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!UPDATE! PLANET REPUBLISHES JAN. 23 POST ON NILAN-MOORE …MORE ON ONLY ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT FIRST AMENDMENT CASES TO COME DOWN THE PIKE IN YEARS … THE PLANET SHARES ATTORNEY DEL GALLO’S WINNING BRIEF … or … INSIDE BASEBALL ON A HUGE RULING ON FREEDOM IN AMERICA

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By DAN VALENTI

PLANET VALENTI News and Commentary

ADD 1 THURSDAY, JULY 12, 2012 — Today we activate from the Phantom Zone of cyberspace one our early columns on the Nilan-Moore Case. We shall be taking this piecemeal approach to the republishing of most of the columns and information we initially redacted in response to a court order.

As most everyone knows, Judge Mark Mason lifted that restraint in an all-day hearing in Pittsfield District Court on Monday. Meredith Nilan had sought the initial harassment order on June 22. Judge Bethzaida Vega granted it on June 27. Judge Mason pulverized it into its proper state of “Vanquished” on July.

The court actions over the three weeks or so have brought about a huge increase in volume to PLANET VALENTI. Many are eager to learn more of the circumstances of this case. In response, we are re-releasing the following edition of PV, first published on Jan. 23.

Since Judge Mason’s court verdict, THE PLANET has given numerous media interviews for print, radio, TV, and Internet. The story has been covered extensively on the web. The Massachusetts Law Review is preparing a piece. A scholarly article for a prestigious law review is being written by one of the nation’s top authorities on the First Amendment, Prof. Eugene Volokh of the UCLA Law School.

Read on:

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By DAN VALENTI

PLANET VALENTI News and Commentary

(FORTRESS OF SOLITUDE, MONDAY, JAN. 23, 2012) — We The People have not rested in  the Meredith Nilan-Peter Moore Case. The travesty lies the handling of the case, from the get go, beginning with the moment of impact on the night of Dec. 8, 2011 and continuing with the apparent coverup. The alleged coverup, which is all people are talking about, has riled Mary Jane and Joe Kapanski the most.

If the driver is one of the Kapanskis, there’s hell to pay from The Man. If the driver is the spoiled daughter of one of the most arrogant and self-righteous of the GOBs, which is saying a heap, she skates.

We The People cannot let this finding stand without a thorough, honest, and objective investigation.

A SUMMATION OF AN INJUSTICE — This happened, Then That Happened

From all available factual evidence uncovered so far (there may be more to come), here’s the play-by-play:

* It is the night of Dec. 8, around 8:15 p.m. Meredith Nilan, from all the available evidence and according to the police, has just finished partying at a BYP gathering (Berkshire Young Professionals, or BEEPERS, a production of the Berkshire Chamber of Commerce). THE BEEPER “networking socials are famous not so much for “networking” but for drinking to excess. We expect that will change in light of the events of Dec. 8. The information on heavy drinking is the testimony on the general nature of BEEPER gatherings from several BEEPER veterans, who would not let their names be used.

To date, not one BEEPER of the 60 or so who were present at the “networking social” at Allium’s Restaurant in Great Barrington, Mass., has publicly testified to what they saw of Nilan’s behavior that night. Most won’t even admit they were there. The photographic evidence, however, tell us some of the roster who were there at the Great Barrington hot spot. One attendee, who will not allow his or her name to be used, says Meredith Nilan drank heavily at the party. This is not been confirmed and must be considered hearsay, which, we remind our readers, doesn’t necessarily mean the information is true or not true. We must ask, though, why the BEEPERS are so afraid to say anything. Could it be they know if they come out and tell the truth, the GOBs will punish them and their careers, locally, will be over? Many of the BEEPERS are, remember, professional and social climbers looking to get in on the gravy train. THE PLANET received further word from a member of the Chamber that the C of C’s execs have gotten the word out to its BEEPERS: “You don’t know nuttin’, you didn’t see nuttin’, you don’t say nuttin.”

* Meredith Nilan is driving North on Winesap Road toward East Street, near her home, apparently heading out again that night. A pedestrian is walk-jogging his dog on the opposite side of the road, heading in the same direction.

* Nilan’s car swerves and crosses lanes. Clearly, she has lost control. Why? Too much alcohol? Texting? Yakking on a cell phone? Falling asleep at the wheel? Daydreaming? All of these? None of these? The vehicle, owned by and registered to her father, Clifford Nilan, a senior official in the Berkshire County Courthouse, crosses lanes and slams into the pedestrian, whose name is Peter Moore. His dog is named Toby.

* The impact is so great that, as revealed by the photographic evidence, that it rips the front grille of Nilan’s SUV, dents the hood, and leaves a fully delineated head-sized hole in the windshield, just to the right of the driver. Peter Moore’s head has just smashed through the safety glass. Incidentally, THE PLANET has seen a muscular wise guy take a baseball bat to a car windshield in anger. He needed several whacks with all his strength to even create hazing. More whacks produced a spider’s web cracking. Still more whacks finally broke through the glass. Try it today on your own vehicle. You’ll see how tough it is to break the glass, and yet — and yet — the force of the impact of Nilan’s vehicle and Moore’s head produced a hole in the windshield as if it came from a punch press. Nilan tells investigators she’s not sure what she hit; it could have been a “dog” or a “deer.” Remember, a human head has just pierced her windshield, a foot or so from her face. She can’t distinguish that from a dog’s head or a deer’s head, so she testifies. It’s possible, of course, but it it plausible?

THE EVIDENCE SUGGESTS: There’s No REASONABLE Way Meredith Nilan’s Story Can be Taken as Credible

* After surveying the damage to the vehicle, from photos first published by THE PLANET, is there any reasonable way to believe the driver did not know she had hit a human being — not a “dog or a deer”?

* The driver does not stop to notify police.

* The driver does not wait for the police to arrive, as the law requires, despite the fact that a man is almost killed.

* The incident is hidden for almost a month, although THE PLANET first got wind of it a little more than week after it happened. Our first notice came in an e-mail from one of our sources. We made discreet inquiries. Miracle: Nobody knew, heard, saw, or said anything. Nonetheless, we got enough of a confirmation to tell us there was a measure of truth to what we heard. Something had happened. Was that measure full brimmed or one-finger high? We didn’t know.

* The incident finally breaks. We learn that Cliff Nilan, and not Meredith, is the one who calls the police. Why? Is Meredith too impaired? Is there another reason? She doesn’t report to the police until late the next morning, more than 15 hours after the accident, enough time for alcohol to leave her system, if any was present. Her father, meanwhile, has refused to allow Pittsfield police to search the vehicle. He forces them to get a warrant.

* Mysteriously, the Pittsfield police can’t get the courts in Pittsfield to issue a warrant. Was that because Cliff Nilan knew they wouldn’t because of his connections there as the head of the Probation Department? Did he think police would give up or drop the case because it was politically too hot to handle? Or was there another explanation why the police could not get a warrant from Pittsfield?

* Police, though, don’t give up. They are on a mission. They are doing their job, and well. They get a warrant from the Southern Berkshire District Court.

 The Victim, Peter Moore, Tells a Different Story

* The recollection of the victim tells a story opposite of Nilan’s. The police investigation differs from the Nilan account on many crucial aspects. The physical evidence at the scene and on the Nilan vehicle support the claims of Moore and the police compared to Nilan’s statements.   With an application of common sense and reason to the best available body of evidence, one must find in favor of the police and Mr. Moore.

* Pittsfield police charge Meredith Nilan with criminal misdemeanor counts. The counts are subject to a magistrate’s hearing.

Secret Hearing Bars Victim and His Lawyer; A Ringer Magistrate Railroads an Unbelievable Verdict

* The Pittsfield court sets up a hearing for Jan. 12. The hearing date is not made public. THE PLANET is the only media source to investigate. We find shortly after the three-hour hearing some details.

* The magistrate, Nathan Byrnes, who is not from the Pittsfield court, has the option of opening or closing the hearing to the press and the public.

* Byrnes closes the hearing to the public. Let those  words sink in for a moment. This of what they mean.

* Byrnes closes the hearing to the press. He does it in the most bloodless and efficient way possible, by not sharing information on the date or time.

* There is no independent witness to the proceedings.

* Court officials provide no transcript of the hearing.

* Court officials provide no tape of the hearing.

* Byrnes, an assistant clerk magistrate from Westfield, is selected, we learn, because, according to the office of Berkshire County clerk magistrate Christopher Speranzo, he (Byrnes) will be objective, since he knows no one in the case. THE PLANET receives information, unconfirmed, though, that Byrnes’ father and Meredith Nilan’s father, Clifford, have a professional and personal relationship, going back to the beginning days in the court system.

* The victim, Peter Moore, is not allowed to attend the hearing.

* The victim’s lawyer, by his own testimony, is not allowed to attend the hearing.

* Meredith Nilan’s lawyer, Tim Shugrue, is allowed to attend and present evidence.

The magistrate finds that there is insufficient evidence for the case to go to trial. This incredulous, incredible finding angers the Mary Jane and Joe Kapanskis. Good, honest, decent citizens — ordinary citizens who don’t have connections in the System — know that if they had been behind the wheel, they would have been signed, sealed, and delivered, on ice. The perception is that the GOB have saved “one of their own,” yet again.

* Despite the fact that there is no independent confirmation of what went on in the hearing, the Boring Broadsheet — a newspaper once known as The Berkshire Eagle — dutifully prints the story of the Byrnes’ finding. No harm, no foul. See. All that fuss over nothing. Oops. Sorry, Peter Moore. Get over it, big guy. The BB story — which runs without a byline, that is, anonymously —  only quotes Shugrue. It takes his account as whole cloth, including his claim that a full evidential hearing was held. As legal observers point out, including lawyers and one judge to whom THE PLANET spoke, that turns out to be a false claim, since the other side in the case was not allowed to present or attend. The BB later begins a more responsible approach to its coverage, forced into doing to by public outrage and the pressure of this website’s coverage.

