Lindberg v. Dow Jones & Co., Inc.
This text of Lindberg v. Dow Jones & Co., Inc. (Lindberg v. Dow Jones & Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
{{USDCSDNY = □□□□ DOCUMENT □ UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT ELECTRONICALLY FILED SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK DOC ie oo eee eee ee □□ ee ee ee et or his □□ GREG EF, LINDBERG DATE FILED:__£/ i □□□□□□ Plaintiff, -against- 20-cy-8231 (LAK) DOW JONES & COMPANY, INC., Defendant. eee ee ee ee ee eee ee ee ee MEMORANDUM OPINION Appearances: Aaron Z. Tobin Michael Merrick CONDON TOBIN SLADEK THORNTON, PLLC Charles A. Gruen LAW OFFICES OF CHARLES A, GRUEN Attorneys for Plaintiff Robert P. LoBue PATTERSON, BELKNAP, WEBB & TYLER LLP Attorneys for Defendant
LEWIS A. KAPLAN, District Judge. This case arises from two allegedly defamatory articles published in The Wall Street Journal (the “Journal”) about Greg Lindberg’s business and romantic pursuits.’ Lindberg is the founder and sole owner of the Global Growth investment firm and its portfolio of affiliated companies, which includes a number of insurance companies.’ In early 2019, the Journal reported
Complaint [Dkt. 4] at 71. id. at 7 10.
that Lindberg had diverted $2 billion from these insurance companies for his personal use? A number of months later, the Journal published a second article about Lindberg that focused on his alleged use of surveillance operatives to spy on his former fiancée and other women who “caught his eye." . Lindberg claims that these articles were defamatory and that reporters for the Journal improperly relied on sources who were subject to confidentiality agreements or owed him a duty of confidentiality. He alleges that Dow Jones & Company, Inc. (“Dow Jones”) — the owner of The Wall Street Journal —is liable to him for defamation, tortious interference with contracts, and aiding and abetting breaches of fiduciary duty.
Faets the First Article The Journal first reported on Lindberg in a February 28, 2019 article posted to the newspaper’s website under the title Financier Who Amassed Insurance Firms Diverted $2 Billion into His Private Empire (the “First Article”)? It was printed on March 1, 2019 with minor modifications on the front page of the print Journal with the title Insurance Tycoon Diverts 32 Billion® Id. at 40. 4 . Id. at Ff 46, 53. Id. at 4 40. Id. at 4 43.
The First Article claimed that Lindberg had diverted $2 billion of insurance company funds for his personal benefit by causing the insurers to lend money to entities he owned,’ According to the article, insurance companies typically invest premiums “conservatively” to ensure sufficient liquidity to pay insurance claims.’ For the same reason, the article claimed, state regulators monitor and regulate insurance companies’ investments in affiliated entities.” For example, the article noted that “TsJome states” limit affiliate investments to 10 percent of an insurer's assets.!° In contrast, the article □
claimed that one of Lindberg’s insurance companies had invested more than 50 percent of its assets in affiliated entities." The article reported also that Lindberg had moved his insurance companies to North Carolina, where regulators allowed his insurance companies to invest up to 40 percent of their assets in affiliated entities.” It explained that Lindberg had made generous political contributions to the North Carolina insurance commissioner — Wayne Goodwin — who was up for re-election around the time that Lindberg moved his insurance companies to the state.'* In addition, the article claimed that Id. at § 40. & First Article [Dkt. 14-1] at q 15. Paragraph numbers refer to the numbers included in the copies of the articles provided by Dow Jones in support of its motion to dismiss. Id. at Ff 16-17. 10 id. Il Id, at 718. 12 Id. at Ff 34, 36, 44. 13 Id, at 39-40.
“in consultation with” North Carolina regulators, Lindberg had restructured the insurance companies’ investments into special purpose vehicles (“SPVs”) that Lindberg owned — but did not control — to avoid the limitations on investing in affiliated entities,“ According to the article, the SPVs did not simply hold that money. Instead, they lent it to Lindberg’s other companies, which allowed Lindberg to profit from these assets as well.’° While Lindberg was engaged in these lending practices, the article claimed, his net worth had increased to $1.7 billion.!® It described various luxury items that Lindberg purportedly had purchased at the time, such as a Gulfstream aircraft, a 214-foot yacht, and multiple large properties.'? With respect to one such purchase — a 12,000 square-foot mansion in Raleigh, North Carolina — the Journal claimed that it had traced the funds used to purchase the home to one of Lindberg’s insurance companies.'* The article revealed also that Lindberg — whom it described as the largest political donor in North Carolina ~ was the subject of a federal criminal investigation regarding his donations to North Carolina regulators.'” It stated also that the North Carolina regulators were concerned about the solvency of the SPVs and affiliated entities that had borrowed money from these insurance
I4 Id. at $4] 48-51, 54. i3 Td. at 99 49, 55-56. 16 Id. at TOL. 17 Id. at 99 2, 62. 18 Id. at $Y 67-68. 19 Id. at 92,9.
companies.”” It noted that these entities had paid dividends to Lindberg, “suggesting that insurance money was flowing into his pockets.””!
IL The Second Article On October 3, 2019, the Journal’s online edition published another article about Lindberg (the “Second Article”). Entitled ‘Active Interest’: Insurance Tycoon Spied on Women Who Caught His Eye, it allegedly “reinforced the impression” that Lindberg and his businesses were operating in an “unethical” or “legally dubious” manner and “sought to create the impression that Lindberg harassed, stalked and victimized women in his personal life.” The article began by noting that federal officials had obtained a warrant to arrest Lindberg following an investigation into whether he had bribed a state regulator.“ Next, the article said that Lindberg had paid dozens of surveillance operatives to trail women he was, or was interested in, dating.?*> The report included colorful details and photos from surveillance dossiers and quoted heavily from surveillance operatives. For example, it reported that one surveillance operative had enrolled in a culinary school in Manhattan where Lindberg’s then fiancée — referred
20 Id. at (9 74-75. 21 Id. at 475. : 22 Compl. at { 46. 23 Id. at (9 46, 53. 24 Second Article [Dkt. 14-3] at 4 1. 25 id. at J 2-3.
to as MM — was taking classes so that the operative could keep a close eye on her activities without her knowledge.”® The article quoted a surveillance dossier’s report that MM was “not social at [the school] and appears to have no interest in her classmates . . . MM is very focused and business minded.’ While the article noted that Lindberg had met some women at nightclubs and through matchmaker services, it claimed also that Lindberg had identified “prospective partners” for surveillance officials to track by “scour[ing] Instagram” for women, who were “often aspiring models.””* “Then,” it claimed, “the surveillance team went to work, finding the woman’s address and following her to learn about habits and possible boyfriends.””” The article claimed that “Mr. Lindberg’s unorthodox pursuit of romantic interests is a previously unreported sign of the entrepreneur's lavish lifestyle since he started acquiring life insurers in 2014” and explained that “[t]he spending took off after Mr. Lindberg began lending at least $2 billion of the insurers’ funds to his private conglomerate, the focus of a Journal investigation in February.’ The words “a Journal investigation in February” contained a hyperlink”! that, if selected, took the reader to the First Article on the Journal’s website.”
26 Id. at $9 65, 70. at Td. at 71. 28 Id. at 935. 29 fd. 30 Id, at 97-8.
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Lindberg v. Dow Jones & Co., Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindberg-v-dow-jones-co-inc-nysd-2021.