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Summary: USCA11 Case: 19-14894 Date Filed: 10/27/2020 Page: 1 of 23 [DO NOT PUBLISH] IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT _ No. 19-14894 Non-Argument Calendar _ D.C. Docket No. 1:18-cv-23462-RS VIRGINIA VALLEJO, Plaintiff - Appellant, versus NARCOS PRODUCTIONS LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, NETFLIX, INC., a Delaware corporation, GAUMONT TELEVISION USA LLC, a Delaware limited liability company f.k.a. Gaumont International Television LLC, DYNAMO PRODUCCIONES S.A., Defe
Summary: USCA11 Case: 19-14894 Date Filed: 10/27/2020 Page: 1 of 23 [DO NOT PUBLISH] IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT _ No. 19-14894 Non-Argument Calendar _ D.C. Docket No. 1:18-cv-23462-RS VIRGINIA VALLEJO, Plaintiff - Appellant, versus NARCOS PRODUCTIONS LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, NETFLIX, INC., a Delaware corporation, GAUMONT TELEVISION USA LLC, a Delaware limited liability company f.k.a. Gaumont International Television LLC, DYNAMO PRODUCCIONES S.A., Defen..
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USCA11 Case: 19-14894 Date Filed: 10/27/2020 Page: 1 of 23
[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 19-14894
Non-Argument Calendar
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 1:18-cv-23462-RS
VIRGINIA VALLEJO,
Plaintiff - Appellant,
versus
NARCOS PRODUCTIONS LLC,
a Delaware limited liability company,
NETFLIX, INC.,
a Delaware corporation,
GAUMONT TELEVISION USA LLC,
a Delaware limited liability company
f.k.a. Gaumont International Television LLC,
DYNAMO PRODUCCIONES S.A.,
Defendants - Appellees.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
________________________
(October 27, 2020)
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Before JORDAN, GRANT, and LUCK, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
In this copyright infringement case, Virginia Vallejo appeals the district
court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Narcos Production LLC, Netflix, Inc.,
and Gaumont Television USA LLC. She contends that the district court erred when
it concluded that two scenes from the television series Narcos, in episodes 103 and
104, were not substantially similar to two chapters in her memoir, Amando a Pablo,
Odiando a Escobar (2013). Following review of the record and parties’ briefs, we
affirm.
I
From mid-1983 until September of 1987, Ms. Vallejo, a well-known
Colombian journalist and anchorwoman, had a romantic affair with Pablo Escobar,
a notorious Colombian drug trafficker. Based on this affair, she authored the memoir
Amando a Pablo, Odiando a Escobar (2013), which translates to Loving Pablo,
Hating Escobar. She owns the copyright in two Spanish-language versions of the
book, Copyright Registration TX0007105765 and Copyright Registration
TX0007833787.
The memoir recounts Ms. Vallejo’s romantic relationship with Mr. Escobar,
as well as the rise of the Colombian drug cartels. According to Ms. Vallejo, the facts
in the memoir are “all true.”
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A
Two chapters in Ms. Vallejo’s memoir are at issue on this appeal—“The
Caress of a Revolver” and “That Palace in Flames.” “The Caress of a Revolver”
describes a romantic encounter between Ms. Vallejo and Mr. Escobar, in which Mr.
Escobar uses a gun in foreplay with Ms. Vallejo. “That Palace in Flames” chronicles
a meeting between Mr. Escobar, Ms. Vallejo, and Ivan Marino Ospina, one of the
heads of M-19, a Colombian guerrilla organization.
1
In “The Caress of a Revolver,” Mr. Escobar takes Ms. Vallejo to his penthouse
by telling her that there is a surprise waiting for her. See D.E. 76-1 at 13. At the
penthouse, Ms. Vallejo sits in a low-backed chair and Mr. Escobar speaks to her in
a “threatening tone and [with] an ice-cold expression in his eyes.”
Id. He then says
to her:
So now you see who has the higher IQ here. Not to
mention who’s got the balls, right? And if you complain
or make one false move while I’m preparing the surprise,
I’m going to rip that dress in two, film what comes next,
and sell the video to the media.