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WHEN THE MOMENT OF TRUTH COMES

(FORTRESS OF SOLITUDE, WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY, JULY 11-12, 2012) — The rubber met the road, the silicon met the photons, and the floor met the ceiling the moment the clerk announced Nilan v. Valenti was up before the bench of Judge Mark Mason. That’s when any pre-game jitters vanish, the game face becomes fixed, and you begin playing chess for all the marbles. Our experiences at tournament chess would again be called upon for a translatable use.

THE PLANET did not go looking for this battle, but when it came our way, we were determined to fight it with all of our efforts. We quickly got as much legal advice as we could, mustering a lot of resources, including the ACLU, the UCLA Law School, and individual attorneys and firms. That wasn’t the first decision THE PLANET made. The first decision was to redact the posts in response to a court order.

America is — and must be — ‘a nation of laws’

Was that the right decision? Yes, said every legal mind we consulted — after the fact, by the way. We took the posts down solely on and of our own choice. We obeyed a court order. We did not agree with the order, and in fact, vehemently disagreed, judging it to be a grossly misapplied harassment statute applied to the case of a writer who hadn’t threatened anyone. THE PLANET learned long ago, though, that a cornerstone principle of America is this: “We are a nation of laws.” America MUST be that, or else it is any third-world banana republic. Personal feelings must be set aside, as much as that is humanly possible.

THE PLANET could have disobeyed Judge Vega‘s order, been arrested, then sued everyone in sight, as one commentator advised. Monday Morning Quarterbacking of that ilk comes mighty easy when you’re not the one in the sights of a court-ordered restraint. We didn’t take that course, and only considered it theoretically as a realistic option, because we knew that in obeying the law, our remedy also could be found in the law.

How could we expect to defy the law, in effect make up our own personal law, then employ the same law for my defense? It would have been inconsistent, ineffective, bad citizenship, and lousy strategy. How could we disrespect the law by spitting on Judge Vega’s order and then turn around and ask the law to respect us? As the beginning of our legal strategy, we had done exactly the right thing.

Now, We Go to Judge Mason’s Courtroom, Time: 10 a.m., Date: July 9, 2012, Place: Berkshire Country District Court in Pittsfield, Mass.

The clerk called the case before the bench. We each — Meredith Nilan and Dan Valenti, two ships colliding in the sun of morning, the two never having before been in the same ocean together, let alone the same room — raised our rights hands and swore to do what THE PLANET has been doing all along in this case and in the entirely of our professional life: To tell the truth. For us, therefore, it was business as usual; for Nilan, we can only surmise, it may have come as a new experience.

She led off, asking for permission through her attorney, Mark Brennan, to read her statement into the record. Judge Mason agreed. The ACLU’s Bill Newman, one of our attorneys who assisted lead barrister Rinaldo Del Gallo III, noted that the language of Ms. Nilan’s court statement had a totally different “feel” and “tone” compared to the initial affidavit she initially submitted to the court (the one that Judge Vega responded to by granting a ridiculously misapplied and specious  restraining order on THE PLANET).

That original affidavit was submitted in Nilan’s handwriting (definitely not the Palmer Method we learned from the Venerini Sisters at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel School back in the day) bearing the style of a 24-year-old not proficient in the King’s English. The statement she read to the court, Newman felt, had been “gone through several times by lawyers.” Thus, when Nilan read the statement, it came across to our ears as unconvincing, with halting diction at a pace far too fast for full comprehension. Judge Mason had to ask her to slow down, more than once.

More importantly, that Nilan was allowed to read her statement led to an opening for our defense. Attorney Del Gallo asked for the same privilege for THE PLANET. Judge Mason, an impressive jurist and not only because of his ruling on our case but from having watched him in action during the course of the same long day on some truly crazy cases involving domestic violence, granted the motion. The judge said he was determined to give Nilan v. Valenti “all the time it needed,” or words to that effect.

Judge Mason was true to his word.

THE PLANET Takes the Docket

We took the docket, feeling comfortable as we always do in front of a live mic, and delivered our statement. It took 45 minutes. It was the first time since this ordeal began that we were allowed to address the court. We did, in detail, in confidence, and with assertions consistent with having truth on our side. It felt good to have our say.

Remember:

* Nilan submitted her request on June 22, 2012. THE PLANET was not informed of this.

* On June 27, Judge Vega issued her now-defunct ruling. THE PLANET was not informed nor were we presented an opportunity to be heard.

* For five days, from June 22 to June 27, we were a subject of the court without knowing it. We were not advised of anything motion being entertained against us. Ironically, and now comically, we found out about Judge Vega’s decision by reading our own website. A reader had posted word from the Berkshire Eagle‘s Andrew Amelinckx‘s first online posting.

In our view, the most important point we made while having the floor in the courtroom was the one was about the true victim in this case. That victim isn’t Meredith Nilan. The victim isn’t Dan Valenti. The victim is Peter Moore.

Peter Moore was the man run over by Nilan’s negligent driving on the night of Dec. 8, 2011, following her attendance at a Christmas party put on by Berkshire Young Professionals and the Berkshire Chamber of Commerce at Allium’s Restaurant in Great Barrington.  He is the man who will now be dealing with a lifetime of physical and emotional aftermath. And yet … and yet … Nilan’s has acted in this case as if she’s the victim. That was 100% of her stance on Monday, July 9, in court. From her perspective, it was and still is about her suffering, her pain, her feelings.

THE PLANET has no doubt she’s a troubled young woman stemming from her actions on the evening of Dec. 8, 2011. We have sympathy for her distress. We also know that when you make a colossal mistake that nearly takes someone’s life, your best course is to handle it with honesty, forthrightness, and maturity. You handle it with a determination to take responsibility for your actions, make good as best you can, and become doubly determined to live the rest of your life in a good, healthy, and productive way.

To date, to the best of our knowledge, she has not expressed to Mr. Moore or his family any sign of regret, sorrow, or remorse of her own volition and sense of decency, notwithstanding the court-ordered “letter of apology.” How unfortunate. That’s why yesterday, in court, as we have for the entirety of this case, we wanted to go to bat the the Moores.

Attorney Del Gallo’s Winning Brief: Every Word of It

THE PLANET now wishes to share the entirety of the brief written by Attorney Del Gallo and submitted to the court on our behalf. Remember, again, that the clock was ticking. We decided on a strategy late Tuesday morning. We wanted to get our affidavit and Attorney Del Gallo’s brief into the judge’s hands via the court clerk on Friday. That gave us two+ days. As one of our posters so trenchantly posted, winners want the ball when the game is on the line and the clock is ticking down.

The brief is long, but cyberspace (god bless it) knows no spatial limits. Such constraints are for dinosaurs like print. We think every word of this is worth sharing.

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Massachusetts Trial Court

District Court Department

Central Berkshire (Pittsfield) Division

 

 

Meredith Nilan v. Daniel Valenti

Docket Number: 12 27RO 235

 

 

BRIEF OF DAN VALENTI

IN OPPOSITION TO CIVIL harassment prevention order under Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E

 

 

 

Rinaldo Del Gallo, III, Esq. for Dan Valenti

PO Box 1081

Pittsfield, MA 01202-1082

(413) 445-6789

BBO 632880

 

 

 

Contents

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES 4

ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW 6

STATEMENT OF THE CASE 6

THE ARGUMENT 17

There is no statutory provision under Mass. Gen. L. C. 258e §3(a) allowing a judge to proscribe or censure speech on the internet, apart from a generalized order not to abuse or harass defendant. 18

There is no “harassment” as defined under Mass. Gen. L. C. 258e§1 19

This year’s case of O’brien v. Borowski limits what one may “fear” in order for there to be “harassment” and obtain a civil harassment protection order—one must be in fear of physical harm or physical damage to one’s property, and the words used must (1) “fighting words” or (2) “true threats.” 21

Ms. Nilan must show that Mr. Valenti’s speech consist of “fighting words” or “true threats,” and this she cannot do. 31

Mr. Valenti could not engage in fighting words because they would not incite an ordinary person to violence and there was no face to face confrontation. 33

Mr. Valenti did not engage in a “true threat” because he did not manifest an intent to visit physical harm to Ms. nilan or harm to her property. 35

“True threats” must be objectively reasonable as a constitutional requirement and therefore statute suffers from overbreadth—O’Brien is wrong in this respect—the issue is reserved for U.S. Supreme Court. 42

Ms. Nilan cannot claim that because she feared from third parties because of Mr. Valenti’s coverage of her case, that she is entitled to relief. 47

Even, assuming arguendo, that Mr. Valenti has engaged in “fighting words” or “true threats,” the order is too broad and bans expression that is neither “true threats” or “fighting words” on Mr. Valenti’s blog. 50

There is a constitutional right to publish truthful information about other individuals about an area of public concern. 52

The order constitutes an unconstitutional prior restraint and should not be continued. 56

 

 

 

 

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

Cases

Alexander v. United States, 509 U.S. 544, 550 (1993) 57, 58

Bartnicki v. Vopper, 532 U.S. 514 (2001) 54, 55

Blue Canary Corp. v. City of Milwaukee, 251 F.3d 1121, 1123 (7th Cir. Wis. 2001) 60

Bobolas v. Does, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 110856 (D. Ariz. Oct. 1, 2010) 59, 60, 61

Bosley v. WildWetT.com, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 11028 (6th Cir. Apr. 21, 2004) 59

Carroll v. Princess Anne, 393 U.S. 175, 183 (1968) 51

Cohen v. California, 403 U.S. 15, 20, 91 S. Ct. 1780, 29 L. Ed. 2d 284 (1971) 33, 34

