Bochan v. La Fontaine

68 F. Supp. 2d 692, 27 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2057, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8253, 1999 WL 343780
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedMay 26, 1999
DocketCiv.A. 98-1749-A
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 68 F. Supp. 2d 692 (Bochan v. La Fontaine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bochan v. La Fontaine, 68 F. Supp. 2d 692, 27 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2057, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8253, 1999 WL 343780 (E.D. Va. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ELLIS, District Judge.

This is an Internet 1 libel case. Plaintiff, a Virginia resident, alleges that defen *695 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. 2 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.’ ” 3 The next day, Ray La Fontaine responded from Dallas, Texas, by posting a message to alt.conspirajcy.jfk. 4 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. 5 This author profile, as provided by Bochan, listed 238 *696 articles, 6 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. 7 , 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. 8

Harris also entered the fray on October 14, 1998, stating, in a posting to alt. con spiracy,jfk, 9 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.” 10 On October 17, 1998, Harris posted another message to alt. conspiracy, jfk which called alt.sex.fetish.tinygirls “Bochan’s newsgroup.” 11

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 *697 their publisher to national chains, 12 and iv) have never derived any revenue that they are aware of from Virginia. 13 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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Bluebook (online)
68 F. Supp. 2d 692, 27 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2057, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8253, 1999 WL 343780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bochan-v-la-fontaine-vaed-1999.