Id.
Mr. Escobar then ties a black blindfold over Ms. Vallejo’s eyes, while
humming “Feelin’ Groovy” by Simon and Garfunkel, and wonders where he placed
his handcuffs. See
id. Ms. Vallejo refuses to be handcuffed and gagged, and Mr.
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Escobar relents by telling her that he would “never underestimate a panther with
delusions of genius.”
Id. She answers: “. . . I would never underestimate a criminal
with the delusions of a schizophrenic.”
Id. She then hears Mr. Escobar open a safe
and load six bullets into a revolver. See
id. He stands behind her, “speaking into
[her] ear in a whispery voice while his left hand holds [her] by the hair and the other
slides the barrel of the gun in circles on [her] neck, around and around.”
Id.
Soon thereafter, Mr. Escobar asks Ms. Vallejo if it is terrifying to have a gun
pointed at her by a murderer. See
id. at 14. She answers by saying:
Quite the opposite: it’s absolutely exquisite! Ooohhh . . .
what could be more divine . . . . more sublime, I say,
throwing my head back and sighing in pleasure while he
unbuttons my shirt dress and the gun starts to descend
along my throat toward my heart. “And, in any case,
you’re only a sadist . . . not a murderer.”
Id. He prompts her to describe why she likes it so much and starts to kiss her neck
and shoulders. See
id. Ms. Vallejo describes the gun and the sensations as “the
revolver descends slowly in a straight line down my breast and my diaphragm, across
my waist and toward my abdomen.”
Id. She then abruptly tells him, “I swear to you
Pablo, if you go one millimeter lower I’ll get up from this chair, go back to Bogota,
and you’ll never see me again!”
Id. Mr. Escobar stops “with a guilty little laugh of
resignation.”
Id.
A few seconds later, Mr. Escobar tells Ms. Vallejo to remove the blindfold for
her surprise, and she sees more than a dozen fake passports on the floor in front of
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her, all belonging to him. See
id. at 15. When she tries to get a closer look, he puts
handcuffs around her ankle and attaches them to the chair. See
id. After looking at
the passports for some time, Mr. Escobar puts them back in the safe, lays the revolver
on a desk, removes the handcuffs, and carries Ms. Vallejo to the bed. See
id. at 16.
2
In “That Palace in Flames,” Ms. Vallejo writes about a meeting she had with
Mr. Escobar and a man named Ivan Marino Ospina. See
id. at 22. The meeting
takes place in Mr. Escobar’s estate near Medellin. See
id. at 21. Mr. Escobar tells
Ms. Vallejo that he is going to introduce her to Mr. Ospina, who is a top leader of
the M-19 guerrilla group. See
id. Mr. Escobar describes Mr. Ospina as “the toughest
of all comandantes” and tells her that Mr. Ospina is not afraid of him. See
id. He
further warns her that Mr. Ospina is “very high” in the M-19 command hierarchy.
See
id. at 22. Ms. Vallejo then proceeds to describe Mr. Ospina’s appearance:
I imagine that the Amazonian commander will look like
an army sergeant and wear camouflage, that he’ll see me
as an intruder in a meeting of very macho men, and that
he’ll do everything humanly possible to get rid of me so
that Pablo will stay and talk about money. Ivan Marino
Ospina is a man of medium build, blunt features, wispy
hair, and a mustache, and beside him Escobar looks like
Adonis. . . . I realize immediately that the legendary
guerilla chief really isn’t afraid of Pablo or of anyone else,
because from the moment he lays eyes on me he doesn’t
take them from my face, my body, my legs; he has an
inflamed gaze that to this day I don’t remember ever
seeing in another man. The M-19 leader is wearing civilian
clothes. . . .
5
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Id. After chatting for a few minutes, Ms. Vallejo leaves the room. See
id. at 23.
When she returns, she pauses outside the door listening to the conversation between
Mr. Escobar and Mr. Ospina. See
id. She overhears Mr. Ospina saying that Mr.