Commonwealth v. A Juvenile, 368 Mass. 580 (Mass. 1975) 24

Commonwealth v. Chou, 433 Mass. 229, 236, 741 N.E.2d 17 (2001) 36, 37, 39

Commonwealth v. Gazzola, 17 Mass. L. Rep. 308 (Mass. Super. Ct. 2004) 40

Commonwealth v. Welch, 444 Mass. 80, 94 (Mass. 2005) 25, 26, 28, 40

Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn, 420 U.S. 469 (1975) 53

Doe v. Pulaski County Special Sch. Dist., 306 F.3d 616, 622 (8th Cir. 2002) 37

Erznoznik v. Jacksonville, 422 U.S. 205 (1975) 25

Johnson v. Campbell, 332 F.3d 199, 212 (3d Cir. 2003) 34

Landmark Communications, Inc. v. Virginia, 435 U.S. 829 (1978). 55

Layshock v. Hermitage Sch. Dist., 496 F. Supp. 2d 587, 602 (W.D. Pa. 2007) 35

Merenda v. Tabor, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63782 (M.D. Ga. May 7, 2012) 34

Mortgage Specialists v. Implode-Explode Heavy Indus., 999 A.2d 184 (N.H. 2010); 61

Near v. Minn., 283 U.S. 697, 713-714 (1931) 58, 61, 64

Neb. Press Ass’n v. Stuart, 427 U.S. 539, 598 (1976) 59

Patterson v. Colorado, 205 U.S. 454, 462 (1907) 59

Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Pittsburgh Com. on Human Relations, 413 U.S. 376, 390 (1973), 60

Smith v. Daily Mail Publishing Co., 443 U.S. 97, 103 (1979) 54

Terminiello v. Chicago, 337 U.S. 1, 4-5 (1949) 49

The Florida Star v. B. J. F., 491 U.S. 524 (1989) 52

United States v. Fulmer, 108 F.3d 1486, 1492 (1st Cir. 1997) 36

United States v. Malik, 16 F.3d 45, 49 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 513 U.S. 968, 115 S. Ct. 435, 130 L. Ed. 2d 347 (1994) 36

United States v. White, 670 F.3d 498, 507 (4th Cir. Va. 2012) 42, 43

United States v. Williams, 553 U.S. 285(2008) 24

United States v. Williams, 553 U.S. 285, 302 (2008) 25

Virginia v. Black, 538 U.S. 343, 123 S. Ct. 1536, 155 L. Ed. 2d 535 (2003) 36

Watts v. United States, 394 U.S. 705, 708, 22 L. Ed. 2d 664, 89 S. Ct. 1399 (1969) 39

Whitney v. Cal., 274 U.S. 357, 376 (1927) 42

Statutes

Mass. Gen. L. c.258E passim

Other Authorities

Article 16 of the Massachusetts Constitution 19

Treatises

Blackstone Commentaries 58

M. Nimmer, Nimmer on Freedom of Speech 57

 

 

ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW

Whether there is “harassment” as defined under Mass. Gen. L. C. 258e§1

Whether Ms. Nilan can show that Mr. Valenti’s speech consist of “fighting words” or “true threats”?

Whether Ms. Nilan can claim that because she feared from third parties because of Mr. Valenti’s coverage of her case, that she is entitled to relief?

Even, assuming arguendo, that Mr. Valenti engaged in “fighting words” or “true threats,” whether the order is too broad and bans expression that is neither on Mr. Valenti’s blog?

Whether there is a constitutional right to publish truthful information about other individuals about an area of public concern?

Whether the order constitutes an unconstitutional prior restraint?

 

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

On June 22, 2012, Meredith Nilan sought a civil harassment protection order pursuant to Mass. Gen. L. ch. 258E against journalist Dan Valenti for writings on his blog, PlanetValenti.com.

She filed a supporting affidavit also dated June 22, 2012, herein after “Nilan Affidavit,” cataloging her misgivings with PlanetValenti.com.

The civil harassment statute, codified in Mass. Gen. L. c.258E, § 1 et seq., is a new statute and was enacted into law in 2010.  As such, much of the law is still in a stage of development.   Civil harassment restraining orders were created based upon a perceived “loophole” in the restraining order law which only applied to members that were in a dating relationship, living in the same household, or related to a certain degree. “Chapter 258E was enacted in 2010 to allow individuals to obtain civil restraining orders against persons who are not family or household members [as with a typical chapter 209A restraining order], and to make the violation of those orders punishable as a crime.”  O’Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 419 (Mass. 2012) (bracketed material added).

Dan Valenti is a journalist of considerable distinction: He has a Master’s degree (M.A.) in journalism, S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, Syracuse University (1975), one of the top journalism schools in the country.  He has worked for and/or written for numerous newspapers, including the Syracuse, N.Y., Post-Standard, the Pennsylvania Times Leader, the Berkshire Eagle, and the Pittsfield Gazette. His work has been published in many newspapers and magazines across the country, including the SF Chronicle, the Boston papers, and many others. He broadcasted on the radio for two years in the mid-80s at WUPE and WUHN (Pittsfield, Mass.), then 14 years (1992-2006) at WBRK and WRCZ (Pittsfield).  He has written and edited numerous books, from major publishers such as Viking Penguin and Bantam to small literary presses. His work has been reviewed in many publications, including the New York Times Book Review.  He has been a member of the English Department faculty at Berkshire Community College for 20 years (1992-2012), where he teaches composition and writing. BCC honored him for his service in May of this year at a recognition dinner at Wahconah Country Club in Dalton, Mass. Mr. Valenti also taught for two years at LeMoyne College, Syracuse, N.Y., teaching expository writing and communications.  His work has received numerous awards and honors.  July 5th Affidavit of Dan Valenti, p. 4-5, herein after “Valenti Affidavit.”

Dan Valenti has a blog, PlanetValenti.com, to which Ms. Nilan took great offense regarding an automobile accident in which Ms. Nilan was involved.  The gist of her complaint is that Mr. Valenti unfairly portrayed her as a drunk driver who left the scene of an accident, and that his coverage on her on his blog was full of lies, exaggerations, and distortions.  In an affidavit dated June 22, 2012, Ms. Nilan advanced a number of theories for issuance of a criminal harassment prevention order, to which Mr. Valenti wrote a responsive affidavit dated and filed on July 5, 2012. It is interesting to note what is not stated in Ms. Nilan’s affidavit:

  1. There is no claim that Mr. Valenti has ever met Ms. Nilan or has in way had a face-to-face meeting.
  2. There is no claim that Mr. Valenti has ever physically threatened her.
  3. There is no claim that Mr. Valenti has solicited others to harm her.

Because it is difficult to articulate a single theory why Ms. Nilan believes a restraining order should issue, or what is background information or what her asserted basis for a harassment prevention order, a best effort will be made to summarize her arguments.

  • First, Ms. Nilan appears to assert in her affidavit in numerous places that Mr. Valenti has slandered her in a “regular and vicious attack on [her] reputation.”  Nilan Affidavit at 1.  Her affidavit is suffused with statements that Mr. Valenti has somehow lied and sensationalized facts, yet fails to identify a single assertion of fact of Mr. Valenti’s that is supposed to be a lie, save for one;  she accuses Mr. Valenti of falsely “representing [her] as a drunk driver who ran a man and left him to die—all false.”  Id.  As to what particular words in the PlantetValenti.com blog that were “lies,” Ms. Nilan does not mention.  In his responsive affidavit, Mr. Valenti asserts that he was not libelous, and his blog contained fair commentary.
  • Second, Ms. Nilan suggests that Mr. Valenti has been otherwise unfair in his coverage (in addition to her allegations that Mr. Valenti lied).  She states Mr. Valenti wrote “sensational interpretations,” such as by saying that Ms. Nilan “‘left a man to die’ while the case was unresolved.” She also finds unfair that Mr. Valenti continued to assert that Ms. Nilan was guilty of a hit and run when it has “since been adjudicated and the charge dismissed.”  Mr. Valenti asserts in his responsive affidavit that his blog met high journalistic standards.   He also asserts that the damage to her automobile was consistent with a hit and run accident.  On page 11 of his July 5th affidavit, Valenti states, “The photos [of Nilan’s car after the accident] clearly show heavy front-end damage and a head-sized hole in the windshield near the driver’s position — damage that would be consistent with hitting a human being.”
  • Third—and this is the best interpretation that can be rendered—Ms. Nilan appears to be arguing that by printing “lies” and “sensational” accounts and “innuendos” and otherwise being unfair in his coverage of her case, Mr. Valenti is somehow encouraging others to be violent towards her by getting members of the public to unfairly hate her and become riled up.  This will be called a “listener reaction” argument.  “Mr. Valenti’s continued vitriol and his repeated inclination to print lies and sensationalize every aspect of my case has made me fear for my personal safety.”  Nilan Affidavit at 1. “His repeated claim that ‘the fix was in on my case’ make me fear vigilante justice.” Id. at 2.  She adds, “I fear for my safety from these constant actions that I feel represent cyberbullying and harassment.” Id.  She states that she “recently received death threats which [she] believes are related to Mr. Valenti’s words and this has only heightened my stress level.” Id.
  • Fourth, but related to the third concern, is that Mr. Valenti has published personal information about Ms. Nilan, including where she works and the street she lives on.  Thus, appears to be the argument, the venom for Ms. Nilan coupled with identifying information such as her likeness, her place of work, and the street she lives on, places her at great physical risk.
  • Fifth, there seems to be an argument, that apart from fear of her own safety, that since readers of Dan Valenti’s log might “boycott [her] work, or suggest that she should be fired from her place of employment, or “march en masse on [her] street,” that this is also grounds for a civil harassment protection order to issue. Nilan Affidavit at 1.
  • Sixth—and this is the best that can be made of the theory which is not articulated—is what seems to be an invasion of privacy argument.  Ms. Nilan accuses Mr. Valenti, in his blogging efforts, of contacting “police, court officials, law makers, and business associates asking them to weigh-in on my case . . .”  “He has printed photos taken without my permission from the inside of [her] garage, as well as pictures of my neighborhood, and of me.”

