MEMORANDUM OPINION
ELLIS, District Judge.
This is an Internet
libel case. Plaintiff, a Virginia resident, alleges that defen
dants, Texas and New Mexico residents, defamed him in Virginia and elsewhere by posting libelous messages from Texas and New Mexico on an Internet newsgroup. At issue is whether there is personal jurisdiction over defendants in Virginia. For the reasons that follow, defendants’ alleged activities are sufficient to warrant personal jurisdiction.
I.
Plaintiff, a devoté of John F. Kennedy (JFK) conspiracy theories, is the district manager of a group of theaters in Northern Virginia. Journalists Ray and Mary La Fontaine are Texas residents who wrote a book on the JFK assassination entitled
Oswald Talked: The New Evidence in the JFK Assassination.
Defendant Robert Harris, who is yet another JFK conspiracy devoté, is a resident of Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he owns Computer Works, a New Mexico-based computer systems business.
Plaintiff purchased the La Fontaines’ book at Borders Bookstore in Fairfax, Va. sometime after it was published in 1996. He became a vocal critic of the book, often expressing his criticisms via the Internet, specifically by posting his critiques to the interactive newsgroup
alt.conspiracy.jfk.
These postings provoked defendants to post responses to the newsgroup, which responsive postings are the alleged defa-mations in this action.
The principal precipitating event occurred on October 12, 1998, when plaintiff posted a message to the La Fontaines that contained the following quote from the acknowledgments of the La Fontaine’s book: “ ‘We thank Charlotte and Eugenia for putting up with weird parents.’ ”
The next day, Ray La Fontaine responded from Dallas, Texas, by posting a message to
alt.conspirajcy.jfk.
This October 13, 1998 posting was labeled “The scum posts of Bochan,” and stated, “I know you like kids, Bochan, but I suggest you limit your interest to trolling in
alt.sex.festish.tiny-girls
and leave our children out of it.” La Fontaine then went on in this posting to provide “for anyone interested” what La Fontaine claimed was Bochan’s October 1997 author profile with Deja News, an Internet discussion network.
This author profile, as provided by Bochan, listed 238
articles,
allegedly posted by Bochan, identifying the individual newsgroups to which each article was posted. The majority of the articles were listed as posted to various- conspiracy theory sites, but according to La Fontaine’s version of the author profile, Bochan also posted articles to three apparently pornographic sites:
alt. sex.fetish, tiny girls, alt. sex.pictures.male,
and
alt.sex.snuff.cannibalism.:
La Fontaine followed the alleged profile' with the following additional editorial comment directed to Bochan: “How come you only posted once to
alt.sex.fetish.tinygirls
and
alt.sex.pictures.male,
Bochan? Did you get lucky the first time around?”
The matter did not end with Ray La Fontaine’s- seemingly unsavory posting. On- October 14, 1998, Mary La Fontaine posted a message on
alt.conspiracy.jfk
to a friend of Boehan’s, which defended the La Fontaines’ actions in posting the alleged profile from Deja News.
, In this posting, Mary La Fontaine asserted that her husband had downloaded the profile directly from Deja News, and that she and her husband had decided to “reveal the truth” about the 1997 profile, then roughly a year old, because of the “not-so veiled attempt at intimidation” contained in the reference to the La Fontaines’ children in Bochan’s October 12, 1998 posting. Not content simply to defend the La Fontaine Deja News profile posting, Mary La Fontaine went on to suggest that Bochan’s friend would be derelict as a mother were she to allow her children to 'associate with Bo-chan.
Harris also entered the fray on October 14, 1998, stating, in a posting to
alt. con
spiracy,jfk,
that although Harris’s children were grown, he could imagine how the La Fontaines must feel to have a “sieko” like plaintiff making “not very subtle references” to their children, and further, expressing the hope that Bochan’s “tastes run more to sex.pictures.male than to tinygirls.”
On October 17, 1998, Harris posted another message to
alt. conspiracy, jfk
which called
alt.sex.fetish.tinygirls
“Bochan’s newsgroup.”
On the basis of these postings, Bochan sues both the La Fontaines and Harris in the Eastern District of Virginia for defamation and for intentional infliction of emotional distress, alleging that all defendants have publicly accused him of being a pedophile. At the threshold, defendants assert a lack of personal jurisdiction. In support of this contention, the La Fon-taines state that they i) have not been in Virginia since. 1993, when they drove from National Airport to the District of Columbia, ii) have not participated in any book promotions in Virginia, iii) receive no royalties from Virginia sales as they do not directly sell their book in Virginia, nor do they directly receive royalties on books sold by others in Virginia, but rather re-' ceive royalties on the total books sold by
their publisher to national chains,
and iv) have never derived any revenue that they are aware of from Virginia.