Escobar owes him a million dollars. See
id.
Ms. Vallejo reenters the room, and after a minute or two asks Mr. Ospina why
he joined the revolutionary fight. See
id. at 24. He replies by telling her about
atrocities committed by conservative hit squads, called birds, against his family. See
id. Ms. Vallejo speaks to Mr. Ospina about her own family’s experience with the
birds. See
id. She tells Mr. Ospina that she quit “the highest-paid job on television
for refusing . . . to refer to your group as a ‘band of criminals.’”
Id. at 25. Mr.
Ospina seems surprised, and Mr. Escobar interrupts to add that Ms. Vallejo had
already been fired from another job for supporting the creation of a technicians’
union. See
id.
After Mr. Ospina leaves, Ms. Vallejo asks Mr. Escobar what the million
dollars is for. See
id. He answers, “[t]o recover my files and set them on fire. And
without a record, there’s no way they can extradite me.”
Id. He explains that in a
few weeks the Colombia Constitutional Court will begin to consider his case for
extradition to the United States, and says that there are six thousand files of evidence
against him at the Palace of Justice. See
id. 25–26.
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Ten days later, Mr. Ospina is killed in a confrontation with the army. See
id.
at 27. Nearly three months later, an armed M-19 rebel group seizes the Palace of
Justice. See
id. at 29. During the siege, the M-19 rebel group makes various political
demands. See
id. A fire breaks out, destroying thousands of documents. See
id. at
29–30.
Months later, Ms. Vallejo learns from Mr. Escobar that he paid Mr. Ospina
one million dollars and promised another one million dollars in arms and financial
aid down the line for the attack on the Palace of Justice. See
id. at 38. He adds that
the weapons and munitions did not make it on time because the plan had to be moved
up when the Constitutional Court was going to start to study the extradition case,
“and the evidence against us was overwhelming.”
Id. at 38–39.
B
In October of 2012, Narcos Productions started producing the television series
Narcos, which tells the story about the Colombian drug trade. Gaumont Television
USA distributed the series throughout international markets. Netflix made the series
available for public viewing on its internet-based streaming video service, and
licensed the first season of Narcos to be broadcast on Univision.
In her complaint, Ms. Vallejo claims that two scenes from Narcos infringe on
her copyright. First, she asserts that a scene from season one, episode 103, of Narcos
is similar to “The Caress of a Revolver” because it is a sex scene between Mr.
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Escobar and a character named Valeria Velez (who is supposed to be Ms. Vallejo)
involving a gun. Second, she contends that a scene from season one, episode 104,
of Narcos—portraying a meeting between Mr. Escobar and a character named
“Ivan” who is a leader in M-19—is similar to “That Palace in Flames.”
1
In season one, episode 103, of Narcos, the scene at issue opens with Ms. Velez
in a luxurious bedroom. She is already tied to the bed by her wrists and is
blindfolded. She is wearing a bra, panties, a garter belt, and stockings. The actor
playing Mr. Escobar’s character is holding a newspaper that refers to him as “un
Robin Hood Paisa.” He approaches the bed while holding a gun and tells Ms. Velez
that his name is everywhere—in newspapers, magazines. When he gets to the side
of the bed, he throws the gun on the bed and straddles Ms. Velez.
Mr. Escobar tells her that she is going to have to pay for exposing him to so
much publicity, as he pulls off the blindfold from her eyes and leaves his arm resting
on her shoulder with his hand in her hair. She replies that she will pay anything he
wants. Mr. Escobar starts caressing Ms. Velez with the gun and, while doing so,
tells her that she is going to help get him elected to congress. She responds “Yes,
Pablo. Yes,” while he continues to caress her with the gun. D.E. 79-7.
Though not explicitly shown, the implication is that Mr. Escobar is using the
gun to either penetrate Ms. Velez or touch her genitalia. Next, Ms. Velez can be
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seen climaxing. The scene ends with them sharing a kiss and laying down on the
bed with Mr. Escobar on top of Ms. Velez.
