Schatz v. REPUBLICAN STATE LEADERSHIP COMMITTEE

777 F. Supp. 2d 181, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38175, 2011 WL 1354405
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedApril 7, 2011
DocketCivil 10-528-B-H
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 777 F. Supp. 2d 181 (Schatz v. REPUBLICAN STATE LEADERSHIP COMMITTEE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schatz v. REPUBLICAN STATE LEADERSHIP COMMITTEE, 777 F. Supp. 2d 181, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38175, 2011 WL 1354405 (D. Me. 2011).

Opinion

*183 DECISION AND ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS

D. BROCK HORNBY, District Judge.

Introduction

Elections unsurprisingly are often rough-and-tumble events. But candidates become justifiably outraged when they are falsely accused, especially when the close date of the election prevents an effective rebuttal, and especially when the accusation is made not even by the opponent but by relatively anonymous outsiders. Nevertheless, in the service of robust public discourse, the First Amendment protects statements made in a campaign even if they turn out to be false — unless the speaker knows the statements are false, or makes them with reckless disregard for their truth. It is on that basis that, after oral argument on April 4, 2011, I Grant the motion in this case to dismiss the claims of an aggrieved 2010 candidate for the Maine Senate.

Facts Alleged in Amended Complaint and Attached Exhibits

According to the Amended Complaint, the plaintiff James M. Schatz has been active in Maine politics, as a member of the Maine House of Representatives from 2004 through 2010, and as a Blue Hill Selectman during at least 2008 and 2009. 1 Schatz ran as a Democratic candidate for the Maine Senate in the November 2, 2010 election, but lost. 2

The defendants are the Republican State Leadership Committee, a political action committee incorporated in Virginia and registered in Maine; the related but unincorporated Republican State Leadership Committee — Maine PAC, also registered in Maine; Crossroads Media, LLC, a Republican media services firm; another firm that produces flyers or brochures; and other related entities and individuals. The national mission of the Republican State Leadership Committee is to elect Republican candidates in the various states; 3 the mission of the Republican State Leadership Committee — Maine PAC is the same, but limited to Maine. 4 I shall refer to all the defendants collectively as the Republican State Leadership Committee because the Amended Complaint asserts that the actions of which it complains were generated by those two organizations. 5 The Republican State Leadership Committee opposed Schatz’s Democratic Senate candidacy in the 2010 election and supported that of his Republican opponent. 6

Schatz is aggrieved by certain brochures, flyers, television and radio advertisements that the Republican State Leadership Committee mailed, published and broadcast “a short time before the Maine election on November 2, 2010, giving [Schatz] neither time nor means to make *184 an effective rebuttal to their false and defamatory content.” 7 In essence, he says, they “contained false allegations that [Schatz], in his capacity as selectman of the Town of Blue Hill, Maine, had voted to cancel a $10,000 Fourth of July fireworks display, and that [Schatz] and other selectmen had improperly applied taxpayers’ fireworks funds to a political contribution or political campaign.” 8 I quote the text of one of the flyers, which is representative:

First Page:

No Rockets’ Red Glare, No Bursting in Air.
Thanks to JIM SCHATZ ...

Second Page:

Jim Schatz voted to cancel the $10,000 fireworks celebration for the Fourth of July — blaming it on a bad economy. However, before canceling the show, Schatz and the Blue Hill Selectmen gave 10,000 taxpayer dollars to a political organization.
It’s wrong for Schatz to give your money to a political organization, and it was wrong for Schatz to cancel your 4th of July celebration.
On- November 2, Vote against Jim Schatz, because he’s wrong for Maine. 9

Schatz says that, in fact, it was the voters of the Town of Blue Hill who decided to spend $10,000 “to be used at the discretion of the Selectmen, as a contribution toward costs associated with the efforts to repeal Maine’s school consolidation law.” 10 It was in accordance with that vote, he says, that funds were paid to the Maine Coalition to Save Schools in installments ending with a final payment on July 3, 2009, and there was nothing wrong about the payments. 11 He says that the Blue Hill Selectmen voted 2-1 against funding a fireworks display for July 4, 2009, but that he, Schatz, voted in favor of funding the fireworks. 12 He also says that the two decisions were unrelated. The first, by the voters, was made at a Town meeting on January 2, 2008. 13 The second, where he was outvoted by the other two Selectmen, was made on March 3, 2009. 14 Finally, Schatz says that the Republican State Leadership Committee’s “only source of information” for the statements in its election missives was the reporting in two newspaper articles, 15 and that “[n]either *185 newspaper article contained information that supported” the statements. 16 He attaches the two newspaper articles as exhibits to his Amended Complaint. 17

One of the articles is from the July 2, 2009, Bangor Daily News, and is a story about Maine towns struggling to fund fireworks for the then-upcoming July 4, 2009 celebrations. It opens:

There will be no fireworks display in Blue Hill this Fourth of July due to the poor economic climate, but business is booming elsewhere as municipalities and private groups have worked hard to raise funds to pay for the fire that lights up the nation’s birthday.
For the past two years the Hancock County town has fronted the money for the fireworks display for the Fourth to Remember celebration and paid the funds back through donations. There’s about $10,000 in the account, but the selectmen and the fireworks committee opted not to spend the funds this year.
“Given the economy, we felt that in good conscience we couldn’t do it this year,” said Selectman Jim Schatz. “We thought that to spend that much money on something that will light things up for a few seconds and then is gone was not the thing to do. Unless we were sure we could pay the town back, we didn’t want to pull the trigger on it this year.” 18

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777 F. Supp. 2d 181, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38175, 2011 WL 1354405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schatz-v-republican-state-leadership-committee-med-2011.