Koerber v. Project Veritas CA2/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 2022
DocketB298540
StatusUnpublished

This text of Koerber v. Project Veritas CA2/3 (Koerber v. Project Veritas CA2/3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koerber v. Project Veritas CA2/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 12/23/22 Koerber v. Project Veritas CA2/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(a). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115(a).

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

KIMBERLY KOERBER, B298540

Plaintiff and Appellant, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC681083 v.

PROJECT VERITAS et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL and CROSS-APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Elaine Lu, Judge. Affirmed. Gary Rand & Suzanne E. Rand-Lewis, Suzanne E. Rand- Lewis and Timothy Rand-Lewis for Plaintiff and Appellant. Litchfield Cavo, G. David Rubin and Elizabeth M. Sanguinetti for Defendants and Appellants. _______________________________________ INTRODUCTION

This is plaintiff Kimberly Koerber’s second lawsuit against defendants Project Veritas, Project Veritas Action Fund (Action Fund), James O’Keefe III (O’Keefe), and Christian Hartsock (defendants). The trial court granted in part defendants’ special motion to strike Koerber’s complaint under Code of Civil Procedure1 section 425.16 (anti-SLAPP statute), dismissing Koerber’s claims against Project Veritas, Action Fund, and O’Keefe for intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED), negligence, and intentional interference with prospective economic advantage (economic interference), as well as all of Koerber’s claims against Hartsock. As to Project Veritas, Action Fund, and O’Keefe, the court denied the anti-SLAPP motion with respect to Koerber’s claims for defamation and unfair business practices. The court awarded defendants $40,942 in attorney fees and costs. Koerber appeals from the court’s orders granting in part defendants’ anti-SLAPP motion and awarding defendants attorney fees and costs. She raises several procedural and substantive arguments challenging both orders. Project Veritas, Action Fund, and O’Keefe cross-appeal from the court’s order denying in part their anti-SLAPP motion, arguing Koerber failed to show a reasonable probability of prevailing on her claims for defamation and unfair business practices. As we explain, the parties’ arguments lack merit. We therefore affirm the court’s orders.

1All undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.

2 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1. The Parties Koerber used to work as a sales consultant for an educational content company, where she sold “National Geographic materials.” According to Koerber, she never occupied a “management” position at the company or worked as an “official” in the book publishing industry. Nor did she ever have a policy making role with respect to the development of educational policies, such as the Common Core curriculum. Project Veritas is a non-profit “media organization” that engages in “undercover investigative journalism.” Project Veritas claims its “reports average over 100,000 views online” and are often covered by “other news outlets.” One of Project Veritas’s goals is to “educate and inform the public about issues of public interest.” Like Project Veritas, Action Fund is a non-profit media organization involved in investigative journalism; O’Keefe is Action Fund’s president. According to Koerber, Hartsock is an officer and employee of Project Veritas. 2. Koerber’s Interview and the Termination of Her Employment In the fall of 2015, Project Veritas “launched an investigation into the Common Core curriculum.” The investigation focused on the “relationship between textbook companies and Common Core standards, how textbook companies promoted Common Core to public officials and legislators, and the lobbying tactics of textbook companies,” as well as “the reaction of those within the textbook industry to the backlash against Common Core.”

3 In November 2015, an unknown caller asked Koerber to participate in an interview, which the caller claimed would help then-California Attorney General Kamala Harris formulate “policy” on “an issue”. The caller told Koerber the meeting would be “private” and “confidential.” The next day, Koerber went to a Starbucks and sat in a patio area that she believed was private. There, she met two people, one of whom gave her a business card, which stated the cardholder’s name was “Alyssa Harris,” a “project manager” with “Breakthrough Dev Group.” The interviewers told Koerber her statements would be used “as anonymous research to assist Kamala Harris in formulating policy.” The interview was video and audio recorded without Koerber’s knowledge and consent. In January 2016, Project Veritas published a series of reports on Common Core. The third report, which was originally published on YouTube in late January 2016, is a video featuring clips of Koerber’s November 2015 interview, as well as clips of several candidates from the 2016 presidential primary election and O’Keefe talking about Common Core (January 2016 Video). The video also features clips of two other book publishing employees. In those clips, one of the employees states: “I hate kids. I’m in it to sell books, don’t even kid yourself for a heartbeat.” The other employee states: “There’s always money in it. It’s never about the kids.” Koerber was fired from her job as a sales consultant after Project Veritas published the January 2016 Video. 3. Koerber’s First Lawsuit In February 2017, Koerber sued, among others, her former employer, Project Veritas, and several entities and individuals associated with Project Veritas, including Action Fund, O’Keefe,

4 and Hartsock. Koerber asserted 23 causes of action, including 11 against Project Veritas based on allegations that the organization recorded, edited, and published the January 2016 Video under false pretenses and without Koerber’s knowledge or consent. In October 2017, Project Veritas moved to strike Koerber’s claims against the organization under the anti-SLAPP statute. The court granted Project Veritas’s motion and dismissed the organization from Koerber’s lawsuit. We affirmed the order granting Project Veritas’s anti-SLAPP motion in September 2019. 4. Project Veritas’s Second Video In September 2017, O’Keefe, through Action Fund, released a video in which he addresses Koerber’s first lawsuit, as well as other plaintiffs’ lawsuits, against the organization (September 2017 Video). The video was posted on Action Fund’s website, YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook. At the beginning of the video, O’Keefe walks into an office and stands in front of a desk containing a laptop and several binders and documents, including copies of various court filings. O’Keefe addresses the camera and talks about two lawsuits filed against defendants. O’Keefe then addresses Koerber’s first lawsuit against defendants. As O’Keefe talks, a photograph of the cover page to a motion filed in Koerber’s first lawsuit appears in the background of the video while O’Keefe holds a copy of what appears to be Koerber’s complaint from that lawsuit with a large yellow sticky note attached to the front that says, “KOERBER.” O’Keefe says this about Koerber and her first lawsuit: “We got another lawsuit from this official who … [W]hen we did the Common Core investigation last year, that’s the one where they said we don’t care about kids[;] it’s all about money. [¶] Well, one of the people

5 in the book publishing industry has sued us. I don’t know why she’s suing us.

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Koerber v. Project Veritas CA2/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koerber-v-project-veritas-ca23-calctapp-2022.