2
In season one, episode 104, of Narcos, Mr. Escobar and some of his associates
are discussing the fate of another drug kingpin who was extradited to the United
States. One of them says that a motion has been filed before the Colombian Supreme
Court challenging the legality of extradition, which is going to be considered this
week. Another associate says, “[w]e’re next, aren’t we?” D.E. 81. Mr. Escobar
says that a jail in the United States is worse than death and adds: “But remember,
they want someone more than they want us. So, brothers, it’s time to give them what
they want, isn’t it?”
Id.
The meeting scene in Narcos opens with Mr. Escobar sitting in a room with a
man named Ivan. Mr. Escobar is trying to strike a deal with Ivan, who seems
relatively young, has a beard, mustache, and is dressed in civilian clothes. Ivan is
leaning back on the couch while Mr. Escobar is leaning forward on the edge of a
chair. There are several armed men in the room.
Ivan tells Mr. Escobar that he did not think their paths would cross again. He
continues by implying that the attack on the Palace of Justice would not be that
simple; it would require more men and weapons, and there would be casualties. Ivan
then inquires about how much money is involved. Mr. Escobar answers two million
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dollars. Ivan states that it is too dangerous and Mr. Escobar counters that “fighting
a revolution comes with sacrifice.”
Id.
The camera then cuts to a woman, not Ms. Velez, wearing scrubs, who gets
out of a taxi in front of a house and walks through the house’s outside gate. The
scene cuts away from the woman and back inside to the meeting between Mr.
Escobar and Ivan. A knock is heard. One of the armed men answers the door while
Mr. Escobar presses Ivan by telling him that “it is our duty to fight to the very end.
We have a[ ] historical obligation. We can’t ignore it.”
Id. The woman in scrubs is
then escorted into the room and Ivan says “[m]eet Pablo Escobar.”
Id. Mr. Escobar
stands, and the men agree that they have a deal. Mr. Escobar and his men leave.
The woman in scrubs—Ivan’s comrade in arms, viewers are led to assume—
asks Ivan, “[w]hat the hell is this?”
Id. He tells her that he and Mr. Escobar have
reached an agreement involving an exchange of money that is “necessary for the
revolutionary fight.”
Id. He does not explain to her what the agreement entails, and
she tells him, “I fight for the people, not for the drug traffickers.”
Id.
In the next scene, the woman in scrubs approaches one of her co-workers and
asks to speak to the co-worker’s husband, who works at the United States Embassy.
She tells her co-worker that “Pablo Escobar is planning something with the
communist group called M-19. I don’t know what it is, but I know it is going to be
bad.”
Id. The co-worker can be seen calling her husband, but by the time she tells
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him, news of the raid on the Palace of Justice is breaking on television. The
voiceover of the series’ narrator then takes over:
Financed by Escobar, the M-19 guerillas stormed the
Palace of Justice and occupied the Supreme Court. They
took over a hundred hostages and made a bunch of
demands about the redistribution of wealth, and an end to
injustice and tyranny, but it was all bullshit. The military
attacked, dozens of lives were lost in the carnage,
including half the Colombian Supreme Court justices.
Most of the M-19 were killed, some escaped, but not
before accomplishing their true goal: setting fire to the
room that contained six hundred thousand pages of
evidence against Escobar. The entire case against him
turned to ash. In the United States, the mafia makes
witnesses disappear so they can’t testify in court. In
Colombia, Pablo Escobar made the whole court disappear.
Id. During the narration, a fictional film of the raid and military response is played.
Five men, including Ivan, are shown breaking into a file room in the Palace of
Justice, splashing gasoline on the files, and lighting them on fire.
II
Based on these scenes from episodes 103 and 104 of Narcos, Ms. Vallejo
brought a copyright infringement claim against the defendants. After reviewing both
the memoir and the Narcos scenes at issue, the district court granted summary
judgment in favor of the defendants. Ms. Vallejo now appeals.
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment, viewing
the evidence in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion. See Leigh
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v. Warner Bros., Inc.,
212 F.3d 1210, 1214 (11th Cir. 2000). “Summary judgment
is only proper when there are no genuine issues of material fact” and the moving
party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Id.
