Driessen, Kenneth v. Vabalaitus, Anthony

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedApril 14, 2023
Docket3:23-cv-00045
StatusUnknown

This text of Driessen, Kenneth v. Vabalaitus, Anthony (Driessen, Kenneth v. Vabalaitus, Anthony) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Driessen, Kenneth v. Vabalaitus, Anthony, (W.D. Wis. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

KENNETH LEROY DRIESSEN,

Plaintiff, v. OPINION and ORDER ANTHONY A. VABALAITUS, NICHOLAS A. PHILLIPS, SAWYER CTY. SHERIFF’S DEP’T, 23-cv-45-jdp SAWYER CTY. RECORD, and SEELEY SAWMILL SALOON,

Defendants.

Pro se plaintiff Kenneth Leroy Driessen alleges that defendants Anthony A. Vabalaitus and Nicholas A. Phillips assaulted him and that defendant Sawyer County Sheriff’s Department inadequately investigated the assault by, among other things, preparing a false police report. Driessen adds that defendant Sawyer County Record libeled him by using the false police report as a basis for a news article suggesting that he assaulted Vabalaitus. Sawyer County Record has moved to dismiss Driessen’s Wisconsin-law libel claim, contending that Driessen failed to comply with pre-suit notice requirements and that the judicial proceedings privilege protects its publication of the article. I will grant the motion and dismiss this claim. I will also sua sponte dismiss Driessen’s federal claims against Sawyer County Record because they are clearly deficient, and I will remove Sawyer County Record as a defendant. ALLEGATIONS OF FACT On February 26, 2022, Vabalaitus and Phillips assaulted Driessen at defendant Seeley Sawmill Saloon, which is a bar. Vabalaitus blindsided Driessen and knocked him unconscious, and Vabalaitus and Phillips continued to strike him as he lay unconscious. The assault broke Driessen’s ribs, teeth, and nose and gave him other injuries. Vabalaitus “may have” hated Driessen for “political reasons,” but Driessen does not allege what prompted the assault. Nondefendants Ryan Schick and Amber O’Shea Dorn, deputies for the Sheriff’s Department, investigated the assault and interviewed Driessen. The deputies failed to

investigate the assault adequately, manipulated Driessen’s words, and downplayed his injuries to protect Vabalaitus and Phillips. Dorn’s report, which led to a criminal complaint against Phillips, falsely suggested that Phillips was the only attacker and was defending Vabalaitus. Dorn based the report largely on false statements that she received from Vabalaitus and Phillips over the phone, failing to “seek out statements from neutral witnesses.” The Sheriff’s Department allegedly refused to release the names of the persons who called 911 to report the assault, though a prosecutor informed Driessen that the women who spoke with the dispatcher failed to identify themselves.

According to Driessen, Sawyer County Record libeled him in an article that appeared in the Court Report section of its April 6, 2022, edition. Sawyer County Record did this “by printing [his] initials and accusing [him] of punching someone and [by] printing accusations of the assailants that will be proven false.” Seeley Sawmill Saloon failed to arrange transportation to the emergency room for Driessen, find neutral witnesses to the assault, and give Driessen video footage of the assault. Vabalaitus and Phillips have a “relationship” with the Sheriff’s Department because, at a proceeding in Phillips’s criminal case, the judge “gave verbal personal friendly recognition” to

Vabalaitus. “The assault and character assassination” allegedly prevented Driessen from running for political office. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND All defendants have answered or moved to dismiss.1 In its motion to dismiss, Sawyer County Record contends that Driessen alleged only a defamation claim against it and that this

claim should be dismissed because: (1) Driessen failed to comply with the pre-suit notice requirements of Wis. Stat. § 895.05(2); and (2) the allegedly defamatory statements are privileged under Wis. Stat. § 895.05(1). See Dkt. 9 and Dkt. 10. Driessen’s response is discursive and somewhat unclear. As I understand, Driessen contends that § 895.05(2)’s notice requirement does not apply because Sawyer Record would have denied a retraction demand. Dkt. 24 at 10–11. Driessen also contends that applying this requirement would violate his “federal and state constitutional rights” by precluding an otherwise valid claim. See id. at 11–13, 15. From what I can tell, Driessen contends that

§ 895.05(1) does not apply because: (1) he is alleging several civil rights violations and Sawyer County Record conspired with the other defendants to violate his federal rights; and (2) the article falsely accuses him of punching someone. See id. at 2–10. The Sawyer County Record replied. Dkt. 28.

ANALYSIS Driessen’s claims are scattered throughout the complaint. Driessen alleges that all defendants defamed him and violated his “freedom of speech” and right to “equal justice.” Driessen further alleges that Vabalaitus and Phillips violated the First Amendment because the assault stopped him from participating in activities that he used to participate in, including

1 Seeley Sawmill Saloon’s motion to dismiss is not ripe. politics. Driessen contends that Vabalaitus’s and Phillips’s alleged relationship with the Sheriff’s Department violated his right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. Driessen maintains that the Sherriff’s Department’s falsification of the police report constitutes defamation under federal law, violates equal protection by favoring Vabalaitus and Phillips,

and violates federal and Wisconsin criminal laws. Driessen alleges more violations of the First, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments against the Sherriff’s Department, though it is unclear on what theory he bases these claims. Driessen contends that Seely Sawmill Saloon was negligent for various reasons. Driessen alleges that Sawyer County Record defamed, libeled, and slandered him in violation of 28 U.S.C. § 4101 and Wisconsin law. Driessen alleges conspiracy claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3), apparently based on allegation that the assault and “character assassination” interfered with his political ambitions. A. Pre-suit notice

Before bringing a civil action for libel, § 895.05(2) requires the plaintiff to give the newspaper responsible for the libelous statement a reasonable opportunity to correct the statement through proper notice of the libel. See Milsap v. Stanford, 139 F.3d 902, *1 (7th Cir. 1998); Ladd v. Uecker, 2010 WI App 28, ¶ 17 (stating that the “written notice” under § 895.05(2) must give the defendant “a reasonable opportunity to correct the libelous matter”). Specifically, the “notice must (1) be in writing; (2) be directed to those alleged to be responsible or liable; (3) specify the article and statements therein which are claimed to be false and

defamatory; (4) contain a statement of what are claimed to be the true facts, and (5) be given before any civil action is commenced.” Milsap, 139 F.3d 902, *1. If the plaintiff fails to “satisfy the conditions precedent to commencing an action” under § 895.05(2), the court must dismiss the claim “with prejudice.” See DeBraska v. Quad Graphics, Inc., 2009 WI App 23, ¶ 2. Driessen varyingly refers to his Wisconsin-law claim against the Sawyer County Record as libel, defamation, and slander. Because Driessen bases this claim on only a newspaper article, I will refer to it as libel. Cf. Freer v. M & I Marshall & Ilsley Corp., 2004 WI App 201, ¶ 9 (“Slander . . . is distinguished from libel because, unlike libel, where the defamation is written,

slander is oral.”). Driessen’s allegations indicate that he failed to give Sawyer County Record an opportunity to correct the allegedly libelous statements, see Dkt.

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