Biskupic v. Cicero

2008 WI App 117, 756 N.W.2d 649, 313 Wis. 2d 225, 2008 Wisc. App. LEXIS 468
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJune 17, 2008
Docket2007AP2314
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2008 WI App 117 (Biskupic v. Cicero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biskupic v. Cicero, 2008 WI App 117, 756 N.W.2d 649, 313 Wis. 2d 225, 2008 Wisc. App. LEXIS 468 (Wis. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

PETERSON, J.

¶ 1. Vincent Biskupic is a former Outagamie County District Attorney and an unsuccessful candidate for Wisconsin Attorney General. He claims he was defamed by a newspaper article published by the Shawano Leader in August 2004. The article incorrectly stated Biskupic had been involved in bribery and graft.

¶ 2. Biskupic sued eight defendants, including the Leader, several of its employees, and Stacey Cicero, an individual quoted in the article. 1 The circuit court granted summary judgment dismissing the suit. We conclude Biskupic is a public figure. In order to prevail, *233 he must prove that the defamation was made with actual malice. On this record, there is not sufficient evidence of actual malice to create a genuine factual dispute on that issue. We therefore affirm the summary judgment. We also reject Biskupic's argument that the circuit court should have granted him judgment as a sanction for the Leader destroying evidence.

Background

¶ 3. Biskupic was Outagamie County District Attorney from 1994 until January 2003. In 2002, he ran unsuccessfully for Wisconsin Attorney General. During that campaign, an open records request revealed payments by Outagamie County criminal defendants and potential defendants to a crime prevention fund Bisk-upic controlled. Some of the payments were ordered as part of the defendants' sentences, while other payments were made under agreements in which no charges were filed or in which the defendant entered into a deferred prosecution agreement. An Ethics Board investigation, which ended in October 2003, expressed concerns about the practice but did not sanction Biskupic. The board concluded Biskupic did not profit personally from the fund and was not affiliated with any organization that received money from it.

¶ 4. Before he was elected district attorney, Bisk-upic worked for five years in the Winnebago County District Attorney's Office, including three years as deputy district attorney. At the time, Joe Paulus was Winnebago County District Attorney. In 2002, Paulus was voted out of office amid bribery allegations. In April 2004, Paulus was convicted of two federal charges for accepting approximately $50,000 to fix cases. The record includes fifty-six news articles and editorials from 2002 through 2005 mentioning both Paulus" and *234 Biskupic. Some discuss cases both Paulus and Biskupic were involved in prosecuting, while others cite the allegations against both men as a reason for changes in the justice system.

¶ 5. In July 2004, the circuit court judges in the Ninth Judicial Administrative District, which includes Shawano County, voted to stop the practice of judges ordering convicted defendants to pay money to nonprofit organizations. On August 23, 2004, the Leader ran an article about the district's decision under the headline "Agencies to lose thousands if fee on criminals ends." The article included information from Stacey Cicero, the executive director of Safe Haven, a domestic abuse prevention organization. Cicero stated the courts had been ordering defendants convicted of domestic abuse to pay $20 to domestic abuse prevention programs such as Safe Haven. The article continued:

Judges from [the Ninth Judicial District] met in July and voted to eliminate the fees next year.
"I believe it was done in response to the bribery and graft cases involving former Winnebago County District Attorney Vince Biskupic," said Cicero.
Biskupic was convicted of accepting bribes to dismiss cases. Some of the money that defendants paid to have their cases dismissed went to organizations that he (Biskupic) was involved in or into his own pocket.

¶ 6. The next day, the Leader ran a correction of the article. The correction stated:

A story in Monday's edition incorrectly referred to Vince Biskupic as a former Winnebago County District attorney [sic] accused of bribery and graft.
The name of that official is Joe Paulus, who was recently sentenced in federal court for personally accepting about $48,000 to reduce or avoid court cases.
*235 Also, according to Shawano County Circuit Court Judge J.R. Habeck, the Paulus case had nothing to do with the cutoff of funding for [crime prevention organizations].
Biskupic is a former Outagamie County district attorney. When he ran for the Wisconsin Attorney General office, an issue was raised as to whether he acted properly by accepting funds for [crime prevention organizations] as an alternative to prosecution.
Habeck said he's never heard or seen any allegation that Biskupic personally benefitted from these funds. He has not been charged.
However, Biskupic was rebuked by the state Ethics Board in 2003 for striking secret deals with defendants to avoid prosecution in exchange for payments óf up to $8,000 to local anti-crime groups and his privately operated crime-prevention fund.
It was this issue, Habeck said, that raised statewide judicial awareness of the possibility of paying sums without court proceedings, leading to a review of [crime prevention organization] practices.

The Leader ran a second correction on its front page in early September in response to a demand letter from Biskupic.

¶ 7. Biskupic filed suit in August 2005. He alleged two claims relevant here: slander against Cicero and libel against the Leader. Biskupic alleged Cicero's comments to the Leader slandered him, and the Leader libeled him when it printed Cicero's comments and the paragraph stating Biskupic had been convicted of accepting bribes.

¶ 8. In her deposition, Cicero stated she had been accurately quoted in the article. She said when she was interviewed for the article, she intended to refer to *236 Paulus, and had a "brain lapse" and inadvertently used Biskupic's name instead. Cicero said she did not believe she was the source of the information in the paragraph following her quote — that Biskupic had been convicted of bribery and graft and that money intended for nonprofits had gone into Biskupic's pocket — although she could not "recall the specific conversation."

¶ 9. Joe Vandel, 2 the reporter who wrote the story, was also deposed. Vandel said both Cicero's quote and the information in the paragraph following the quote came from Cicero. He said Cicero had provided him with correct information dozens of times in the past, and he had "no reason to believe what she was telling me was incorrect." Vandel admitted that in hindsight he "probably should have" verified the information, but at the time he did not doubt its veracity.

¶ 10. Vandel said he had no specific recollection of taking notes for this particular story, but his normal process was to take notes. When a story was finished, he would put his notes in a drawer. When the drawer filled up, he would discard the notes at the bottom, the notes from the oldest stories.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 WI App 117, 756 N.W.2d 649, 313 Wis. 2d 225, 2008 Wisc. App. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biskupic-v-cicero-wisctapp-2008.