Ms. Vallejo argues that “summary judgment is often inappropriate in
copyright infringement cases due to their inherent subjectivity.” Appellant’s Br. at
25. See also Beal v. Paramount Pictures Corp.,
20 F.3d 454, 459 (11th Cir. 1994)
(stating that “[s]ome courts have observed that summary judgment is peculiarly
inappropriate in copyright infringement cases due to their inherent subjectivity”)
(citing Hoehling v. Universal City Studios, Inc.,
618 F.2d 972, 977 (2d Cir. 1980)).
We, however, have affirmed the grant of “summary judgment in infringement cases
when it is clear that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Id.
III
To succeed on a copyright infringement claim, the plaintiff must prove “(1)
ownership of a valid copyright, and (2) copying of constituent elements of the work
that are original.” Feist Publ’n, Inc., v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co.,
499 U.S. 340, 361
(1991). In their motion for summary judgment, the defendants conceded that Ms.
Vallejo holds a valid copyright in her memoir Amando a Pablo, Odiando a Escobar
(2013). Thus, only the copying element is contested.
The copying element is satisfied if (1) “the defendant, as a factual matter,
copied portions of the plaintiff’s” work, and (2) “as a mixed issue of fact and law,
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those elements of the [work] that have been copied are protected expression and of
such importance to the copied work that the appropriation is actionable.” MiTek
Holdings, Inc. v. Arce Eng’g Co., Inc.,
89 F.3d 1548, 1554 (11th Cir. 1996). Because
the defendants admitted that they had access to and copied from Ms. Vallejo’s
memoir, the district court assumed that the first prong of copyright infringement was
met. As a result, this “appeal centers on the subsequent inquiry of whether such
copying is legally actionable; that is, whether there is substantial similarity between
the allegedly offending [works] and the protectable, original elements of the”
memoir. See Peter Letterese & Assocs., Inc. v. World Inst. of Scientology Enters.
Int’l,
533 F.3d 1287, 1301 (11th Cir. 2008) (citations and internal quotation marks
omitted). We may affirm the grant of “summary judgment for a defendant if the
similarity between the works concerns only noncopyrightable elements, or if no
reasonable jury upon proper instruction would find that the two works are
substantially similar.”
Beal, 20 F.3d at 459.
A
Before determining whether there is substantial similarity between two works,
we must first separate the unprotected facts from the protected expression of those
facts. See Cable/Home Commc’n Corp. v. Network Prods., Inc.,
902 F.2d 829, 843
(11th Cir. 1990) (citing Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enters.,
471 U.S.
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539, 556 (1985)). This means that we must determine what parts of Ms. Vallejo’s
memoir are protected under copyright law and which parts are not.1
We have long held that “copyright protection extends only to an author’s
expression of facts and not to the facts themselves.” Miller v. Universal City Studios,
Inc.,
650 F.2d 1365, 1368 (5th Cir. 1981). An author “may not claim that the facts
are original with him although there may be originality and hence authorship in the
manner of reporting, i.e., the expression, of the facts.”
Id. (quotations and citations
omitted). “[T]he mere use of the information contained in a [work] without a
substantial copying of the format does not constitute infringement.”
Id. at 1369–70.
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted). A person who reports new facts
for the first time cannot claim copyright protection in the further dissemination of
those facts. See
Feist, 499 U.S. at 353 (citing
Miller, 650 F.2d at 1372). With these
principles in mind, we address which parts of Ms. Vallejo’s memoir constitute
unprotected facts and which parts constitute the protected expressions of those
facts.2
1
Ms. Vallejo argues that the district court erred in failing to articulate a legal standard requiring it
to separate protectable copyright elements from unprotectable elements. We are not convinced.
