¶ 69.) It asserts that the relevant
interviews the Five and others occurred in the presence of a parent, following the recitation of
Miranda rights, and that Fairstein played no role in any interviews about McCray. (Compl’t ¶¶
70-73.) The Complaint also asserts that Fairstein did not use the term “wilding,” and asserts that
the word was first used by several young men questioned about the events of April 19, before
being adopted by the press as a term that stoked public fears of black men. (Compl’t ¶¶ 74-76.)
The Complaint does not plausibly allege a defamatory meaning to Fairstein’s
depiction in this scene. First, the scene does not show an express or implied denial of Miranda
protections. The scene depicts a large number of young men gathered in a room when Fairstein
arrives. There is no suggestion that they were advised of Miranda protections but also no
suggestion that they were not so informed. The actions and dialogue do not reflect an express or
implied limitation on their right to remain silent or to consult with an attorney. The average
viewer would not understand this scene to depict a deprivation of Miranda’s protections, or of
any other protections afforded under the U.S. Constitution. The Complaint’s assertion that the
series depicts Fairstein as violating Miranda protections is not supported by the scene viewed in
context.
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Fairstein’s questioning of minors outside the presence of a parent or guardian is a
somewhat closer issue. It is true that the scene does not reflect the presence of any parent while
Fairstein questions the young men, and defendants do not dispute that New York law requires
that a parent be present when law enforcement questions a minor younger than age 16. (See Def.
Mem. at 23.) Similar to the issue of Miranda protections, however, the series does not suggest
any calculated effort to exclude parents. The scene is brief and Fairstein’s questions are
generalized and conversational. Moreover, the average viewer would be unlikely to know of a
requirement under New York law that a parent be present during questioning, and the scene does
not suggest that Fairstein was attempting to evade legal requirements. In context, the average
viewer would not view Fairstein’s portrayal in this scene as violating New York’s restrictions on
the questioning of minors or otherwise defamatory.
Lastly, the scene does not defame Fairstein by having her utter the word
“wilding.” Fairstein is shown to lack familiarity with the word’s definition and pronunciation.
At this moment in the series, she is repeating an unfamiliar word that she only recently
encountered in an internal report. Given the word’s usage in context, the average viewer would
not attach a defamatory meaning to Fairstein’s use of the word “wilding.”
Fairstein’s defamation claim directed to her questioning about “Tron” turns on
speculative interpretations not supported by actions or dialogue depicted in the series. Her claim
directed to these scenes will therefore be dismissed.
F. Fairstein Has Not Plausibly Alleged Defamation Based on Language
Referring to the Five as “Animals.”
The Complaint alleges that the defendants defamed Fairstein by depicting her as
using derogatory and “dehumanizing” language in a scene with Ryan. (Compl’t ¶¶ 94-96.) In
one of the scenes set at the 24th Precinct on April 20, Fairstein is shown briefing NYPD
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members in front of a map of Central Park. (Compl’t ¶ 94 & Ep. 1 at 18:42-19:48.) Fairstein
says, “They brutally raped a woman and discarded her like a piece of garbage, left her for dead,
bleeding, bound, naked. And to think we were going to release these animals to family court and
put them back on the streets.” (Id.) Fairstein notes that a half-hour is unaccounted for in the
timeline of the attack, and, pointing to a map of Central Park, says, “What did these animals do
between here and here? Are there other victims still in the Park?” (Id.) Ryan then says to
Fairstein, “Good luck. You’re gonna need it.” (Id.) According to the Complaint, the scene is
fabricated, and the dialogue “portrays Ms. Fairstein as dehumanizing children of color by
referring to them as ‘animals,’ while trying to create support among police officers for a weak
case, as indicated by ADA Ryan’s skepticism.” (Compl’t ¶ 95.)
In this context, the Fairstein character’s use of the word “animals” is derogatory
and appears intended to discomfort the viewer. Accepting Fairstein’s assertion that she never
uttered such a remark, the use of the word “animals” in a dramatized interpretation of historical
events is not so inflammatory that it rises to the level of defamation. See Chau, 771 F.3d at 127
(“Not all (or even most) maligning remarks can be considered defamatory.”). The word is used
to describe suspects who she believed “raped a woman and discarded her like a piece of
garbage . . . .” While the description of suspects as “animals” has fraught and negative
connotations, given the context of the moment, the term’s use reflects a character’s outrage over
the attacks, and is not the type of remark that plausibly exposes a person to the type of public
hatred or shame that forms the basis of a defamation claim.
