Richards v. Union Leader Corp.

2024 N.H. 49
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedSeptember 4, 2024
Docket2022-0197
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 N.H. 49 (Richards v. Union Leader Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richards v. Union Leader Corp., 2024 N.H. 49 (N.H. 2024).

Opinion

NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for rehearing under Rule 22 as well as formal revision before publication in the New Hampshire Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter, Supreme Court of New Hampshire, One Charles Doe Drive, Concord, New Hampshire 03301, of any editorial errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion goes to press. Errors may be reported by email at the following address: reporter@courts.state.nh.us. Opinions are available on the Internet by 9:00 a.m. on the morning of their release. The direct address of the court’s home page is: https://www.courts.nh.gov/our-courts/supreme-court

THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

___________________________

Grafton Case No. 2022-0197 Citation: Richards v. Union Leader Corp., 2024 N.H. 49

DANIEL RICHARDS

v.

UNION LEADER CORPORATION & a.

Argued: March 21, 2023 Opinion Issued: September 4, 2024

Lehmann Major List, PLLC, of Concord (Richard J. Lehmann on the brief), and Allen Harris PLLC, Narberth, Pennsylvania (Samantha Harris on the brief and orally), for the plaintiff.

Malloy & Sullivan, Lawyers Professional Corporation, of Hingham, Massachusetts (Kathleen C. Sullivan on the brief and orally), for defendant Union Leader Corporation.

Rath, Young and Pignatelli, P.C., of Concord (Michael S. Lewis on the brief and orally), for defendant Robert Azzi. American Civil Liberties Union of New Hampshire Foundation, of Concord (Gilles R. Bissonnette and Henry R. Klementowicz on the brief), for American Civil Liberties Union of New Hampshire, New England First Amendment Coalition, and GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, as amici curiae.

BASSETT, J.

[¶1] The plaintiff, Daniel Richards, appeals a decision of the Superior Court (Bornstein, J.) dismissing his complaint alleging defamation and invasion of privacy — false light against the defendants, Union Leader Corporation (Union Leader) and Robert Azzi. Union Leader cross-appeals the superior court’s finding that certain statements contained in the newspaper column at issue (hereinafter, “op-ed”) pertained to the plaintiff, and its decision not to take judicial notice “about the existence of controversy and debate surrounding Critical Race Theory and the definition of White supremacy.” We affirm.

I

[¶2] The following facts are derived from the plaintiff’s complaint, or from documents sufficiently referred to in the complaint and whose authenticity no party disputes. See Beane v. Dana S. Beane & Co., 160 N.H. 708, 711-12 (2010). The plaintiff is the father of two children enrolled in the Hanover School District (the district). In 2021, the district “began sending parents an increasing number of communications about [its] increasing focus on ‘equity’ and ‘anti-racism.’” The communications indicated that the district was planning “significant curricular changes around these issues.” The plaintiff was “concerned by materials that he learned were in use in the school district.” While he believed the curricular changes were “well-intentioned,” the plaintiff believed that the changed curriculum was “deeply divisive and ultimately harmful to the goal of a quality education and a society where everyone is treated equally.”

[¶3] As a result of his concerns about the district’s proposed curriculum changes, the plaintiff supported “legislation that prohibits New Hampshire schools from teaching children that they are ‘inherently racist, sexist, or oppressive, whether consciously or unconsciously.’” The parties agree that this legislation was House Bill 544 (HB 544). The plaintiff submitted public testimony in favor of the bill.

[¶4] On June 18, 2021, the Union Leader published the following op-ed, written by Azzi, titled “White supremacists reveal content of their character”:

2 YET ANOTHER white supremacist — Newt Gingrich — has emerged to hector New Hampshire about what it should think about Critical Race Theory (CRT) and systemic racism by misappropriating MLK’s “... dream of a nation in which people are judged not by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character …”

Today, we know well the content of Gingrich’s character.

Desperate to stay bonded to America’s original sins of slavery and genocide of indigenous peoples, Gingrich, Frank Edelblut, Dan Richards, Mike Moffett, Joseph Mendola, and others have disseminated, across multiple media platforms, white supremacist ideology to keep Americans from learning an unexpurgated American history from its 1619 origins alongside the dominant White 1776 narrative.

Today, we know well the content of their character.

Espousing a form of anti-American excrescence entitled “1776 Action” — Gingrich and fellow travelers falsely assert: “Critical Race Theory-based curriculum, which pits students against one another on the basis of race, is being forced on students all across America. It rejects the central message of our founders as well as Martin Luther King Jr. — that we are all individuals created equal in the image of God — and it’s taking our country backwards.”

Whoever utters such calumnies are either ignorant beyond redemption or, more likely, unreconstructed White apologists looking to conceal the truth of systemic racism and its pernicious effects on people of color and minority communities.

While it’s true, as Gingrich says, that “America is a better place today because great leaders like Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. chose to embrace the premise, and the promise, of America …” it is equally true that in spite of generations of promises, America has failed many of them.

It’s equally true that many Americans — like MLK, Medgar Evers, Fred Hampton, and Malcolm X — were harassed, spied upon, and assassinated fighting for respect, dignity, and rights promised to them in the Declaration of Independence so highly valued by HB 544’s proponents.

It’s not just about the 1830 Indian Removal Act, the 1882 Chinese Expulsion Act, the over 4,400 lynchings, the 1921 Tulsa pogrom,

3 the “Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male,” the 1939 refusal to allow the SS St. Louis to disembark 900 Jews fleeing Nazi Germany, the internment of Japanese-Americans — about Emmett Till, Tamir Rice, George Floyd — it’s about contextualizing American history; about persistent racial exploitation and trauma and their disproportionate effects on generational health and wealth.

When Education Commissioner Edelblut says that proposed state legislation “will help instill confidence in parents that our basic values are not being compromised,” which values is he touting? The values of the last state to have a paid holiday honoring MLK or the values of a just people committed to truth and human dignity?

It is not true that CRT teaches children that one race is superior to another and to assert such is dishonest, provocative and dangerous.

It is true, as Edelblut notes, that Ibram X. Kendi wrote that “... [t]he only remedy to racist discrimination is antiracist discrimination. The only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination … The only remedy to present discrimination is future discrimination,” but Edelblut fails to allow Kendi to define what he means.

Kendi continues: “... As President Lyndon B. Johnson said in 1965, ‘You do not take a person who, for years, has been hobbled by chains and liberate him, bring him up to the starting line of a race and then say, “You are free to compete with all the others,” and still justly believe that you have been completely fair.’” As U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun wrote in 1978, ‘In order to get beyond racism, we must first take account of race. There is no other way. And in order to treat some persons equally, we must treat them differently.’”

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2024 N.H. 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-union-leader-corp-nh-2024.