Moreover, they note as significant that they i) do not have their own website, ii) do not conduct commercial activity over the Internet, and in) made the allegedly defamatory postings by accessing the Internet through a California-based Internet service provider.
Harris, in support of his personal jurisdiction defense, states that he i) has never conducted any business in Virginia, ii) has only visited Virginia once, in 1994, to attend a Washington, D.C. conference and visit some historic sites in Virginia, iii) did not use any Virginia-based company in posting the allegedly defamatory comments, but instead used either California or New Mexico-based Internet service providers, and iv) did not direct his Internet postings to any Virginia resident. He further notes as significant that i) his website specifically states that Computer Works sells computers only in New Mexico, and ii) Computer Works has never sold any computers or computer products to anyone in Virginia.
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
ELLIS, District Judge.
This is an Internet
libel case. Plaintiff, a Virginia resident, alleges that defen
dants, Texas and New Mexico residents, defamed him in Virginia and elsewhere by posting libelous messages from Texas and New Mexico on an Internet newsgroup. At issue is whether there is personal jurisdiction over defendants in Virginia. For the reasons that follow, defendants’ alleged activities are sufficient to warrant personal jurisdiction.
I.
Plaintiff, a devoté of John F. Kennedy (JFK) conspiracy theories, is the district manager of a group of theaters in Northern Virginia. Journalists Ray and Mary La Fontaine are Texas residents who wrote a book on the JFK assassination entitled
Oswald Talked: The New Evidence in the JFK Assassination.
Defendant Robert Harris, who is yet another JFK conspiracy devoté, is a resident of Albuquerque, New Mexico, where he owns Computer Works, a New Mexico-based computer systems business.
Plaintiff purchased the La Fontaines’ book at Borders Bookstore in Fairfax, Va. sometime after it was published in 1996. He became a vocal critic of the book, often expressing his criticisms via the Internet, specifically by posting his critiques to the interactive newsgroup
alt.conspiracy.jfk.
These postings provoked defendants to post responses to the newsgroup, which responsive postings are the alleged defa-mations in this action.
The principal precipitating event occurred on October 12, 1998, when plaintiff posted a message to the La Fontaines that contained the following quote from the acknowledgments of the La Fontaine’s book: “ ‘We thank Charlotte and Eugenia for putting up with weird parents.’ ”
The next day, Ray La Fontaine responded from Dallas, Texas, by posting a message to
alt.conspirajcy.jfk.
This October 13, 1998 posting was labeled “The scum posts of Bochan,” and stated, “I know you like kids, Bochan, but I suggest you limit your interest to trolling in
alt.sex.festish.tiny-girls
and leave our children out of it.” La Fontaine then went on in this posting to provide “for anyone interested” what La Fontaine claimed was Bochan’s October 1997 author profile with Deja News, an Internet discussion network.
This author profile, as provided by Bochan, listed 238
articles,
allegedly posted by Bochan, identifying the individual newsgroups to which each article was posted. The majority of the articles were listed as posted to various- conspiracy theory sites, but according to La Fontaine’s version of the author profile, Bochan also posted articles to three apparently pornographic sites:
alt. sex.fetish, tiny girls, alt. sex.pictures.male,
and
alt.sex.snuff.cannibalism.:
La Fontaine followed the alleged profile' with the following additional editorial comment directed to Bochan: “How come you only posted once to
alt.sex.fetish.tinygirls
and
alt.sex.pictures.male,
Bochan? Did you get lucky the first time around?”
The matter did not end with Ray La Fontaine’s- seemingly unsavory posting. On- October 14, 1998, Mary La Fontaine posted a message on
alt.conspiracy.jfk
to a friend of Boehan’s, which defended the La Fontaines’ actions in posting the alleged profile from Deja News.
, In this posting, Mary La Fontaine asserted that her husband had downloaded the profile directly from Deja News, and that she and her husband had decided to “reveal the truth” about the 1997 profile, then roughly a year old, because of the “not-so veiled attempt at intimidation” contained in the reference to the La Fontaines’ children in Bochan’s October 12, 1998 posting. Not content simply to defend the La Fontaine Deja News profile posting, Mary La Fontaine went on to suggest that Bochan’s friend would be derelict as a mother were she to allow her children to 'associate with Bo-chan.
