FOX Entertainment Group, Inc., FOX Broadcasting Company, FOX News, Inc., FOX News Network, Inc., FOX News Network, L.L.C., FOX News Holdings, Inc., and Bill O'Reilly v. Gamal Abdel-Hafiz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 2007
Docket02-06-00353-CV
StatusPublished

This text of FOX Entertainment Group, Inc., FOX Broadcasting Company, FOX News, Inc., FOX News Network, Inc., FOX News Network, L.L.C., FOX News Holdings, Inc., and Bill O'Reilly v. Gamal Abdel-Hafiz (FOX Entertainment Group, Inc., FOX Broadcasting Company, FOX News, Inc., FOX News Network, Inc., FOX News Network, L.L.C., FOX News Holdings, Inc., and Bill O'Reilly v. Gamal Abdel-Hafiz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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FOX Entertainment Group, Inc., FOX Broadcasting Company, FOX News, Inc., FOX News Network, Inc., FOX News Network, L.L.C., FOX News Holdings, Inc., and Bill O'Reilly v. Gamal Abdel-Hafiz, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 2-06-353-CV

FOX ENTERTAINMENT GROUP, INC.,      APPELLANTS

FOX BROADCASTING COMPANY,

FOX NEWS, INC.,

FOX NEWS NETWORK, INC.,

FOX NEWS NETWORK, L.L.C.,

FOX NEWS HOLDINGS, INC.,

AND BILL O’REILLY

V.

GAMAL ABDEL-HAFIZ APPELLEE

------------

FROM THE 96TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

OPINION ON REHEARING

We grant Appellants’ motion for rehearing, withdraw our August 31, 2007 opinion and judgment, and substitute the following.

Appellant FOX brings this interlocutory appeal of the trial court’s order denying its motion for traditional and no-evidence summary judgment. (footnote: 1) See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 51.014(a)(6) (Vernon Supp. 2006).  We reverse and render.

BACKGROUND

Gamal Abdel-Hafiz (“Appellee”), born and educated in Egypt, came to the United States (“U.S.”) to work in 1984 and became a U.S. citizen in March 1990.  He became a language specialist with the Federal Bureau of Investigations (“FBI”) in January 1994 and then a special agent in the Dallas FBI office.  He was assigned to the Dallas FBI office’s international terrorism unit from 1996 to 2001 and served as assistant legal attache to the U.S. Embassy in Saudi Arabia from 2001 to 2003.  He was recalled from Saudi Arabia by the FBI in February 2003 for an administrative inquiry into insurance fraud allegations made by his ex-wife.  This investigation led to his termination; the FBI later reinstated him.

The underlying suit is a defamation action.  The alleged defamation involves statements initially made by FBI agents Robert (“Bob”) Wright and John Vincent, of the FBI’s terrorism unit in Chicago, assistant U.S. attorney Mark Flessner, also based in Chicago, and FBI agent Barry Carmody, of the FBI’s terrorism unit in Tampa, about Appellee with regard to FBI investigations in 1998 and 1999.  Bill O’Reilly, host of THE O’REILLY FACTOR , a television program on the FOX television network, interviewed Flessner on March 4, 2003, and interviewed former FBI assistant director Bill Baker and former FBI agent Gary Aldrich about Flessner and Wright’s allegations against Appellee, among other topics, on March 5, 2003.  On March 6, 2003, O’Reilly also interviewed Vincent and David Schippers, Vincent and Wright’s attorney.

Appellee sued Appellant for libel per se, slander per se, libel per quod, slander per quod, statutory libel, and libel and slander by innuendo and implication based on statements made in the three broadcasts and in the broadcast transcripts posted on FOX’s website (collectively, the “Broadcasts”).  He further contended that the Broadcasts “omitted material facts and/or juxtaposed facts in a material way such that the gist of the publications . . . was false,” and listed twelve statements made by O’Reilly as defamatory. (footnote: 2)  Appellee sought $3.5 million in compensatory damages plus exemplary damages.  We have reordered these statements chronologically:

Statement Three : [March 4, 2003] In the “Impact” segment tonight, very disturbing story.  Charges that an FBI agent named Gamal Abdel Hafiz (ph) refused to wear a recording device in terrorist investigations of accused money men, Yassin Al-Kadi [ (footnote: 3)] and Sami Al-Arian.