While contacting police, courts officials, lawmakers, and business associates is a common journalist practice, Mr. Valenti states in his affidavit,

“To the best of my knowledge, I did not directly contact in a substantive manner such people that Ms. Nilan claims. I therefore could not have shared my ‘interpretation’ with them (police, court officials, lawmakers, her work mates). As I have stated previously, the story largely came to me. To the best of my recollection, I did directly contact two people: (a) Mr. Alfred ‘Alf’ Barbalunga, chairman of the Pittsfield school committee and probation officer of Southern Berkshire District Court, who was pictured in a photograph taken with Ms. Nilan on the evening of Dec. 8 at the BYP party at Allium’s restaurant, and (b) Ms. Ashley Sulock, PR director for the Berkshire Chamber of Commerce.”

Nor does Ms. Nilan claim that she has ever met Dan Valenti.

  • Seventh, there Nilan complains that Mr. Valenti “made one wish that there was a place people could be ‘put down.’”  This is the only thing that could remotely be labeled a “physical threat.”  Mr. Valenti responded in his affidavit that Mr. Nilan “brings up a phrase that was clearly meant to be figurative.”  Valenti affidavit at 15.  Mr. Valenti maintains this is hyperbole.

On June 27, 2012, after an ex-parte hearing, District Court Judge Bethzaida Sanabria-Vega issued a temporary order of harassment prevention pursuant to Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E §5 (which provides for the issuance of temporary orders).    Included were the customary issuance of an order to stay 100 yards from the plaintiff and an order to stay away from the plaintiff’s work and residence.  But in addition to these usual provisions, in Section 3 of the order there was the additional provisions that Mr. Valenti was . . .

 

“ordered to remove any and all information referring to the Plaintiff [Ms. Nilan] from any and all websites, blogs, etc.”

 

Mr. Valenti’s interpretation of this order is not only must he pull the material on the website down before it was reviewed by the court (a species of prior restraint), but that he must also not publish any future articles mentioning Meredith Nilan (the acme of prior restraint). In his affidavit, Mr. Valenti has stated that

“the prior restraint has caused me not to add further commentary on my website, Planet Valenti, including this case. This ruling as I understand it prevents me from publishing new articles in any way mentioning her. The judge’s order required me to pull content from my website, material already published, as if the Nilan-Moore case didn’t happen. The judge’s actions in allowing a temporary restraining order violate my First Amendment rights under freedom of speech as a citizen and freedom of the press as a journalist.”

 

Valenti Affidavit at p.17.

 

THE ARGUMENT

Pursuant to Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E §3 (a),

(a) A person suffering from harassment

 may file a complaint in the appropriate court requesting protection from such harassment. A person may petition the court under this chapter for an order that the defendant:

(i) refrain from abusing or harassing the plaintiff, whether the defendant is an adult or minor;

(ii) refrain from contacting the plaintiff, unless authorized by the court, whether the defendant is an adult or minor;

(iii) remain away from the plaintiff’s household or workplace, whether the defendant is an adult or minor; and

(iv) pay the plaintiff monetary compensation for the losses suffered as a direct result of the harassment; provided, however, that compensatory damages shall include, but shall not be limited to, loss of earnings, out-of-pocket losses for injuries sustained or property damaged, cost of replacement of locks, medical expenses, cost for obtaining an unlisted phone number and reasonable attorney’s fees.

There is no statutory provision under Mass. Gen. L. C. 258e §3(a) allowing a judge to proscribe or censure speech on the internet, apart from a generalized order not to abuse or harass defendant.

 

While this case raises many issues regarding the free speech provisions of the First Amendment of the United States and Article 16 of the Massachusetts Constitution, it also raises a much more pedestrian issue: Where in Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E §3(a), or in any other part of Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E for that matter, does it authorize a court to order a defendant to remove all material from a blog or website mentioning a plaintiff?  There is no such provision.  Granted, Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E §3(a)(i) allows a judge to issue an order to “refrain from abusing or harassing the plaintiff” similar to the “no abuse” counterpart to a restraining order, but this not a license to start censuring speech on the Internet.  Mr. Valenti argues that in addition to the order’s provisions (or any future such order) to remove all articles or comments referring in any way to Meredith Nilan as being in violation of the free speech provisions of the Massachusetts and Federal constitutions, the remedy is not a remedy as provided in Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E and is therefore without legal justification.  When the legislature has clearly and unmistakably stated all the remedies afforded under a statute, it is not the province of courts to engraft new ones. Inclusio unius est exclusio alterius.

 

There is no “harassment” as defined under Mass. Gen. L. C. 258e§1

 

The next order of inquiry is whether Mr. Valenti has “harassed” Ms. Nilan so as to afford her any remedy under Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E §3(a), for it is only a person suffering “harassment” that may file a complaint.  Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E §1 provides several definitions useful in interpreting Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E §3(a):

Section 1. As used in this chapter the following words shall, unless the context clearly requires otherwise, have the following meanings:

“Abuse”, attempting to cause or causing physical harm to another or placing another in fear of imminent serious physical harm.

“Harassment”, (i) 3 or more acts of willful and malicious conduct aimed at a specific person committed with the intent to cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property

and that does in fact cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property; or (ii) an act that:

(A) by force, threat or duress causes another to involuntarily engage in sexual relations; or

(B) constitutes a violation of section 13B, 13F, 13H, 22, 22A, 23, 24, 24B, 26C, 43 or 43A of chapter 265 or section 3 of chapter 272. . . .

“Malicious”, characterized by cruelty, hostility or revenge.

 

It is worthy of note that while “harassment” is defined, the statute does not specify just what the plaintiff might “fear” or be “intimidated” about that is cause to trigger “harassment.”  There is a subject—the defendant who causes the fear or intimidation.  There is an object—the plaintiff who is at the receiving end of the fear or intimidation.  But there is no modifying prepositional phrase of “intimidation” or “fear.”  If “fear” of anything or “intimidation” about anything could constitute “harassment,” any speech that is critical of another could be considered “harassment” since people often fear criticism or otherwise being portrayed in an unfavorable likeness, and might be intimidated that such criticism might repeat itself.  Thus, without some type of limiting definition of “fear” or “intimidation,” the statute is unconstitutionally broad.

 

This year’s case of O’brien v. Borowski limits what one may “fear” in order for there to be “harassment” and obtain a civil harassment protection order—one must be in fear of physical harm or physical damage to one’s property, and the words used must (1) “fighting words” or (2) “true threats.”

 

 

The recently decided case of O’Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415 (Mass. 2012) is important because it was just held that Massachusetts civil harassment statute is not unconstitutionally overly broad. Id. at 416.  O’Brien is a somewhat unusual case in that it was moot when the case was decided, but because it “raise[d] issues of public importance regarding the constitutionality of a recently enacted statute that will likely arise again but, if [dismissed] on grounds of mootness, evade review,” id. at 551, the case was heard on the overbreadth issue.

In order to understand the effect of O’Brien in this case, it is important to understand overbreadth jurisprudence under the First Amendment.  In some cases a statute can be challenged if it jeopardizes too much speech so as to strike the entire statute—an “overbreadth” or “facial” challenge. Unlike other constitutional challenges where one has to show that the Constitution has been violated as pertains to their particular case (as a fundamental requirement of standing), the First Amendment free speech provisions is so important that an overbreadth challenge may even be brought by a party who did not actually engage in the protected speech and whose own speech may be unprotected.  One would ordinarily lacking standing by arguing that while their constitutional rights have not been violated, the law (be it or a statute, ordinance, or regulation) violates the constitutional rights of others.  But a person that did not personally have their First Amendment free speech rights violated by a statue may argue that, nonetheless, so much legitimate speech is imperiled by a statute that the statute is “substantially” overly broad because it has too much of a chilling effect, and that the statute must fall. “[I]f a law is found deficient as unconstitutionally overbroad in its potential application to protected speech, it may not be applied even to the person raising the challenge though that person’s speech is arguably unprotected by the First Amendment.” Commonwealth v. A Juvenile, 368 Mass. 580, 585 (Mass. 1975).

The amount of constitutionally protected statute injured by a law must be more than a hypothetical possibility—a substantial amount of protected speech must be imperiled. United States v. Williams, 553 U.S. 285, 292 (2008)( “According to our First Amendment overbreadth doctrine, a statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech.”); See generally Bulldog Investors Gen. Partnership v. Secretary of the Commonwealth, 460 Mass. 647, 676-677, 953 N.E.2d 691 (2011) for a good description of the overbreadth doctrine.

“Overbreadth” is considered “strong medicine,” so very often a court will be reluctant to invalidate an entire statute. Nonetheless, sometimes a statute may not proscribe so much speech as to render their entire statute invalid on a facial or overbreadth challenge, but might be invalid “as applied” to a given situation or class of speech.  For instance, a child pornography statute might not proscribe so much speech so as to be “substantially” overly broad so as to completely invalidate the statute, but might be unconstitutional as applied by outlawing “documentary footage of atrocities being committed in foreign countries, such as soldiers raping young children.” United States v. Williams, 553 U.S. 285, 302 (2008).