Harris also entered the fray on October 14, 1998, stating, in a posting to
alt. con
spiracy,jfk,
that although Harris’s children were grown, he could imagine how the La Fontaines must feel to have a “sieko” like plaintiff making “not very subtle references” to their children, and further, expressing the hope that Bochan’s “tastes run more to sex.pictures.male than to tinygirls.”
On October 17, 1998, Harris posted another message to
alt. conspiracy, jfk
which called
alt.sex.fetish.tinygirls
“Bochan’s newsgroup.”
On the basis of these postings, Bochan sues both the La Fontaines and Harris in the Eastern District of Virginia for defamation and for intentional infliction of emotional distress, alleging that all defendants have publicly accused him of being a pedophile. At the threshold, defendants assert a lack of personal jurisdiction. In support of this contention, the La Fon-taines state that they i) have not been in Virginia since. 1993, when they drove from National Airport to the District of Columbia, ii) have not participated in any book promotions in Virginia, iii) receive no royalties from Virginia sales as they do not directly sell their book in Virginia, nor do they directly receive royalties on books sold by others in Virginia, but rather re-' ceive royalties on the total books sold by
their publisher to national chains,
and iv) have never derived any revenue that they are aware of from Virginia.
Moreover, they note as significant that they i) do not have their own website, ii) do not conduct commercial activity over the Internet, and in) made the allegedly defamatory postings by accessing the Internet through a California-based Internet service provider.
Harris, in support of his personal jurisdiction defense, states that he i) has never conducted any business in Virginia, ii) has only visited Virginia once, in 1994, to attend a Washington, D.C. conference and visit some historic sites in Virginia, iii) did not use any Virginia-based company in posting the allegedly defamatory comments, but instead used either California or New Mexico-based Internet service providers, and iv) did not direct his Internet postings to any Virginia resident. He further notes as significant that i) his website specifically states that Computer Works sells computers only in New Mexico, and ii) Computer Works has never sold any computers or computer products to anyone in Virginia.
Bochan responds that the La Fontaines posted the allegedly defamatory messages using an account with AOL, a Virginia-based company, and moreover, that the La Fontaines have advertised, promoted and sold their book in Virginia.
As to Harris, Bochan notes i) that the website for his business, Computer Works, is interactive, contains contact information and advertisements, and is accessible to Virginia residents 24 hours a day, and ii) that Harris has advertised specific computers in a variety of newsgroups, suggesting that he would take credit cards over the Internet, and that there were no geographical limitations on buyers. Bochan moreover states that all defendants knew that he resides and works in Virginia, and that the reputational harm, as well as the emotional distress, would be suffered in Virginia.
II.
All defendants move to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(2), Fed.R.Civ.P., for lack of personal jurisdiction. When the exercise of personal jurisdiction is challenged pursuant to Rule 12(b)(2), Fed.R.Civ.P., the question “is one for the judge, with the burden on the plaintiff ultimately to prove the existence of a ground for jurisdiction by the preponderance of the evidence.”
See Combs v. Bakker,
886 F.2d 673, 676 (4th Cir.1989). When a court rules on this issue in reliance upon the complaint and affidavits alone, a plaintiff need only make a
prima facie
showing of a sufficient jurisdictional basis to survive the jurisdictional challenge. M
Specifically, a plaintiff in Virginia must make a
prima facie
showing that first, Virginia’s long-arm statute reaches the non-resident defendant given the cause of action alleged and the nature of the defendant’s Virginia contacts, and second, that the exercise of personal jurisdiction in
the circumstances is consistent with due process, that is, that the long-arm statute’s reach in the circumstances does not exceed its constitutional grasp.
See DeSantis v. Hafner Creations, Inc.,
949 F.Supp. 419, 422 (E.D.Va.1996);
see also Peanut Corp. of Am. v. Hollywood Brands, Inc.,
696 F.2d 311, 313 (4th Cir.1982). Although Virginia’s long-arm statute extends personal jurisdiction “to the outmost perimeters of due process,”
it nonetheless appears that it is possible “for the contacts of a non-resident defendant to satisfy due process but not meet the specific grasp of a Virginia long-arm statute provision.”
