MAXINE M. CHESNEY, District Judge.
Before the Court is plaintiffs Planet Aid, Inc. and Lisbeth Thompsen's motion to retransfer or, in the alternative, to take jurisdictional discovery, filed July 11, 2017, by which plaintiffs challenge an order of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, granting defendants Reveal, Center for Investigative Reporting ("Reveal"), Matt Smith ("Smith"), and Amy Walters' ("Walters") Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Personal Jurisdiction and Improper Venue, and transferring, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1406(a), the above-titled action to the Northern District of California. Defendants filed opposition, to which plaintiffs replied, and a hearing was held on October 27, 2017.
By Order filed October 30, 2017, the Court found plaintiffs had not shown the challenged order was "`clearly erroneous'" (
The issue currently before the Court is whether the newly discovered evidence identified in the supplemental briefing, together with evidence of defendants' previously submitted contacts, is sufficient to show defendants are subject to personal jurisdiction in Maryland, or, alternatively, to warrant further jurisdictional discovery. For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds plaintiffs have failed to make either such showing.
The claims brought in the above-titled action arise from what plaintiffs allege are false and defamatory statements contained in print and broadcast media, in particular, as relevant to plaintiffs' supplemental showing, podcasts published by Reveal and authored by Smith and Walters, two Reveal reporters based in California. The challenged podcast was aired on March 19, 2016, after which it was updated and re-broadcast on May 28, 2016, and June 2, 2016.
In their supplemental briefing, plaintiffs contend newly discovered evidence shows two Reveal employees, Deborah George ("George") and Susanne Reber ("Reber"), who reside in Maryland, were involved in the production and/or distribution of the challenged podcasts, and that such contacts, together with those previously submitted, are sufficient to show defendants are subject to personal jurisdiction in Maryland.
For a court to exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant consistent with due process, the "defendant must have sufficient minimum contacts with the forum."
In determining whether a defendant has "purposefully directed his activities" at the forum, the Fourth Circuit considers eight factors, one of which is "whether the defendant maintains offices or agents in the forum state."
In that regard, defendants, in response to plaintiffs' initial showing, submitted a declaration from George, in which she stated she provided occasional technical and logistical advice of a general nature and that she neither wrote nor edited any of the scripts or audio for the podcasts here at issue. (
The evidence now presented by plaintiffs, although providing additional detail, is consistent with George's initial description of her role, and likewise is unavailing. In particular, although Walters, on one occasion, described George as the "radio editor" on the stories (
None of the proffered new evidence contradicts George's earlier declaration that she had no role in the writing or editing of the scripts or podcasts. Nor have plaintiffs offered any evidence to show George had approval, let alone final approval, over the content of the stories; indeed, the new evidence is to the contrary. (
In sum, the newly presented evidence, in combination with the evidence previously considered, is insufficient to show plaintiffs' claims "arise out of" any of Georges activities, and thus is insufficient to show the District of Maryland has personal jurisdiction over defendants.
Subsequent to their initial showing, plaintiffs learned that Reber currently resides in Maryland, was the "Executive Editor" for all of Reveal's podcasts, including the podcasts challenged here (
Assuming,
To the extent plaintiffs contend Reber played a role in Reveal's response to the "retraction demand" Planet Aid sent on August 19, 2016 (
Consequently, plaintiffs' reliance on Reber's Maryland residence is unavailing.
In their supplemental briefing, plaintiffs contend defendants failed to comply with the Court's discovery order, and, based thereon, ask the Court to draw an inference that George and Reber were "substantially involved in the stories" (
First, plaintiffs contend defendants failed to produce some of the documents to which George made reference in her deposition, specifically, two Facebook messages in which the publication of the podcasts was announced, and emails she retrieved using search terms suggested by Reveal in the course of discovery. As to the former, there is nothing to indicate the documents are anything other than as described by George, and, as to the latter, plaintiffs, who received numerous email chains in which George was included, have not shown George retrieved any other emails relevant to the instant inquiry.
Plaintiffs next contend defendants improperly redacted portions of some of the documents defendants produced. Defendants have submitted, however, a privilege log explaining such redactions were made to preserve the identities of confidential sources as well as to protect unpublished information unrelated to the instant action. (
Likewise unavailing is plaintiffs' contention, based wholly on speculation, that, if they had received "native, electronic copies of documents" (
Lastly, given the Maryland court's finding that the podcasts "were drawn from a variety of sources . . . across the United States and several countries" (
For the reasons stated, plaintiffs' motion is hereby DENIED.