Dickinson v. Cosby

225 Cal. Rptr. 3d 430, 17 Cal. App. 5th 655
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedNovember 21, 2017
DocketB271470
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 225 Cal. Rptr. 3d 430 (Dickinson v. Cosby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickinson v. Cosby, 225 Cal. Rptr. 3d 430, 17 Cal. App. 5th 655 (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

RUBIN, J.

*660Plaintiff Janice Dickinson went public with her accusations of rape against William H. Cosby, Jr. Cosby, in turn, through his attorney, Martin Singer, reacted with (1) a letter demanding media outlets not repeat Dickinson's allegedly false accusation, under threat of litigation ("demand letter"); and (2) a press release characterizing Dickinson's rape accusation as a lie ("press release"). Dickinson brought suit against Cosby for defamation and related causes of action. Cosby responded with a motion to strike under Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16 (the "anti-SLAPP" statute).1 When Cosby's submissions indicated that Singer might have issued the statements without first asking Cosby if the rape accusations were true, Dickinson filed a first amended complaint, adding *438Singer as a defendant. Cosby and Singer successfully moved to strike the first amended complaint because of the pending anti-SLAPP motion. The court then heard Cosby's anti-SLAPP motion, granting it as to the demand letter, and denying it as to the press release.

Dickinson appeals the order granting the motion to strike her first amended complaint; and the grant of the anti-SLAPP motion with respect to the demand letter. Cosby appeals the order denying his anti-SLAPP motion with respect to the press release. We conclude: (1) the court erred in striking Dickinson's first amended complaint, as it pertains only to a party, Singer, who had not filed an anti-SLAPP motion; (2) the court erred in granting the *661anti-SLAPP motion with respect to the demand letter; and (3) the court correctly denied the anti-SLAPP motion with respect to the press release. Accordingly, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1. The Alleged Rape

According to Dickinson, Cosby drugged and raped her in 1982. Dickinson was a successful model; Cosby was a famous comedian and television actor. They met for dinner, and Dickinson complained to Cosby of menstrual cramps. Cosby offered her a pill that he said would help; the pill was actually a narcotic which heavily sedated her. Later that night, he sexually assaulted her, committing vaginal and anal rape. Dickinson did not report the crime, due to fear of retaliation by Cosby, "a wealthy, powerful celebrity." The evidence would show, however, that she did tell some close friends.

2. Dickinson's Autobiography

In 2002, Dickinson's autobiography, No Lifeguard on Duty , was published by Regan Books, an imprint of HarperCollins. Dickinson's evidence in opposition to the anti-SLAPP motion shows the following: Dickinson disclosed the rape to her ghostwriter, Pablo Fenjves, and wanted it included in the book. The president of Regan Books, Judith Regan, discussed the matter with the legal department at HarperCollins, which said the rape could not be included without corroboration. Regan thought corroboration would be difficult, but believed Dickinson to be credible and argued to include the rape. As the HarperCollins legal department refused to publish the rape allegations, Fenjves wrote a "sanitized version of the encounter," in which Dickinson "rebuffed Cosby's sexual advances and retreated to her room." The book stated that when Dickinson turned Cosby down, "he gave [her] the dirtiest, meanest look in the world, stepped into his suite, and slammed the door in [her] face." According to Regan, Cosby was "mentioned in the book to satisfy Ms. Dickinson in some way; however the story was modified to deal with the issue without any legal problems."

In September 2002, shortly after publication of the book, the New York Observer published an interview with Dickinson. The article begins with the interviewer discussing highlights from the book, including that Dickinson believed Cosby when he told her that she had a good singing voice, "that is, until she didn't want to go to bed with him and he blew her off." The interviewer later asked Dickinson about the Cosby encounter from her book, to which Dickinson is quoted as responding, " 'Oh, he's so sad.' " Dickinson did not mention rape in the published portion of the interview.

*6623. The November 18, 2014 Disclosure

By late 2014-12 years after Dickinson's book had been published-other women *439had publicly accused Cosby of drugging and raping them. On November 18, 2014, in a television interview with Entertainment Tonight , Dickinson disclosed that Cosby had raped her. By this time, Dickinson had become a successful reality television personality. Her accusation garnered substantial media attention.

Cosby would subsequently make much of the point that, in addition to accusing him of rape, Dickinson may have also accused him of killing the rape story in her autobiography. A story on ETOnline states that Dickinson wanted to write about the rape, "but claims that when she submitted a draft with her full story to HarperCollins, Cosby and his lawyers pressured her and her publisher to remove the details." While it is true that the ETOnline story states this, it is not completely clear whether Dickinson had actually made that statement to Entertainment Tonight -or instead, ETOnline may have misconstrued Dickinson's explanation as to why the rape was omitted from her autobiography. A transcript of Dickinson's actual interview with Entertainment Tonight makes no mention of Cosby or his lawyers pressuring HarperCollins.

4. The Demand Letter

After the Entertainment Tonight interview went public, several media outlets contacted the Cosby camp, indicating an intention to run follow-up stories and seeking Cosby's comment. In response, that same day, Singer, on behalf of Cosby, sent a demand letter to the executive producer of Good Morning America , with similar letters to other media outlets. The demand letter was over two pages long, on letterhead from Singer's law firm, and began with the warnings: "CONFIDENTIAL LEGAL NOTICE" and "PUBLICATION OR DISSEMINATION IS PROHIBITED."

The body of the letter started with, "We are litigation counsel to Bill Cosby. We are writing regarding the planned Good Morning America segment interviewing Janice Dickinson regarding the false and outlandish claims she made about Mr. Cosby in an Entertainment Tonight interview, asserting that he raped her in 1982 (the 'Story'). That Story is fabricated and is an outrageous defamatory lie. In the past, Ms. Dickinson repeatedly confirmed, both in her own book and in an interview she gave to the New York Observer in 2002, that back in 1982 my client 'blew her off' after dinner because she did not sleep with him. Her new Story claiming that she had been sexually assaulted is a defamatory fabrication, and she is attempting to justify this new false Story with yet another fabrication, claiming that Mr. Cosby and his *663lawyers had supposedly pressured her publisher to remove the sexual assault story from her 2002 book.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 Cal. Rptr. 3d 430, 17 Cal. App. 5th 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-v-cosby-calctapp5d-2017.