When a statute is overly broad, it is sometimes stricken down entirely. For instance, in Erznoznik v. Jacksonville, 422 U.S. 205 (1975), a local ordinance in Florida restricting the ability of a drive-in movie theater to show films containing nudity was invalidated in its entirety; the court did not engraft a judicially created limitation such as that the ordinance would only apply to obscenity. See Commonwealth v. Welch, 444 Mass. 80, 94 (Mass. 2005) for a recitation of a number of cases where statutes or ordinances were stricken that regulated putative offensive or harassing speech. The O’Brien court did not follow such an approach.

Sometimes when courts are faced with an overbreadth challenge, a court will leave parts of a statute intact, while invalidating other parts of the statute that pertain to regulating speech or expression.  For instance, in Commonwealth v. A Juvenile, 368 Mass. 580, 587 (Mass. 1975), as to the “disorderly conduct” statute as codified in ALM GL ch. 272, § 53, it was ruled that “the offense of being a disorderly person in so far as it encompasses speech or expressive conduct is not sufficiently narrowly and precisely drawn to ensure that it reach only that speech which the State has a justifiable and compelling interest in regulating, and is therefore overbroad.” “However, [the court also] conclude[d] that as reaching to conduct (other than expressive conduct), the § 53 ‘idle and disorderly persons’ provision is neither unconstitutionally overbroad nor vague.” Id.  In O’Brien, no part of the civil harassment protection statute was stricken as in Commonwealth v. A Juvenile.

Sometimes a court when confronted with an overbreadth challenge will rule that a statute that affects speech and other forms of expression was given a sufficiently narrow meaning by the legislature so as not be to be either overly broad or vague. For instance, in 2000, the Massachusetts criminal harassment statute was enacted. Its constitutionality under the free speech provisions of the US Constitution’s First Amendment or Article 16 of the Massachusetts Constitution was called into question for overbreadth in Commonwealth v. Welch, 444 Mass. 80, 97 (Mass. 2005). The Welch court noted, in review of a statute then only five years old, that

 

“States, however, have construed their statutes that proscribe harassing conduct or speech as constitutionally permissible. Most commonly, statutes have been upheld that contain some combination of the following limiting characteristics: a “willful,” “malicious,” or specific intent element; a requirement that the conduct be “directed at” an individual; a reasonable person standard; a statutory limitation that the conduct have “no legitimate purpose”; and a savings clause excluding from the statute’s reach constitutionally protected activity or communication.”

 

The Welch court recited numerous examples of such cases where statutes were not stricken but saved by narrowing constructions. The Welch court followed this approach by not striking the entire criminal harassment statute as overly broad or vague, but instead gave the Massachusetts criminal harassment statute a narrow interpretation.  This was based upon a permissible interpretation of the narrow intent of the legislature to make the statue pass constitutional muster. Id. at 96.

While it was true that the “Massachusetts criminal harassment statute lacks a savings clause or other provision that restricts punishable conduct to that which is constitutionally unprotected,” Welch, 444 Mass. at 99, and while “[s]imilarly, it contains no express limitation to fighting words,” id., the court held:

“Nonetheless, we believe the Legislature, in carefully crafting the statute, intended the statute be applied solely to constitutionally unprotected speech. Any attempt to punish an individual for speech not encompassed within the “fighting words” doctrine (or within any other constitutionally unprotected category of speech) would of course offend our Federal and State Constitutions.”

Commonwealth v. Welch, 444 Mass. 80, 99 (Mass. 2005) “In Welch, [the Supreme Judicial Court] considered the constitutionality of the criminal harassment statute, G. L. c. 265, § 43A, and concluded that, while the harassing conduct punishable under the statute may include harassing speech, the statute passed constitutional muster because it was carefully crafted by the Legislature to apply “solely to constitutionally unprotected speech.’” O’Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 420 (Mass. 2012).

The O’Brien court followed the approach in Welch by narrowing just what might be “feared” or be “intimidated” about when one is “harassed” as defined under the civil harassment protection statute so as to save it from overbreadth.  In O’Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 421 (Mass. 2012), the court had to be decided whether the civil harassment statute passed in 2010 was facially invalid for overbreadth. The O’Brien court, while noting distinct differences in the civil harassment and criminal harassment statutes, nonetheless followed the Welch court’s lead and “conclude[d] that the Legislature crafted the civil harassment act, G. L. c. 258E, with the intent that the definition of harassment exclude constitutionally protected speech, and [interpreted] G. L. c. 258E to effectuate that legislative intent.” O’Brien at 425.

The O’Brien court stated that what comes in the ambit of the civil harassment statute are “fighting words” and “true threats.”  If “harassment” is defined in Mass. G. L. c. 258E(1) as “or more acts of willful and malicious conduct aimed at a specific person committed with the intent to cause fear, intimidation, abuse,” and the “fear” caused could become fear of anything, the statute would be patently overly broad, if not also vague.  If fear could mean “fear of economic loss, of unfavorable publicity, or of defeat at the ballot box,” as the O’Brien court gave as examples, id.  at 427 (emphasis supplied), the statue would encompass Mr. Valenti’s blog, and would clearly be unconstitutional.  But the O’Brien court did not allow “fear” to be fear of anything.  It certainly did not allow “fear” or “intimidation” to be predicated on fear of unfavorable publicity which form the basis of Ms. Nilan’s complaint. The O’Brien court ruled:

We interpret the word “fear” in G. L. c. 258E, § 1, to mean fear of physical harm or fear of physical damage to property. With that narrowed construction, we conclude that the civil harassment act, G. L. c. 258E, is not constitutionally overbroad because it limits the scope of prohibited speech to constitutionally unprotected “true threats” and “fighting words.”  With that narrowed construction, we conclude that the civil harassment act, G. L. c. 258E, is not constitutionally overbroad because it limits the scope of prohibited speech to constitutionally unprotected “true threats” and “fighting words.”

 

O’Brien at 430 (emphasis supplied).

This proves fatal to Ms. Nilan’s case because she does not allege, not could she allege, that Mr. Valenti put her in fear of physical harm or fear of damage to her property, let alone, as the statute (Mass. Gen. L. c. 253E §1 requires in its definition of harassment) that Mr. Valenti engaged in “willful and malicious conduct” that was done “with the intent to cause fear [or] intimidation.”  Ms. Nilan could not show that this happened once, let alone three times as required in Mass. Gen. L. c. 253E §1’s definition of harassment.

Even it were true that Mr. Valenti urged that Ms. Nilan “be fired or that they boycott [her] work or march en masse on [her] street” as stated in Ms. Nilan’s affidavit, even if it true that Mr. Valenti asked his readers to “weight in on [her] case” as stated in her affidavit, or even if it were true that Mr. Valenti helped organize a benefit for accident victim and in doing so “represented [Ms. Nilan] as a drunk driver who ran a man down and left him to die” as stated in her affidavit, or even if photos to her car were published as stated in her affidavit, or even if the street she lives on or where she works was published in on his website, this is not a physical threat to person or property as required by O’Brien.

Ms. Nilan must show that Mr. Valenti’s speech consist of “fighting words” or “true threats,” and this she cannot do.

 

So what is the scope of the civil harassment statute? While the criminal harassment statute was limited to “fighting words” in Welch, the civil harassment statute was limited to “fighting words” and “true threats,” reasoning that . . .

 

Because the definition of “civil harassment” is substantially broader than the definition of “fighting words,” we discern no legislative intent to confine the meaning of harassment to fighting words, but we do discern an intent to confine the meaning of harassment to either fighting words or “true threats.”

O’Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 425 (Mass. 2012). In footnote 7, in obiter dicta,

the court opined that they were wrong in Welch and should have concluded that the criminal harassment statute should have been interpreted to include “fighting words” and “true threats.” Id. at 425 n.7. The O’Brien court reasoned:

 

Because a “true threat” need not produce an imminent fear of harm, we erred in concluding that “true threats” analysis did not apply to criminal harassment. Welch, supra. Having unnecessarily excluded “true threats” from our constitutional analysis, we similarly erred in concluding that the criminal harassment statute was limited in its reach to “fighting words” rather than both “fighting words” and “true threats.”

O’Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 425 n.7 (Mass. 2012).

Mr. Valenti could not engage in fighting words because they would not incite an ordinary person to violence and there was no face to face confrontation.

The “fighting words” exception to the First Amendment is limited to words that are likely to provoke a fight and a breach of the peace because one person would be likely to strike another.  “Fighting words” constitute face-to-face personal insults that are so personally abusive that they are plainly “likely to provoke a violent reaction and cause a breach of the peace.” See Cohen v. California, 403 U.S. 15, 20, 91 S. Ct. 1780, 29 L. Ed. 2d 284 (1971) (fighting words are “personally abusive epithets which, when addressed to the ordinary citizen, are, as a matter of common knowledge, inherently likely to provoke violent reaction”); Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, supra at 572 (fighting words are words whose “very utterance . . . tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace”); Commonwealth v. A Juvenile, supra at 591. Fighting words thus have two components: they must be a direct personal insult addressed to a person, and they must be inherently likely to provoke violence. As such, the fighting words exception is “an extremely narrow one.” Johnson v. Campbell, 332 F.3d 199, 212 (3d Cir. 2003).

“Fighting words” inherently require a face-to-face situation because the underlying theory is that they would cause an immediate breech of the piece.  “Fighting words situations involved face to face encounters.”  Barron and Dienes, First Amendment Law (in a Nutshell)(4th ed.), p.82. “Fighting words require face to face confrontation.” Merenda v. Tabor, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63782 (M.D. Ga. May 7, 2012).

Since there is no face-to-face confrontation, postings on the Internet (such as Mr. Valenti’s blog at PlanetValenti.com) cannot be considered “fighting words.” For instance, it has been held that “[a] ‘MySpace’ internet page is not outside of the protections of the First Amendment under the fighting words doctrine because there is simply no in-person confrontation in cyberspace such that physical violence is likely to be instigated.” Layshock v. Hermitage Sch. Dist., 496 F. Supp. 2d 587, 602 (W.D. Pa. 2007).