The district court articulated and applied the correct legal standard. First, it stated that the only
“issue for the [c]ourt is whether there is ‘substantial similarity’ between the Narcos scenes at issue
and the protectable, original elements of [Ms. Vallejo]’s Memoir.” D.E. 120 at 10 (emphasis
added). Second, in its analysis, the district court repeatedly separated the unprotectable facts in
the memoir from the protectable expression of those facts. See
id. at 12, 15 (separating the
unprotectable facts from the protectable expression of facts).
2
Ms. Vallejo contends that her memoir is a fictional collective work of historical research
regarding Mr. Escobar and is written in the style of “magical realism.” In making this argument,
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Ms. Vallejo has repeatedly admitted that the facts reported in her memoir are
true. At her deposition, Ms. Vallejo testified that her foreplay with Mr. Escobar,
while he was holding a gun, had taken place. She similarly acknowledged that the
meeting between Mr. Ospina and Mr. Escobar, where they planned the attack on the
Palace of Justice and where Mr. Escobar agreed to pay two million dollars, was also
true. We therefore conclude that those facts, standing alone, do not enjoy copyright
protection and could have been freely copied by the defendants in writing the Narcos
series.
We now turn to those parts of Ms. Vallejo’s memoir that do enjoy copyright
protection. These are the expression of the facts contained in the publication. See
Miller, 650 F.2d at 1368. In other words, Ms. Vallejo has copyright protection in
the way that she set her “characters, theme, plot, setting, and mood and pace.”
Herzog v. Castle Rock Ent.,
193 F.3d 1241, 1258 (11th Cir. 1999). This protection
includes the purported “magical realism” style in which she wrote her memoir, as
well as the alleged scenes and dialogues that she recreated after 20 years from her
own memory.
Ms. Vallejo attempts to avoid well-settled copyright precedent which provides that works that are
considered non-fiction or a compilation of facts receive only thin copyright protection. See
Feist,
499 U.S. at 349. Although it is true that fictional works based on historical research may receive
more copyright protection than a pure non-fiction work or a compilation of facts, the historical
facts contained within the fictional work remain unprotected. See
Miller, 650 F.2d at 1368.
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B
Having separated the unprotected facts from the expression of those facts in
Ms. Vallejo’s memoir, we now address whether the two Narcos scenes at issue here
are substantially similar to the expression of facts in the two chapters of Ms.
Vallejo’s memoir, “The Caress of a Revolver” and “That Palace in Flames.”
1
Ms. Vallejo argues that the district court erred in concluding that the scene in
episode 103 of Narcos was not substantially similar to her chapter “The Caress of a
Revolver.” We are not persuaded.
She maintains that the defendants appropriated more than mere facts. In her
view, they misappropriated her artistic expression “including, her personal choices
of details, and subjective observations, such as the profiling of characters and her
illustration of the interplay of the characters.” Appellant’s Br. at 43–44. She points
to the following similarities: (1) Ms. Velez is blindfolded with a black blindfold; (2)
Mr. Escobar uses a gun to caresses her neck and chest in a menacing way; (3) she
appears aroused; (4) the scene takes place in an elegant room; (5) she is bound to
furniture; (6) she acts in a submissive manner; (7) she does not appear to be afraid
of Mr. Escobar; (8) Mr. Escobar grabs her by the hair; and (9) Mr. Escobar uses the
gun in the same manner that she described in her memoir.
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The first two alleged similarities—the blindfold and the use of the gun by Mr.
Escobar—are unprotected facts, as Ms. Vallejo admitted that they indeed took place.
The rest of the alleged similarities do not copy Ms. Vallejo’s expression of facts in
the memoir. In the memoir, Ms. Vallejo is sitting in a low-backed chair, and she is
handcuffed by one of her ankles after Mr. Escobar stops using the gun. In the Narcos
episode, both of Ms. Velez’s arms are bound to a bedpost before Mr. Escobar uses
the gun. Contrary to her suggestions, in her memoir Ms. Vallejo does not act in a
submissive manner towards Mr. Escobar; instead, she verbally spars with him by
telling him that “I would never underestimate a criminal with delusions of a
schizophrenic.” D.E. 76-1 at 13. She also threatens Mr. Escobar with walking out
if he continues to move the gun any lower. The Narcos episode, on the other hand,
shows Ms. Velez being completely submissive towards Mr. Escobar; she agrees to
help him run for Congress and allows him to use the gun any way he wants.