Additionally, the series’ use of the word “animals” is also protected as a
privileged opinion on the part of the defendants. In the full context of “When They See Us,” the
average viewer would understand the term’s use to reflect the filmmakers’ perception that
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prosecutors and law enforcement viewed the suspects as a violent, out-of-control pack presumed
to be guilty, and not as individuals. While Fairstein is free to challenge that perception, such
language in a dramatized series drawn from historical events would not be understood by the
average viewer as a faithful representation of Fairstein’s actions and words, and would instead be
viewed as heightened and hyperbolic rhetoric that reflects the filmmakers’ critique of the
prosecution. The degree to which Fairstein and others pre-judged the guilt of the Five and
differentiated between them as individuals is a subjective opinion that does not easily lend itself
to being proved or disproved.
The question understandably arises why the Court draws a distinction between the
use of the terms “little thugs” and “animals.” The phrase “stop every little thug you see” was
used in the portrayal to refer indiscriminately to young males in the projects of Harlem without
cause for suspicion that the particular person was involved in the Central Park attack or any other
crime. It portrays Fairstein as advocating an unlawful stop of innocent individuals, young, black
men in Harlem. “Animals,” a similarly dehumanizing term, was used to describe individuals
who were believed to have participated in an exceptionally brutal and savage rape of a woman,
leaving her in a coma. Neither epithet is generally considered appropriate but, in context, only
one – “stop every little thug you see” – portrays Fairstein as having contempt for and directing
unlawful action against young men in Harlem regardless of their participation in criminal
activity. In context, the use of “animals” was reserved for supposed participants in an extremely
brutal crime. The average viewer seeing the entire series would understand the difference and
see the word “animals” used in context as inappropriate but not implying a generalized view of
all young men of color, or otherwise holding Fairstein up to ridicule and contempt for its use.
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Because the Complaint does not plausibly allege a defamatory meaning to
Fairstein’s use of the word “animals,” the Complaint will be dismissed to the extent that it asserts
defamation based on that scene. (Compl’t ¶¶ 94-96.)
III.
The Motion to Dismiss the Claim of Civil Conspiracy Will Be Denied.
Count VII alleges that defendants conspired to defame Fairstein. (Compl’t ¶¶
375-82.) It asserts that defendants collaboratively wrote, produced and published “When They
See Us” with the intent to direct public ridicule and scorn to Fairstein and to cause her harm.
(Compl’t ¶¶ 377-78.)
Defendants move to dismiss this claim on the limited ground that New York
“does not recognize a freestanding claim for conspiracy.” Carlson v. Am. Int’l Inc., 30 N.Y.3d
288, 310 (2017). But New York law does, in fact, recognize a claim of civil conspiracy where a
plaintiff adequately alleges an underlying tort. See, e.g., Alexander & Alexander of New York,
Inc. v. Fritzen, 68 N.Y.2d 968, 969 (1986) (“Allegations of conspiracy are permitted only to
connect the actions of separate defendants with an otherwise actionable tort.”). “In order to
properly plead a cause of action to recover damages for civil conspiracy, the plaintiff must allege
a cognizable tort, coupled with an agreement between the conspirators regarding the tort, and an
overt action in furtherance of the agreement.” Perez v. Lopez, 97 A.D.3d 558, 560 (1st Dep’t
2012) (reversing trial court’s dismissal of claim of conspiracy to defame).
Here, the Complaint has plausibly alleges an underlying tort of defamation and
that the defendants collaborated in the writing, production and publication of defamatory
statements. (Compl’t ¶¶ 376-77.) The question of whether defendants actually agreed to defame
Fairstein is properly subject to discovery, but the opprobrium expressed toward Fairstein in
certain of defendants’ public comments lend some plausibility to the claim. (See, e.g., Compl’t ¶
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194 (quoting public remark from Locke stating: “But fuck it: Linda Fairstein is trash, was trash,
will always be trash.”).)
Defendants’ motion to dismiss the claim of conspiracy to commit defamation will
therefore be denied.
CONCLUSION.
Defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part.
Specifically, the motion is denied as to the scenes described in paragraphs 77-85
(the creation of a timeline), 118-21 (the withholding of DNA evidence), 104-07 (the instructions
to interrogate), 128 (Ryan’s assertion that Fairstein “coerced” the Five into confessing), and 97103 (the instructions to canvass Harlem). The motion to dismiss Fairstein’s claim of civil
conspiracy is also denied. (Compl’t ¶¶ 375-82.)
The motion is granted as to the scenes described in paragraphs 51-56 (the Central
Park sequence), 59-61 (the drafting of the press release), 87-93 (Fairstein’s bureaucratic
infighting with Ryan), 108-15, 122 (debates between Lederer and Fairstein about the strength of
evidence), 127-28 (statements in Fairstein’s final meeting with Ryan that do not relate to
“coerced” confessions), 64-66 (questioning about Antron McCray), and 94-96 (the reference to
attackers as “animals).
The Clerk is directed to terminate the motion and the related letter-motion.
(Docket # 86, 94.)
SO ORDERED.
Dated: New York, New York
August 9, 2021
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