Dennis Montgomery v. James Risen

CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 17, 2017
Docket16-7096
StatusPublished

This text of Dennis Montgomery v. James Risen (Dennis Montgomery v. James Risen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennis Montgomery v. James Risen, (D.C. Cir. 2017).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

Submitted September 22, 2017 Decided November 17, 2017

No. 16-7096

DENNIS L. MONTGOMERY, APPELLANT

v.

JAMES RISEN, ET AL., APPELLEES

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (No. 1:16-cv-00126)

Larry Klayman was on the briefs for appellant.

Laura R. Handman and Lisa B. Zycherman were on the brief for appellees.

Bruce D. Brown and Gregg P. Leslie were on the brief for amici curiae The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and 35 Media Organizations in support of defendants- appellees.

Before: GRIFFITH and PILLARD, Circuit Judges, and EDWARDS, Senior Circuit Judge.

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge PILLARD. 2

PILLARD, Circuit Judge: Software developer Dennis Montgomery appeals from summary judgment in his defamation action. Montgomery claimed that author James Risen, together with publishers Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Company (collectively, Defendants or Risen), made false and damaging statements about Montgomery in the book Pay Any Price: Greed, Power, and Endless War (2014). A chapter of the book focuses on software that Montgomery pitched to the United States as a counterterrorism tool, but that ultimately was widely seen as a “hoax.” Id. at 33. Risen describes Montgomery and his phantom software as “the perfect case study to explain how during the war on terror greed and ambition have been married to unlimited rivers of cash to create a climate in which someone who has been accused of being a con artist was able to create a rogue intelligence operation with little or no adult supervision.” Id. at 31-32.

This is Montgomery’s defamation case—he chose to bring it. To sustain it against a motion for summary judgment, he would have had to marshal sufficient evidence to create a triable issue for a jury as to each element of his claim. The district court held that he failed to take the basic steps necessary to do so. Critically, he produced virtually no evidence of the software’s functionality to factually rebut Risen’s statements that it never worked as Montgomery said it did.

Risen’s reporting is, at its core, about how authorities at the highest levels of government fell for a “ruse,” id. at 32: software that could never be verified. This lawsuit, too, has been defined by the software’s persistent absence. That lacuna in the record dooms Montgomery’s case. We affirm the district court’s well-reasoned grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendants. 3 Background

A. The Challenged Chapter

Risen’s book, Pay Any Price, argues that a post-9/11 scramble to strengthen national security led the U.S. government and its contractors to “throw cash at counterterrorism” and hastily create a “homeland security- industrial complex” that was both wasteful and ineffective. Id. at xiii-xvi, 32. Montgomery’s software was the subject of one chapter titled “The Emperor of the War on Terror” (Chapter). See id. at 31-53.

The Chapter chronicles Montgomery’s marketing of software he invented that, he claimed, had revolutionary capabilities to detect layers of data embedded in video and to perceive granular detail in video images taken at great distances. Montgomery first unsuccessfully pitched his software to Hollywood, the Chapter details, as a new way to more precisely colorize film from old black-and-white movies, and then to casinos in Las Vegas to scope out cheaters on surveillance tapes. Having struck out twice, he turned to Washington, D.C. Risen’s Chapter focuses on how Montgomery sold his wares to the federal government. He persuaded Pentagon officials that the software could improve the accuracy of its predator drone program. And he convinced the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) that it could detect hidden messages in television broadcasts.

The Chapter describes how the CIA came to believe that the software uncovered “hidden letters and numbers embedded” in Al Jazeera tapes—combinations like “AA” and “UA,” followed by two or three digits. Id. at 41. According to Risen, the CIA connected the dots, concluding that those codes represented flights that would soon be the targets of impending 4 al Qaeda attacks. The software’s influence culminated in December 2003: Then-CIA Director George Tenet “rushed directly to President [George W.] Bush when information provided by Montgomery and his software purported to show that a series of flights from France, Britain, and Mexico to the United States around Christmas were being targeted by al Qaeda.” Id. at 42. Based on that data, the Chapter recounts, President Bush ordered that a series of flights be grounded. Information ostensibly mined from the broadcasts also caused the Bush administration to discuss directing fighter jets to shoot down a commercial flight filled with passengers over the Atlantic.

Once the “fever” of that post-9/11 period broke, Risen reports, government officials saw the software for what it was: an “illusion.” Id. at 32.

B. Procedural History

Incensed by the allegations in the Chapter, Montgomery sued Risen and his publisher in February, 2015. The Southern District of Florida, where Montgomery initially filed, transferred the case to the District of Columbia, where a substantial part of the relevant events and research into them occurred and for the convenience of the parties and witnesses. On July 15, 2016, the district court here issued an opinion resolving twelve outstanding motions or objections and granting Risen’s motion for summary judgment. See Montgomery v. Risen, 197 F. Supp. 3d 219 (D.D.C. 2016).

The district court had directed Montgomery to produce the subject software. Id. at 238-45. It specifically rejected Montgomery’s arguments that the software is either not relevant to the case or not capable of production. Id. at 239-42. The court was “substantially troubled by Montgomery’s and his counsel’s conduct in this case,” specifically, their 5 representations about the software and failure to produce it in violation of a court order. Id. at 246. The court considered imposing case-ending spoliation sanctions, but deemed them unnecessary because the case was readily subject to judgment on its merits. Id.

It is worth remarking that this case is not the first in which Montgomery has balked at producing or otherwise demonstrating the capabilities of his obscure software. In his suit against his ex-employer in Nevada, he similarly refused in contravention of a court order to produce the software. J.A. 826-39. The court imposed monetary sanctions of $2,500 per day for continued failure to comply. J.A. 844. Montgomery settled that suit without producing his software. See J.A. 847- 73.

The district court held that production of Montgomery’s software or other evidence corroborating Montgomery’s claims about its capabilities was critical to his case. Where a defamation plaintiff challenges statements on matters of public concern, it is his burden to prove the falsity of the statements. See Montgomery, 197 F. Supp. 3d at 239, 251-54. Risen was entitled to summary judgment because Montgomery failed to marshal evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that Risen’s reporting about the software was untrue. Id. at 251-54.

The district court also held that Montgomery is a limited- purpose public figure, meaning that he could recover for defamation only if he further established that Risen published the falsehoods with “actual malice.” Id. at 258. Montgomery failed to make any showing of actual malice on Risen or the publishers’ part. Id. at 266.

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