Lluberes v. Uncommon Productions, LLC

740 F. Supp. 2d 207, 38 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2522, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 83829, 2010 WL 3245283
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 16, 2010
DocketCivil Action 07-11623-DPW
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 740 F. Supp. 2d 207 (Lluberes v. Uncommon Productions, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lluberes v. Uncommon Productions, LLC, 740 F. Supp. 2d 207, 38 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2522, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 83829, 2010 WL 3245283 (D. Mass. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

DOUGLAS P. WOODLOCK, District Judge.

In 2007, a documentary titled The Price of Sugar was released and distributed by the Defendants, Uncommon Productions, LLC and William Haney III, chronicling the working conditions of Haitian laborers on sugarcane plantations in the Dominican Republic. The film refers by name to the Plaintiffs, Felipe and Juan Vicini Lluberes (collectively, the “Vicinis”), who are executives in a family business that owns and operates Dominican sugarcane plantations. In this diversity suit, the Vicinis allege that the film makes a series of defamatory statements about them and their sugar production operations. The Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment before me contends that the Vicinis, as limited purpose public figures, cannot demonstrate actual malice on the part of the Defendants.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

1. Content of the Film

The Price of Sugar includes footage of several large Dominican sugarcane plantations, as well as the villages where the workers reside, called bateyes. Much of the film follows the actions of Father Christopher Hartley, a Catholic priest working in the Dominican Republic who sought to improve working conditions in the bateyes and sugarcane plantations in his parish. The film depicts conditions of the workers as including little access to decent housing, adequate food, education, or sanitary water sources. Father Hartley and the film’s narration specifically reference the Vicini plantations and the Vicini family at several points in the film.

2. Production and Release of the Film

The three individuals primarily responsible for the content of The Price of Sugar are Haney, Eric Grunebaum, and Peter Rhodes. Filming began in March 2004, and over the next two years, the filmmakers made eight trips to the Dominican Republic to shoot footage for the film. The Defendants began editing the film in 2005, with Rhodes doing most of the day-to-day editing of the film sequences. Grunebaum provided general feedback during the creative and editing process, while Haney had final authority on editorial decisions.

Because the film was developed over a period of time, and in the midst of changing circumstances, it did not have an established storyline, but rather followed Father Hartley in his work with the Haitian plantation workers. As the Defendants developed film sequences, they created footnoted scripts with sources for the facts presented in the film. The film was released on March 11, 2007.

3. Allegedly Defamatory Statements

The Plaintiffs allege that the film made seven defamatory statements about the Vicinis.

Statement 1: At approximately 23:28 in the film, Father Hartley makes this statement:

FATHER HARTLEY: The Vicini family have a lot of blood on their hands. *213 This is well known. Nobody dares speak out and say it because many people fear for their lives or the lives of their loved ones. And this is a fact. People disappear. People are never found.

The Plaintiffs contend that this implies that the Vicinis kidnap people and/or murder them.

Statement 2: At 1:13:59 in the film, Jhonny Belizaire makes the following statement, as translated in the subtitles:

JHONNY BELIZAIRE: If they get Father Christopher out of the country I am not going to wait for the Vicini to send someone to kill me. I would kill myself. Anyone following Father Christopher’s path is in great danger.

The implication, according to the Vicinis, is that the Vicinis will kill Belizaire after Father Hartley leaves the Dominican Republic.

Statement 3: The Narrator states the following at approximately 1:25:45:

NARRATOR: The batey is still a dangerous place. Jhonny has been fired. He and his family have been threatened with eviction from their home; but without legal status, they are unable to go elsewhere to make a living. And the attacks on Father Christopher continue.

The Vicinis suggest that the implication of the statement is that the Vicinis threatened Belizaire and his family and are imprisoning him because of his illegal status in the Dominican Republic.

Statement k: The fourth statement is a recorded statement presented in conjunction with a series of images, appearing at approximately 2:33:

FATHER HARTLEY: One of the first things I was told-some of the people in the Dominican Republic came to me saying, by the way, remember you’re not allowed into the Vicini bateyes. It took me three months to muster the courage to go into the sugarcane fields.
NARRATOR: The growing and harvesting of Dominican sugar is done almost entirely by laborers from Haiti. What Father Christopher saw in the plantations he began to document.

The statement is followed by a series of still images, four of which are highlighted by the Plaintiffs: (1) a boy sitting on a pile of sugarcane, holding a machete; (2) a boy cutting sugarcane, wearing no shirt; (3) a young child chewing on a piece of sugarcane, holding a syringe near his mouth; and (4) a pair of hands with a finger missing. The Plaintiffs allege that the film implies that these images were taken of workers and conditions on Vicini bateyes.

Statement 5: At 4:26 in the film, the following recorded statement is made by Father Hartley:

FATHER HARTLEY: Gradually, I began to learn more about their [people living on Vicini bateyes] situation. What I discovered was truly appalling.

This statement is followed by images from a barrack, such as a one-legged man and a woman with a scarred face. The Plaintiffs maintain that the statement, in conjunction with images on the screen, implies that the images depict conditions on Vicini-owned plantations, when in fact they were filmed at batey Paloma, not owned by the Vicinis.

Statement 6: The following statement appears at approximately 17:43:

FATHER HARTLEY: This is where they’re going to put the workers when they arrive. Anywhere from 60 to 100 people are going to be crammed into this one barrack. You can see all this barbed wiring up on the top which is to prevent them from escaping at night and they will have armed men at the doors of the barracks in the night so they don’t attempt to flee the barrack in the night.

*214 The statement appears in conjunction with images on the screen, which the Plaintiffs allege implies that the Vicinis treat their laborers like prisoners, confine them to the plantations against their will, and will shoot or injure workers attempting to leave the plantations.

Statement 7: At 20:22 in the film, the Narrator makes the following statement:

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Related

Lluberes v. UNCOMMON PRODUCTIONS, LLC
663 F.3d 6 (First Circuit, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
740 F. Supp. 2d 207, 38 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2522, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 83829, 2010 WL 3245283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lluberes-v-uncommon-productions-llc-mad-2010.