As stated in Mr. Valenti’s Affidavit on page 2, “To this date, I have never met her, talked with her, been near her, contacted or attempted to contact her, or spoken to Meredith Nilan.”  Nor does Ms. Nilan claim (nor could she claim) that there was a face-to-face encounter.  Moreover, even his if he said statements in his blog to Ms. Nilan’s face, they could not be considered so vituperative and utterly without value so as to cause an immediate breach of the peace.

 

Mr. Valenti did not engage in a “true threat” because he did not manifest an intent to visit physical harm to Ms. nilan or harm to her property.

 

Once it has been determined that words do not constitute “fighting words,” the only category of speech that falls within the civil harassment statute are “true threats.” The O’Brien court outlined just what is a “true threat” so as to fall within the civil harassment protection statute:

True threats. In Virginia v. Black, 538 U.S. 343, 123 S. Ct. 1536, 155 L. Ed. 2d 535 (2003) (Black), the Supreme Court defined true threats:

 

‘True threats’ encompass those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual or group of individuals. . . . The speaker need not actually intend to carry out the threat. Rather, a prohibition on true threats ‘protect[s] individuals from the fear of violence’ and ‘from the disruption that fear engenders,’ in addition to protecting people ‘from the possibility that the threatened violence will occur.'” . . .

 

The term ‘true threat’ has been adopted to help distinguish between words that literally threaten but have an expressive purpose such as political hyperbole, and words that are intended to place the target of the threat in fear, whether the threat is veiled or explicit.” Commonwealth v. Chou, 433 Mass. 229, 236, 741 N.E.2d 17 (2001) (Chou).

A true threat does not require “an explicit statement of an intention to harm the victim as long as circumstances support the victim’s fearful or apprehensive response.” Id. at 234. See United States v. Fulmer, 108 F.3d 1486, 1492 (1st Cir. 1997) (“use of ambiguous language does not preclude a statement from being a threat”); United States v. Malik, 16 F.3d 45, 49 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 513 U.S. 968, 115 S. Ct. 435, 130 L. Ed. 2d 347 (1994) (“absence of explicitly threatening language does not preclude the finding of a threat”). Nor need a true threat threaten imminent harm; sexually explicit or aggressive language “directed at and received by an identified victim may be threatening, notwithstanding the lack of evidence that the threat will be immediately followed by actual violence or the use of physical force.” Chou, supra at 235. See Black, supra at 359-360 (defining true threats without imminence requirement); Doe v. Pulaski County Special Sch. Dist., 306 F.3d 616, 622 (8th Cir. 2002) (“serious expression of an intent to cause a present or future harm” is true threat).

For example, in Chou, supra at 230-231, the defendant produced flyers with the word “MISSING” printed in large type across the top, beneath which was a photograph of a former girl friend who had broken up with him and offensive sexual remarks about her, and then hung the flyers in several places in her high school. He was convicted under G. L. c. 272, § 53, id. at 230, which criminally punishes “persons who with offensive and disorderly acts or language accost or annoy persons of the opposite sex.” We concluded that the defendant’s criminal conviction for this communication did not violate the First Amendment because it was a true threat that “had no expressive purpose but was, instead, intended to ‘get back’ at the victim by placing her in fear that she might suffer some sexual harm or wind up among the ‘missing.'” Id. at 237. We recognized that “[s]exually explicit language, when directed at particular individuals in settings in which such communications are inappropriate and likely to cause severe distress, may be inherently threatening.” Id. at 234.

In Black, the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of a Virginia law that prohibited the burning of a cross with intent to intimidate, concluding that, in view of the Ku Klux Klan’s “long and pernicious history” of using the burning of a cross “as a signal of impending violence,” it constituted a true threat, unprotected by the First Amendment, when committed with an intent to intimidate. Black, supra at 363.n6 The Supreme Court noted that “[i]ntimidation in the constitutionally proscribable sense of the word is a type of true threat, where a speaker directs a threat to a person or group of persons with the intent of placing the victim in fear of bodily harm or death.” Id. at 360. Taken together, Chou and Black demonstrate that the “true threat” doctrine applies not only to direct threats of imminent physical harm, but to words or actions that — taking into account the context in which they arise — cause the victim to fear such harm now or in the future and evince intent on the part of the speaker or actor to cause such fear.

 

O’Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 423-425 (Mass. 2012)(emphasis supplied).   The gist of a “true threat” is that someone directly or unmistakably suggests that they will visit harm to another’s person or property.

Nowhere is it ever alleged by Ms. Nilan that Mr. Valenti “communicated a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence” so as to constitute a “true threat.”  Not only is there no “direct” threat, but there is not an “implied” threat as by burning a cross across from an Afro-American’s house as described in Black, or by placing “Missing” signs of a person as in Chou to suggest the person will soon be missing.  Ms. Nilan could not possibly suggest that she fears physical harm to her person or her property from Mr. Valenti.

Ms. Nilan complains that Mr. Valenti stated in his blog that Ms. Nilan “made one wish that there was a place people could be ‘put down.’”  Nilan Affidavit at p.1.  Mr. Valenti responds that she “brings up a phrase that was clearly meant to be figurative.”  Valenti Affidavit at p.15.  Political hyperbole that a reasonable person would not consider as a genuine threat cannot constitute a “true threat.” Commonwealth v. Chou, 433 Mass. 229, 236, 741 N.E.2d 17 (2001)( The term ‘true threat’ has been adopted to help distinguish between words that literally threaten but have an expressive purpose such as political hyperbole, and words that are intended to place the target of the threat in fear, whether the threat is veiled or explicit.”;  Watts v. United States, 394 U.S. 705, 708, 22 L. Ed. 2d 664, 89 S. Ct. 1399 (1969)(the defendant’s statement that “if they ever make me carry a rifle, the first man I want to get in my sights is LBJ” was not held to be a “true threat” punishable as such but was instead “political hyperbole” which was not a crime at all); Commonwealth v. Gazzola, 17 Mass. L. Rep. 308 (Mass. Super. Ct. 2004).

Incidentally, even assuming, arguendo, the ridiculous proposition that Mr. Valenti’s comment that Ms. Nilan “made one wish that there was a place people could be ‘put down’ was not hyperbole or figurative, it would only constitute one instance of a “true threat” when three (3) incidents are needed by the civil harassment protection statute. O’Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 420 (Mass. 2012).  Harassment,” as defined in Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E §1 is defined as “3 or more acts of willful and malicious conduct aimed at a specific person committed with the intent to cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property.”  A single entry on a blog would only constitute one.

The O’Brien court distinguished between the types of threats in criminal harassment and civil harassment protection:

 

Both civil and criminal harassment require proof of three or more acts of wilful and malicious conduct aimed at a specific person. See Commonwealth v. Welch, 444 Mass. 80, 89, 825 N.E.2d 1005 (2005) (Welch) (“phrase ‘pattern of conduct or series of acts’ [in G. L. c. 265, § 43A,] requires the Commonwealth to prove three or more incidents of harassment”).  But the definitions of civil and criminal harassment differ in three respects. First, there are two layers of intent required to prove civil harassment under c. 258E: the acts of harassment must be wilful and “[m]alicious,” the latter defined as “characterized by cruelty, hostility or revenge,” and they must be committed with “the intent to cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property.” G. L. c. 258E, § 1. Only the first layer of intent is required for criminal harassment under c. 265, § 43A. Second, the multiple acts of civil harassment must “in fact cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property,” while the multiple acts of criminal harassment must “seriously alarm[]” the targeted victim. Third, criminal harassment requires proof that the pattern of harassment “would cause a reasonable person to suffer substantial emotional distress,” but civil harassment has no comparable reasonable person element.
O’Brien v. Borowski, 461 Mass. 415, 420 (Mass. 2012)(emphasis supplied). Even if Ms. Nilan unreasonably interpreted Mr. Valenti’s words (there being no “reasonable person” standard in civil harassment protection), “they must be committed with ‘the intent to cause fear, intimidation, abuse or damage to property,” and it would be outrageous to suggest that this was Mr. Valenti’s intent.

 

 

“True threats” must be objectively reasonable as a constitutional requirement and therefore statute suffers from overbreadth—O’Brien is wrong in this respect—the issue is reserved for U.S. Supreme Court.

 

As stated in O’Brien, “criminal harassment requires proof that the pattern of harassment would cause a reasonable person to suffer substantial emotional distress, but civil harassment has no comparable reasonable person element.” O’Brien at 420. And here lies in a constitutional problem with the statute itself.  The “reasonable fear” requirement of a true threat is a constitutional requirement.  “To justify suppression of free speech there must be reasonable ground to fear that serious evil will result if free speech is practiced.” Whitney v. Cal., 274 U.S. 357, 376 (1927)(Brandeis concurrence joined by Holmes).  “In determining whether a statement is a ‘true threat,’ we have employed an objective test so that we will find a statement to constitute a ‘true threat’ ‘if ‘an ordinary reasonable recipient who is familiar with the context . . . would interpret [the statement] as a threat of injury.’‘ United States v. White, 670 F.3d 498, 507 (4th Cir. Va. 2012)(emphasis supplied); United States v Alaboud, 347 F.3d 1393, 1296-1297 (holding that determining just what is a true threat is determined by an “objective standard” that a “reasonable person would construe them as a serious expression of an intention to inflict bodily harm.”); United States v. White, 670 F.3d 498, 507 (4th Cir. Va. 2012)(“‘In determining whether a statement is a ‘true threat,’ we have employed an objective test so that we will find a statement to constitute a ‘true threat’ ‘if ‘an ordinary reasonable recipient who is familiar with the context . . . would interpret the statement as a threat of injury.”)