Bochan contends that jurisdiction exists over all defendants on the basis of two separate prongs of Virginia’s long arm statute, Va.Code § 8.01-328.1(A)(3), and § 8.01-328.1(A)(4). Under § 8.01-328.1(A)(3), a court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant who causes “tortious injury by an act or omission in this Commonwealth.”
See
Va.Code § 8.01-328.1(A)(3). Under § 8.01-328.1(A)(4), a court may exercise personal jurisdiction over a defendant who causes “tortious injury in this Commonwealth by an act or omission outside this Commonwealth” if that defendant i) regularly does or solicits business in Virginia, ii) engages in any other persistent course of conduct in Virginia, or iii) derives substantial revenue from goods used or consumed or services rendered, in Virginia.
See
Va.Code § 8.01-328.1(A)(4). As defendants contend that neither prong of the long-arm reaches them, each defendant’s contacts with the forum must be analyzed in turn under the relevant prongs of the long-arm.
A. The La Fontaine Defendants
Analysis properly begins with the question whether the La Fontaines’ conduct fits within the reach of § 8.01-328.1(A)(3). Put more concretely, the question is whether the La Fontaines committed a tort
(i.e.
libel) in Virginia by posting certain messages to an Internet newsgroup via AOL and Earthlink.net. This, as it happens, is a novel question in Virginia and there do not appear to be any decisions from other jurisdictions that are factually identical. There are, however, factually analogous cases that shed some light on how the Supreme Court of Virginia would analyze this issue. In
Krantz v. Air Line Pilots Association, Int’l,
427 S.E.2d 326, 245 Va. 202 (1993), the defendant airline pilot posted a message from New York to ACCESS, a computer bulletin board physically located in Virginia. This message called for other pilots to pass the word that plaintiff was a “scab,” apparently in an attempt to sabotage plaintiffs prospective- employment at another airline.
The Supreme Court of Virginia concluded that defendant’s use of a bulletin board based in a Virginia facility satisfied § 8.01-328.1(A)(3). In reaching this conclusion, the court stated that “[wjithout the use of ACCESS, a Virginia facility, [defendant] could not have obtained those recruits, and there would have been no interference with [plaintiffs] prospective contract, the third required element for a prima facie showing of this sort.”
See Krantz,
427 S.E.2d at 328.
Several federal district courts have applied the principles enunciated in
Krantz
to cases alleging Internet torts. In
Telco Communications v. An Apple a Day,
977 F.Supp. 404 (E.D.Va.1997), the court, in dicta,
concluded that jurisdiction existed under § 8.01-328.1(A)(3) on the ground that “[b]ut for the Internet service providers [AOL] and users present in Virginia, the alleged tort of defamation would not have occurred in Virginia.”
Thus, the court concluded that those defendants fell “under the jurisdictional net east by Krantz.”
In contrast, the court in
Mitchell v. McGowan,
Civ. No. 98-1026-A, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18587 (E.D.Va. September 18, 1998) (unpublished disposition), concluded that the defendant “appears to escape [the ‘net’ cast by
Krantz
] because the computer bulletin board he accessed is based in Texas,” noting that this distinction, though rather “fine,” was dispositive.
Thus, since
Krantz
courts have focused in large measure on the location of the Internet service provider or the server on which the bulletin board is stored and the role played by this service or hardware in facilitating the alleged tort.
Under this analysis, a
prima fa-cie
showing of a sufficient act by the La Fontaines in Virginia follows from their use of the AOL account, a Virginia-based service, to publish the allegedly defamatory statements. According to Bochan’s expert, because the postings were accomplished through defendant’s AOL account, they were transmitted first to AOL’s USENET server hardware, located in Loudon County, Virginia.
There, the message was apparently both stored temporarily and transmitted to other USENET servers around the world. Thus, as to the La Fontaines, because publication is a required element of defamation,
and a
prima facie
showing has been made that the use of USENET server in Virginia was integral to that publication, there is a sufficient act in Virginia to satisfy § 8.01-328.1(A)(3).
B. Defendant Hams
Because Harris did not use an AOL account after accessing the Internet, or use any Virginia-based service, but instead used only the Internet service providers Earthlink, located in California, or High Fiber, located in New Mexico, there is nothing in the record to suggest that Harris committed any tortious act in Virginia within the meaning of § 8.01-328.1(A)(3).
Therefore, personal jurisdiction over Harris, if it exists at all, must be based on § 8.01-328.1(A)(4). In this regard, because there is no dispute that the alleged injury occurred in Virginia, the question is whether Harris regularly does or solicits business in Virginia or engages in any persistent course of conduct in Virginia.
