Richard Rubin v. U.S. News & World Report, Inc.

271 F.3d 1305, 30 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1089, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 24236, 2001 WL 1397891
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 2001
Docket01-10032
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 271 F.3d 1305 (Richard Rubin v. U.S. News & World Report, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard Rubin v. U.S. News & World Report, Inc., 271 F.3d 1305, 30 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1089, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 24236, 2001 WL 1397891 (11th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

REAVLEY, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff-appellant Richard Rubin appeals the dismissal of his libel claim against U.S. News and World Report (U.S.News) and David Kaplan. Rubin’s claim was dismissed, with prejudice, on the pleadings. We affirm.

Rubin owned a gold-refining business in Miami. Apparently with his cooperation, U.S. News interviewed and photographed Rubin for an article it was preparing. The article, written by Kaplan, was entitled “The Golden Age of Crime: Why International drug traffickers are invading the global gold trade.” It pointed out that much of the international gold trade was legitimate, but that much of it was not, and detailed schemes that drug traffickers used to launder their money by trading in gold.

Rubin brought this suit for libel under diversity jurisdiction. The district court dismissed, concluding that a “reasonable person would not interpret that Article in whole or in part, as being defamatory of Plaintiff.” Rubin appeals.

Legal Standards

We review this dismissal for failure to state a claim de novo. 1

Under Florida law a private figure is entitled to recover in a defamation action if the defendant negligently broadcasts defamatory, false statements or statements with false and defamatory implications and the broadcast results in actual damage to the private figure. 2 Words are defamatory when they charge a person with an infamous crime or tend to subject one to hatred, distrust, ridicule, contempt or disgrace, or tend to injure one in one’s business or profession. 3

Where the court finds that “a communication could not possibly have a defamatory or harmful effect, the court is justified in dismissing the complaint for failure to state a cause of action.” 4 . On the other hand, if an allegedly defamatory publication is reasonably susceptible of two meanings, one of which is defamatory and one of which is not, it is for the trier of fact to determine the meaning understood by the average reader. 5 A statement is not defamatory unless the “gist” or “sting” of the statement is defamatory. 6 The gist of any statement within a publication or broadcast is found only by reference to the entire context. 7

The Article

Rubin was mentioned three times in the article, first in a paragraph outlining the *1307 attraction of the gold trade to drug traffickers:

The big surprise is that it took traffickers like Delgado so long to tumble to the allure of gold. The industry is largely made up of individual dealers and small companies that prefer to deal in cash. High tariffs on gold have attracted smugglers for years. “There’s a dual economic system in the jewelry industry,” concedes Richard Rubin, the owner of Republic Metals in Miami, a gold refiner. “There’s on the books and there’s off the books.”

Rubin was mentioned again in a paragraph describing how Peruvian gold traders used the gold trade to commit tax fraud:

A recent crackdown in Peru found that 40 percent of that nation’s gold companies were bogus, set up largely to take advantage of an export-tax rebate. Smugglers shipped gold to American refiners, pocketed the tax rebate, smuggled the gold back to Peru, then shipped it out again, grabbing yet another rebate. “I may have handled gold coming in that was gold I sent down there to begin with,” says Richard Rubin, whose Republic Metals made large shipments to and from Peru. Gold traders say the influence of narcotraffickers is so pervasive that they are taking over Latin America’s gold trade, co-opting legitimate firms and buying up traders in country after country. “They’re squeezing out the legitimate dealers,” says one prominent trader who insisted on anonymity.

A photograph of Rubin also accompanies the article. He is pictured in a suit and tie, on the floor of his gold refinery, with his arm on a machine. There is a caption beneath the photo. Beneath the caption is an excerpted version of Rubin’s earlier quote. Together they read:

Richard Rubin, owner of Republic Metals, on the floor of his Miami gold refinery (caption)
“There’s a dual economic system.... There’s on the books and there’s off the books ” (quote)

After the article was published, Rubin asked U.S. News for a retraction. In response, U.S. News published the following paragraph on its letters-to-the-editor page:

Clarification
The article “The Golden Age of Crime,” which appeared in the Nov. 29, 1999, edition of the U.S. News & World Report, discussed how drug money is laundered through the purchase and resale of gold. The article includes quotes from an interview with Richard Rubin, the owner of Republic Metal, a gold-refining business. U.S. News did not suggest and did not intend to suggest that Mr. Rubin or his company were engaged in money laundering, tax fraud, smuggling, or any other improper or illegal transactions discussed in the article, or that he or his company transacts business “off the books.” U.S. News regrets if any reader misread the article to suggest such implications.

Analysis

Rubin does not contend that he was misquoted in the article, or that any individual statement in the article is false. 8 *1308 Because a statement must be false to be libelous, any damage to Rubin flowing from the article’s uncontested statements- — that in the jewelry business there’s “on the books and off the books,” and that Rubin may have processed gold that was smuggled into Peru — is not actionable. Instead, Rubin seeks to recover for damages flowing from two implications he argues the article contains: 1) that Rubin processed gold that he knew had been smuggled, and 2) that Rubin himself kept two sets of books.

No reasonable reading of the text supports the implication that Rubin knowingly handled smuggled gold. Although the article takes care to detail the process by which smugglers commit tax fraud, no description of this process states that American gold refiners in general, or Rubin specifically, knowingly processed smuggled gold. Indeed, for the described scheme to work, tax cheats bringing gold into the United States would be forced to declare the shipment in order to claim their Peruvian export-tax rebate. 9 Rubin asserts that the article’s comment that his company Republic Metals “made large shipments to and from Peru” implies that he knowingly handled smuggled gold. But that comment displays his expertise on the matter, and only explains Rubin’s quote. Further, the statement by Rubin itself implies that he did not knowingly handle smuggled gold.

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Bluebook (online)
271 F.3d 1305, 30 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1089, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 24236, 2001 WL 1397891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-rubin-v-us-news-world-report-inc-ca11-2001.