The O’Brien court attempts to “cure” this very real problem of compliance with “true threat” jurisprudence in First Amendment law that requires an objective inquiry as to whether a reasonable person would find the threats real.  The O’Brien court argued that if “the speaker subjectively intends to communicate a threat,” as Massachusetts civil harassment protection statute requires, an objective reasonableness test may be obviated, reasoning that “[t]he requirement that the pattern of harassment in fact cause fear, intimidation, abuse, or damage to property satisfies the ‘true threat’ requirement that the threat be regarded as a serious expression of intent and not mere hyperbole.”   O’Brien at 426.  The O’Brien court then argues that an objective “reasonable person” standard is not required, because . . .

“the Legislature inserted the requirements that the defendant intend to cause fear, intimidation, abuse, or damage to property, and that the pattern of harassment actually cause fear, intimidation, abuse, or damage to property. We conclude that these requirements adequately ensure that protected speech will   not be found to be civil harassment in violation of c. 258E.

There is no appreciable amount of protected speech where the speaker both intends to cause intimidation, abuse, damage to property, or fear of physical harm or property damage, and does in fact cause one of these alternatives.

.
O’Brien at 418.  It is supposed to be admitted that there are few cases where a person makes a threat that would not be reasonably interpreted as a real threat by a reasonable person, and wherein the person hearing the words nonetheless interprets the words as a threat.  But this is to ignore the rules of evidence and the practicality of the fact finding process.  Jurors can much more readily determine whether in a given context certain expression is objectively reasonably interpreted as a threat because it does not require speculation as to what someone is thinking.

Allowing a court or jury to determine whether a reasonable person would find certain words or expression a real threat is an important prophylactic against unwarranted intrusion into the First Amendment—a prophylactic not afforded under the Massachusetts civil harassment protection statue as interpreted by the O’Brien court.  Under an objective reasonableness test, one could simply inquire whether a reasonable person would find any given words or putative expression as a real threat to their person or property.  It is a prophylactic in a way that trying to divine what an alleged perpetrator and alleged victim is thinking does not provide.  While a situation gives insight as to what a person is thinking, fact finders are not mind readers.  A test that does not rely just on determining the subjective intents of a speaker and listener but rather on what an objective person would reasonably interpret, as a practical matter, provides much greater protection for speech and expression of ideas.  To simply argue that if someone subjectively intends to cause fear and the putative victim subjectively is caused to fear, that in such a scenario it is likely a reasonable person would likely interpret the speech or expression as fear (as the O’Brien court seems to have done), ignores the simple reality it is far easier to examine speech from the perspective of the objective reasonable person as opposed to being a mind reader.

Moreover, the O’Brien court does not find a single quote from a court that says the subjective intent of the accused perpetrator and putative victim will be an adequate substitute for an objective reasonableness inquiry into the legitimacy of a perceived threat.  The O’Brien court is wrong and the statute suffers from overbreadth because for there to be a “true threat,” as a matter of Federal Constitutional law, there must be a threat that an objective reasonable person would find threatening to person or property.  Merely divining what an accused perpetrator and a putative victim is thinking has never been held found to be a legitimate substitute for the objective, reasonable person test as required under the United States Constitution until O’Brien.  This issue is preserved in case it ever goes to the United States Supreme Court.

It is supposed that the Massachusetts Supreme Court is the final word on the scope and protection of Article 16 of the Massachusetts Constitution and may dispense with the customary objective reasonableness determination of what constitutes a “true threat.”  But the United States Supreme Court and numerous lower courts have stated that for there to be a “true threat,” there needs to an objective inquiry as to whether a reasonable person would find the threats to be actual threats to their person or property.

 

Ms. Nilan cannot claim that because she feared from third parties because of Mr. Valenti’s coverage of her case, that she is entitled to relief.

 

There appears to be an assertion that because others might have been inclined to threaten or harm Ms. Nilan, that Mr. Valenti must be stopped from his negative portrayals of her.  One reason is that Valenti’s criticism of her and the system’s handling of her case has placed her under “continued emotional distress.”  She states in her affidavit (p.2) that she “fears her safety” and that she believes that “recently related death threats .  . . are related to Mr. Valenti’s words.”  Mr. Valenti has portrayed her in such an unfavorable manner, Ms. Nilan claims, that she “fears for [her] personal safety,”

“Restictions on public speech about a person . . . stand on a very different First Amendment footing from restrictions on unwanted speech to the person.” Eugene Volokh, ONE TO ONE SPEECH VS. ONE TO MANY SPEECH, CRIMINAL HARASSMENT LAWS, AND “CYBER-STALKING, (forthcoming Northwestern Law Review (20120).

 

The argument Ms. Nilan advances is a frightening one.  Any speech critical of others, especially speech highly critical of others for conduct that is usually thought to be odious, might lead others to have animus towards a particular individual that in turn might turn to violence or the threat of violence.  This hardly is grounds to outlaw the speech.  It is supposed that the print allegations regarding Michael Jackson’s alleged pedophilia (and getting away with it) might have lead a person to cause harm to Michael Jackson.  Obviously, that could never be the basis for restraining orders aimed at individuals from being critical of Michael Jackson. As once stated by the United States Supreme Court:

 

Accordingly a function of free speech under our system of government is to invite dispute. It may indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest, creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are, or even stirs people to anger. Speech is often provocative and challenging. It may strike at prejudices and preconceptions and have profound unsettling effects as it presses for acceptance of an idea. That is why freedom of speech, though not absolute, Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, supra, pp. 571-572, is nevertheless protected against censorship or punishment, unless shown likely to produce a clear and present danger of a serious substantive evil that rises far above public inconvenience, annoyance, or unrest. See Bridges v. California, 314 U.S. 252, 262; Craig v. Harney, 331 U.S. 367, 373. There is no room under our Constitution for a more restrictive view. For the alternative would lead to standardization of ideas either by legislatures, courts, or dominant political or community groups.
Terminiello v. Chicago, 337 U.S. 1, 4-5 (1949).  Were Ms. Nilan’s theory to be taken seriously, then accused murderer George Zimmerman should be able to seek injunctions against news agencies covering his case because their articles have promoted many to make death threats against him.

Former Beatle John Lennon was actually once murdered by a man who was in part motivated from a cover story he had read in the November 1980 Esquire Magazine, “JOHN LENNON’s PRIVATE LIFE: A madcap mystery tour” that portrayed Lennon as a recluse millionaire who in no way served the lofty anti-establishment causes of peace or love that he talked about so much as a Beatle—obviously, John Lennon would not have had grounds to get a restraining order against Esquire Magazine.

All writings critical of others has a tendency to make other think lower of the subject.  Regarding matters where the subject is alleged to have done odious things, strong resentment may turn to animus, and animus can turn to violence.   This cannot be a basis for banning speech.

 

Even, assuming arguendo, that Mr. Valenti has engaged in “fighting words” or “true threats,” the order is too broad and bans expression that is neither “true threats” or “fighting words” on Mr. Valenti’s blog.

 

It is ridiculous to conclude that Mr. Dan Valenti engaged in true threats or fighting words directed at Ms. Nilan.  But assuming for moment that he engaged in fighting words or true threats, any relief a court might grant must be narrowly tailored to removing true threats or fighting words.  A court has no right to order Mr. Valenti to take down his whole blog concerning matters that have to do with Ms. Nilan, even the speech that is protected speech and is not libelous, obscenity, a true threat, or fighting words.

“An order issued in the area of First Amendment rights must be couched in the narrowest terms that will accomplish the pin-pointed objective permitted by constitutional mandate.” Carroll v. Princess Anne, 393 U.S. 175, 183 (1968). “In this sensitive field, the State may not employ means that broadly stifle fundamental personal liberties when the end can be more narrowly achieved.” Id. at 393—394. “[T]he order must be tailored as precisely as possible to the exact needs of the case.” Id. at 394.  At most, the court would have to identify the “true threats” and “fighting words,” and only order their removal—not “any and all information referring to the Plaintiff” as it did in its June 27, 2012 order.

 

There is a constitutional right to publish truthful information about other individuals about an area of public concern.

 

Individuals have a constitutional right to publish truthful information about other individuals regarding a public concern.  For instance, in The Florida Star v. B. J. F., 491 U.S. 524 (1989), a sexual assault victim sued a newspaper for publishing her name,

when there was a statute that said a newspaper could not publish the name of a sexual assault victim. “B.J.F.” sued the Florida Star for negligently violating the statute.  In an opinion of Justice Marshall, it was held that a Florida statute could not make a newspaper civilly liable for publishing the name.   Marshall wrote that “The tension between the right which the First Amendment accords to a free press, on the one hand, and the protections which various statutes and common-law doctrines accord to personal privacy against the publication of truthful information, on the other, is a subject we have addressed several times in recent years.” Id. at 530. See also, Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn, 420 U.S. 469 (1975)(also invalidating a law against publishing the name of a rape victim).

It is to be admitted that the Florida Star court did rule, “We do not hold that truthful publication is automatically constitutionally protected, or that there is no zone of personal privacy within which the State may protect the individual from intrusion by the press . . .”  Florida Star at 585.  But the Florida Star court did hold:

 

We hold only that where a newspaper publishes truthful information which it has lawfully obtained, punishment may lawfully be imposed, if at all, only when narrowly tailored to a state interest of the highest order. Id.

 

In Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn, 420 U.S. 469, 496 (1975), another case that struck a statute that banned publication of the names of rape victims, it was held,

We are reluctant to embark on a course that would make public records generally available to the media but forbid their publication if offensive to the sensibilities of the supposed reasonable man. Such a rule would make it very difficult for the media to inform citizens about the public business and yet stay within the law. The rule would invite timidity and self-censorship and very likely lead to the suppression of many items that would otherwise be published and that should be made available to the public.