Additional differences doom Ms. Vallejo’s arguments that the defendants
copied the details of her personal artistic choices. For example, the two scenes occur
in different settings. In the memoir, Ms. Vallejo sits on a low-backed chair, but in
the Narcos episode she is laying on a bed.
The defendants did not appropriate Ms. Vallejo’s subjective observations or
her characters’ exchanges. In “The Caress of a Revolver,” Ms. Vallejo attempts to
portray “an understanding of the manipulation and power dynamics that defined
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[her] romantic relationship with [Mr.] Escobar.” Appellant’s Br. at 50. Those
“manipulations and power dynamic” themes are wholly absent from the Narcos
episode, where the only person in charge is Mr. Escobar.
The mood in both scenes is also quite different, as is evident from the
dialogue. In the memoir, Ms. Vallejo describes how being caressed by the gun
makes her feel. Yet the dialogue in the Narcos episode shows Mr. Escobar trying to
enlist Ms. Velez to help him run for Congress. In Ms. Vallejo’s memoir, Mr.
Escobar takes Ms. Vallejo to his penthouse to show her his fake passports. In the
Narcos episode, Mr. Escobar is complaining about all the publicity he is getting and
enlists Ms. Velez’s help in running for Congress.
In sum, we conclude that the defendants used unprotectable facts from Ms.
Vallejo’s memoir and did not copy her expression of those facts because the plot,
setting, mood, and the characters’ interplay are not substantially similar. The district
court therefore did not err when it ruled that no reasonable juror could find that “The
Caress of a Revolver” and the scene from episode 103 of Narcos were substantially
similar.
2
Ms. Vallejo similarly maintains that the district court erred when it found that
the meeting scene in episode 104 of Narcos was not substantially similar to her
chapter “That Palace in Flames.” We disagree.
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Ms. Vallejo points in her brief to the following similarities between her
chapter and the Narcos scene, including, (1) one of her memoir chapters is titled
“That Palace in Flames,” and episode 104 in Narcos is titled “The Palace in Flames;”
(2) Mr. Escobar and Ivan are in a hideout; (3) Ivan has a beard; (4) Ivan is wearing
civilian clothing, and is of medium build with blunt features; (5) Ivan discusses the
risk of casualties and the danger; (6) Mr. Escobar offers to pay two million dollars;
(7) Mr. Escobar uses revolutionary overtones to persuade Ivan; and (8) Mr. Escobar
is convinced that extradition is imminent.
Our comparison of “That Palace in Flames” and the meeting scene in episode
104 of Narcos, indicates that they are not substantially similar. Some of the alleged
similarities constitute unprotectable facts, such as (1) the name of the M-19 rebel
leader as Ivan or Mr. Ospina, (2) Mr. Escobar offering the two million dollars as
payment, and (3) the physical description of Ivan.3
The Narcos scene, moreover, does not share or copy the protected expression
found in “That Palace in Flames,” as the plot, theme, dialogue, and tone are
dissimilar. First, the details of the plot are different; for example, Ms. Vallejo’s
counterpart character in Narcos, Ms. Velez, is not even present in the Narcos scene.
Instead, the Narcos scene introduces a new female character who did not appear in
3
Furthermore, though it is true that Narcos episode 104 has an almost identical title as the chapter
in Ms. Vallejo’s memoir, “[w]ords and short phrases such as names, titles, and slogans” are not
subject to copyright protection. See 37 C.F.R. § 202.1(a).
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the memoir, and who tries to thwart the attack by informing someone with a
connection to the United States Embassy. Some of the themes are likewise different.
The memoir implies that Mr. Ospina is attracted to Ms. Vallejo by saying that he
could not take his eyes from her, but that thematic element cannot be present in
Narcos because, again, her character (Ms. Velez) is not present in the scene.