Statement Ten : [March 5, 2003] Should FBI Chief Robert Mueller be fired over the scandal of a Muslim agent who failed to aggressively investigate terrorism?

Statement Eleven : [March 5, 2003] And THE FACTOR has two eyewitnesses who say Mr. Hafiz refused to wear a wire twice during terror investigations.

Statement Four : [March 5, 2003] According to FBI agent Robert Wright and former federal prosecutor Mark Flesser, Hafiz declined to secretly tape a Saudi citizen named Yassin Kadi, who was suspected of financing Usama bin Laden. [ (footnote: 4)]  That incident happened in April of 1999, and it happened again during the investigation of Sami Al-Arian, according to the two men.  Wright says Hafiz told people, quote, “a Muslim does not record another Muslim.”  That is not true.  Hundreds of Muslim American law enforcement agents have worn wires, according to FACTOR sources.

Statement Five : [March 5, 2003] But THE FACTOR has learned that Hafiz is being investigated by the office of professional responsibility at the Justice Department.  That’s serious.

Statement Six : [March 5, 2003] In THE FACTOR “Follow-Up” segment tonight, as we told you in the ”Talking Points” memo, an FBI agent named Gamal Abdel-Hafiz has been put on administrative leave.  He has been accused by another agent of refusing to record other Muslims who the FBI was investigating.  One of the men, a Saudi named Yassin Kadi, is suspected of bankrolling Usama bin Laden.  The other man was Sami Al-Arian[,] recently indicted for terrorist fund-raising.

Statement Twelve [the same statement as Statement Two]: [March 5, 2003] How do you know that, because we’re being told by the Prosecutor in the case and Agent Wright that everybody wanted this to happen.  The Tampa office in the Al-Arian case asked the man to wear a wire.  He declined.

Statement Two : [March 5, 2003] The Tampa office . . . asked the man to wear a wire.  He declined.

Statement Seven : [March 5, 2003] I—I just want to—I want the audience to know, Mr. Baker, that what you say, although it might be true, is being vehemently disputed—vehemently disputed—by a number of FBI agents involved in these investigations.

Statement Eight : [March 5, 2003] If you have one that says, I’m not going to record another fellow Muslim, you’ve got to fire him, don’t you?

Statement Nine : [March 6, 2003] This is Hafiz (ph) who refused to record Sami Al-Arian (ph). . . . Listen, we know the truth.  The truth is I believe your two agents here, the guy wouldn’t tape other Muslims.  That’s the truth.  And he wasn’t disciplined. . . . But he should have been disciplined, and he wasn’t.

Statement One [the same statement as Statement Nine]:  [March 6, 2003] Listen, we know the truth.  The truth is, I believe your two agents here, the guy wouldn’t tape other Muslims.  That’s the truth.  And he wasn’t disciplined.

As Statements One and Two duplicate portions of Statements Nine and Twelve, we will consider them subsumed within our discussion of Statements Nine and Twelve and we will not analyze them individually.

It is undisputed that around April 1999, Wright, Vincent, and Flessner asked Appellee to secretly record a Muslim suspect in an FBI investigation code-named “Vulgar Betrayal.”  Vulgar Betrayal’s mission was “to identify and neutralize through criminal process the HAMAS terrorist support organization located within the United States.” (footnote: 5)

SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Standard of Review

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FOX Entertainment Group, Inc., FOX Broadcasting Company, FOX News, Inc., FOX News Network, Inc., FOX News Network, L.L.C., FOX News Holdings, Inc., and Bill O'Reilly v. Gamal Abdel-Hafiz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-entertainment-group-inc-fox-broadcasting-company-fox-news-inc-texapp-2007.