Courts determining personal jurisdiction primarily on the basis of Internet activity generally focus on “the nature and quality of activity that a defendant conducts over the Internet.”
A judicial consensus has generally emerged that personal jurisdiction exists when Internet activities involve the conduct of business over the Internet, including on-line contracting with residents of the jurisdiction or other kinds of substantial commercial interactivity.
' Federal courts in Virginia in particular have generally found that Internet advertising accessible to Virginia residents 24 hours a day constitutes solicitation of business in Virginia sufficient to satisfy the requirements of § 8.01-328.1(A)(4). Thus, in
Telco,
the district court, addressing § 8.01-328.1(A)(4), found that jurisdiction existed over defendants who had issued press releases on the Internet that allegedly caused the plaintiffs’ stock prices to fall. In that case, the district court concluded that defendants were conducting business over the Internet because they were advertising their firm and soliciting investment banking assistance when they posted the press releases.
See Telco,
977 F.Supp. at 406. The court’s reasoning was that “[b]eeause [defendants] conducted their advertising and soliciting over the Internet, which could be accessed by a Virginia resident 24 hours a day” the defendants conducted their business “regularly” under the terms of the long-arm statute sufficient to satisfy 8.01-328.1(A)(4).
Id.
at 407.
Here, Harris, as the owner of Computer Works, has solicited business in Virginia by promoting and advertising his computer hardware company on the Internet through its website, accessible to Virginia Internet users 24 hours a day. This website is interactive in several ways, although no sales are concluded through it.
More
over, even if the website contains sufficient geographic limitations to diminish its jurisdictional significance outside those geographic areas, Harris’s own advertisements of specific computers on Internet newsgroups include his name, company and telephone numbers so that he can be contacted, and state that there are no surcharges for Visa or Mastercard, occasionally specifically request reply by email, and in no way appear to place geographical limits on buyers.
Under these circumstances, Harris sufficiently advertises and solicits business within Virginia to find personal jurisdiction within the meaning of § 8.01 — 328.1(A)(4) of the Virginia long-arm.
III.
Given that § 8.01-328.1(A)(3) reaches the La Fontaines and that § 8.01-328.1(A)(4) reaches Harris, the next question is whether these reaches exceed the constitutional grasp of the provisions.
In this regard, the Due Process Clause requires that no defendant shall be haled into court unless defendant has “certain minimum contacts [with the state] ... such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.”
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
326 U.S. 310, 316, 66 S.Ct. 154, 90 L.Ed. 95 (1945). And the constitutional analysis, unlike the statutory analysis, is virtually identical with respect to both the La Fontaines and Harris. The statements made by all defendants posted on the Internet concerned the presumably local activities of an individual each knew was a Virginia citizen.
Bochan, and several of his Virginia friends, accessed the postings in Virginia, and the reputational harm resulting from defendants’ actions and allegations of pedophilia and sexual deviancy, if any, has been primarily suffered in Virginia, where Bochan lives and works. Under these circumstances, because the predominant “effects” of the La Fontaines’ and Harris’s conduct are in Virginia, these defendants could reasonably foresee being haled into court in this jurisdiction.
See Calder v. Jones,
465 U.S. 783, 789-90, 104 S.Ct. 1482, 79 L.Ed.2d 804 (1984) (holding that California court’s assertion of personal jurisdiction over Florida-based reporters did not violate due process when allegedly defamatory article that was the basis of the suit focused on the California activities of California residents);
First American First, Inc. v. National Ass’n of Bank Women,
802 F.2d 1511, 1517 (4th Cir.1986) (concluding that Virginia court’s exercise of jurisdiction did not violate Constitution when defendant knew or should have known that its alleged defamation would inflict the greatest injury upon plaintiff in Virginia, the state where he lived and conducted his business);
Telco,
977 F.Supp. at 407 (noting that assertion of jurisdiction was supported by the fact that the effect of the
challenged communication would be felt in Virginia). Thus, the constitutional prong of the inquiry is satisfied as to all defendants.
IV.
Based on the affidavits before the Court at this time, Bochan has made a
prima facie
case for jurisdiction over all defendants.
Thus, defendants’ motions to dismiss must be denied.
An appropriate Order has issued.
The Clerk is directed to send a copy of this Memorandum Opinion to all counsel of record.