The dialogue and tone differ as well. In “That Palace in Flames,” Ms. Vallejo
tells Mr. Ospina that she shares similar beliefs as him by telling him that she quit her
job for refusing to call the rebels a “band of criminals.” D.E. 76-1 at 25. The meeting
scene in Narcos focuses solely on the conversation between Mr. Escobar and Ivan
regarding the attack on the Palace of Justice, and it is Mr. Escobar who uses
revolutionary rhetoric to convince Ivan to carry out the attack.
We conclude, therefore, that the plot, theme, dialogue, and tone of “That
Palace in Flames” and the Narcos meeting scene in episode 104 are not substantially
similar. We therefore agree with the district court that no reasonable jury could find
that the two works are substantially similar.
C
Ms. Vallejo also contends that the district court failed to recognize the legal
distinction between historical and non-historical facts in assessing whether the facts
she reported in her memoir should be given copyright protection. Essentially, she
asserts that so-called historical facts lack copyright protection because they are
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newsworthy and that so-called non-historical facts are protected by copyright law
because they are personal. We are not persuaded by Ms. Vallejo’s distinction.
First, we are skeptical of Ms. Vallejo’s argument that the facts she reported
regarding Mr. Escobar in the chapters at issue are not of historical importance.
Given that Mr. Escobar is considered one of the biggest drug lords in the history of
Colombia, and that his life has been fully scrutinized by the media, we expect that
most facts about Mr. Escobar, particularly new ones, will receive national and
international attention.
Second, we are not convinced that the purported distinction between historical
facts and non-historical facts is legally sound. Ms. Vallejo fails to cite any cases or
authorities that support her proposition. The cases that Ms. Vallejo relies on do not
differentiate between historical facts and non-historical facts, and merely stand for
the unremarkable proposition that a defendant cannot copy verbatim the plaintiff’s
work even if the work is considered non-fiction. See Harper &
Row, 471 U.S. at
548–49 (finding copyright infringement where the defendant admitted to copying
verbatim portions of the plaintiff’s work); Scales v. Webb, No. 1:15CV192,
2016
WL 1267756, *3 (M.D.N.C. Mar. 30, 2016) (finding that the defendant had copied
verbatim substantial portions of the plaintiff’s work, including unprotected facts and
protected expression).
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Third, in Feist the Supreme Court stated that “facts—scientific, historical,
biographical, and news of the day” do not receive copyright protection.
Feist, 499
U.S. at 347–48 (denying protection to historically non-significant telephone
numbers). See also 1 Nimmer on Copyright § 2.11[A] (2019) (explaining that
“[c]ourts have denied copyright protection not only to raw historical facts, but also
to facts set forth in biographical works, in news stories, and in other forms of
expression”). We decline the invitation to distinguish between so-called historical
facts and so-called non-historical facts for purposes of copyright protection.
Ms. Vallejo next claims that the district court erred by not applying a modified
substantial similarity standard when assessing whether substantial similarity exists
between works in two different types of media. She relies on Kustoff v. Chaplin,
120 F.2d 551, 561 (9th Cir. 1941), and states that the correct test to measure whether
two works in different media are substantially similar, and whether infringement of
a literary story has occurred, is whether “an ordinary observer is led to believe that
the film is a picturization of the story.” Appellant’s Br. at 41–42. Again, we
disagree.
We do not believe that the test advanced in Kustoff still applies. Recent
decisions from the Ninth Circuit have not applied such a modified standard, and have
instead used the same substantial similarity test used in our circuit. See Litchfield v.
Spielberg,
736 F.2d 1352, 1356–57 (9th Cir. 1984) (applying the substantial
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similarity test between works from two different types of media—a musical play and
a movie); Berkic v. Crichton,
761 F.2d 1289, 1292 (9th Cir. 1985) (applying the
substantial similarity test between a book and a movie). See also 4 Nimmer on
Copyright § 13.03[E][1] (stating that the ordinary observer or audience test has not
been embraced by the federal courts of appeals). We therefore refuse to divert from
our current substantial similarity test.
IV
We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the
defendants.
AFFIRMED.
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