 

However, when privacy interest clash with free speech interest, the United States Supreme Court has recently been more inclined to support free speech.

 

“As a general matter, state action to punish the publication of truthful information seldom can satisfy constitutional standards.”

 

Bartnicki v. Vopper, 532 U.S. 514 (2001), quoting Smith v. Daily Mail Publishing Co., 443 U.S. 97, 103 (1979).  In Bartiniki, a radio station played a tape of a conversation between a teachers union and a school board.  Though the conversations were illegally recorded, the radio station did nothing illegally and had copies of the tapes.

 

This Court has repeatedly held that “if a newspaper lawfully obtains truthful information about a matter of public significance then state officials may not constitutionally punish publication of the information, absent a need . . . of the highest order.” [Smith v. Daily Mail Publishing Co., 443 U.S. 97, 103 (1979)]; see also Florida Star v. B. J. F., 491 U.S. 524 (1989); Landmark Communications, Inc. v. Virginia, 435 U.S. 829 (1978).

 

Bartnicki v. Vopper, 532 U.S. 514 (2001)(emphasis supplied).  If it is well-settled law that newspapers have a protected right to publish truthful information that they did not unlawfully acquire about matters of public significance, it cannot be seriously argued that a blog on the Internet by a journalist does not enjoy similar protection.

 

In the instant case, Mr. Dan Valenti is publishing (1) truthful information that (2) is of a public concern.  It matters not Ms. Nilan is otherwise a “private” individual and not a “public figure” in the First Amendment sense.  Whether or not a person committed a hit and run and got away with it, whether or not she received favorable treatment from the courts or the District Attorney’s office because she is the daughter of the Chief of Probation at Berkshire Superior Court are all undeniably public concerns.  Both the Massachusetts Constitution and the United States Constitution protect such speech.

The order constitutes an unconstitutional prior restraint and should not be continued.

 

Article 16 of the Massachusetts Constitution’s Declaration of Rights, (as modified Article 77), currently reads (emphasis supplied):

The liberty of the press is essential to the security of freedom in a state: it ought not, therefore, to be restrained in this commonwealth. The right of free speech shall not be abridged.

 

It is more than merely an irony that Mr. Valenti’s speech—that of a journalist—has been restricted in a restraining order given the plain words of Article 16 that “the liberty of the press  . . . ought not to be restrained”; it is a plain violation of Article 16.

Any government order that restricts or prohibits speech prior to its publication constitutes a prior restraint.” Rotunda and Nowak, Treaties on Constitutional Law Sec. 20.16(h) p. 114 (Fourth Edition). “The term ‘prior restraint’ is used ‘to describe administrative and judicial orders forbidding certain communications when issued in advance of the time that such communications are to occur.’” Alexander v. United States, 509 U.S. 544, 550 (1993)(emphasis added by Alexander court), quoting M. Nimmer, Nimmer on Freedom of Speech § 4.03, p. 4-14 (1984).

Judge Bethzaida Sanabria-Vega issued a temporary order of harassment prevention pursuant to Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E §5 and “ordered [Mr. Valenti] to remove any and all information referring to the Plaintiff [Ms. Nilan] from any and all websites, blogs, etc.”  This is a prior restraint in the sense that court did not review the contents of the website before entering the injunction and issues an order ex parte.  Moreover, it is a prior restraint in the sense that Mr. Valenti is not allowed even to publish new articles about Ms. Nilan, including any reference to this case, because Ms. Nilan cannot be mentioned by name.  This is classically a prior restraint because the communication is being forbidden before it occurs.

“Prior restraint” is often contrasted with “subsequent punishment.” “Courts and commentators define prior restraint as a judicial order or administrative system that restricts speech, rather than merely punishing it after the fact.” Mortgage Specialists v. Implode-Explode Heavy Indus., 999 A.2d 184, 194 (N.H. 2010). “The liberty of the press is indeed essential to the nature of a free state; but this consists in laying no previous restraints upon publications, and not in freedom from censure for criminal matter when published. Every freeman has an undoubted right to lay what sentiments he pleases before the public; to forbid this, is to destroy the freedom of the press; but if he publishes what is improper, mischievous or illegal, he must take the consequence of his own temerity.” Near v. Minn., 283 U.S. 697, 713-714 (1931), quoting 4 Blackstone Commentaries 151, 152.

The United States Supreme Court has stated that “[t]emporary restraining orders and permanent injunctions — i.e., court orders that actually forbid speech activities — are classic examples of prior restraints.” Alexander v. United States, 509 U.S. 544, 550 (1993). Of course, requesting a court to issue a restraining order asking a defendant to “remove any all information referring to the Plaintiff from any all websites, blogs, etc.” as this court did on June 27, 2012 constitutes a classic example of a prior restraint vis-à-vis its restraint material Mr. Valenti has yet to publish on his website or through other manner.

In Bobolas v. Does, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 110856 (D. Ariz. Oct. 1, 2010), “Plaintiff asks the Court to issue a TRO that shuts down Bobolasgate.info, eliminating past statements on the blog and preventing future statements.”  The Bobolas court did not hesitate to conclude, “Plaintiff’s requested relief would constitute a prior restraint on speech, much of it concerning Greek politics and public affairs.” Bobolas v. Does, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 110856, 17-18 (D. Ariz. Oct. 1, 2010). The court also refused to issue the restraining order. Other courts have ruled that restrictions on websites constitute prior restraints. See, e.g., Bosley v. WildWetT.com, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 11028 (6th Cir. Apr. 21, 2004).

Prior restraints are specifically disfavored. “Prior restraints are particularly anathematic to the First Amendment.” Neb. Press Ass’n v. Stuart, 427 U.S. 539, 598 (1976) “Prior restraints” or “previous restraints” had been practiced by other governments (notably England), and our founders found the practice loathsome. Patterson v. Colorado, 205 U.S. 454, 462 (1907)

“By “prior restraint’ Blackstone and modern courts alike mean censorship–an effort by administrative methods to prevent the dissemination of ideas or opinions thought dangerous or offensive.” Blue Canary Corp. v. City of Milwaukee, 251 F.3d 1121, 1123 (7th Cir. Wis. 2001) “To subject the press to the restrictive power of a licenser, as was formerly done, both before and since the revolution, . . . is to subject all freedom of sentiment to the prejudices of one man, and make him the arbitrary and infallible judge of all controverted points in learning, religion, and government.” Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Pittsburgh Com. on Human Relations, 413 U.S. 376, 390 (1973), quoting 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries.

Prior restraints are seldom justified, and in the relatively rare cases that they have been upheld, only when there is some grave public danger—not a private one. “[P]rior restraints may be issued only in rare and extraordinary circumstances, such as when necessary to prevent the publication of troop movements, to prevent the publication of obscene material, and to prevent the overthrow of the government.” Bobolas v. Does, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 110856, 18-19 (D. Ariz. Oct. 1, 2010); quoting Mortgage Specialists v. Implode-Explode Heavy Indus., 999 A.2d 184 (N.H. 2010); summarizing statements made in Near v. Minn., 283 U.S. 697, 715 (1931).

“[P]rior restraints may be issued only in rare and extraordinary circumstances, such as when necessary to prevent the publication of troop movements, to prevent the publication of obscene material, and to prevent the overthrow of the government.” Bobolas v. Does, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 110856, 18-19 (D. Ariz. Oct. 1, 2010)

Near v. Minnesota, 283 U.S. 697 (1931), is a relevant prior restraint case.  In that case, one person named “Near” published a newspaper, The Saturday Press.  As the Near court explained:

 

At the beginning of the action on November 22, 1927, and upon the verified complaint, an order was made directing the defendants to show cause . . . . from publishing, circulating or having in their possession, ‘any future editions of said The Saturday Press’ and ‘any publication, known by any other name whatsoever containing malicious, scandalous and defamatory matter of the kind alleged in plaintiff’s complaint herein or otherwise.’

 

Minnesota had passed a statute allowing courts to issue injunctions against newspaper they considered to be public nuisances. As stated in Near at 706:

 

The court further found that the defendants through these publications ‘did engage in the business of regularly and customarily producing, publishing and circulating a malicious, scandalous and defamatory newspaper,’ and that ‘the said publication’ ‘under said name of The Saturday Press, or any other name, constitutes a public nuisance under the laws of the State.’ Judgment was thereupon entered adjudging that ‘the newspaper, magazine and periodical known as The Saturday Press,’ as a public nuisance, ‘be and is hereby abated.’ The judgment perpetually enjoined the defendants ‘from producing, editing, publishing, circulating, having in their possession, selling or giving away any publication whatsoever which is a malicious, scandalous or defamatory newspaper, as defined by law,’ and also ‘from further conducting said nuisance under the name and title of said The Saturday Press or any other name or title.’

 

The Near court would not allow the injunction to stand and ruled it was an illegal prior restraint.  In Near, the Minnesota state court ruled “There is no constitutional right to publish a fact merely because it is true.”  Near, at 710.  The Near court noted that under the Minnesota law that allowed for such injunctions, “it is not necessary to prove the falsity of the charges that have been made in the publication condemned.” Id.

Near pointed out that perhaps one of the most important considerations of the First Amendment is freedom of the press from prior restraint. “The general conception that liberty of the press, historically considered and taken up by the Federal Constitution, has meant, principally although not exclusively, immunity from previous restraints or censorship.”  Near, at 716.

The prior restraint in the case at hand is particularly loathsome because it is based, in part, by fear that Mr. Valenti’s blog may animate others to acts of violence—not by Mr. Valenti suggesting such violence, but only because Mr. Nilan has been potrayed to be of an odious nature.  The Near court ruled:

As was said in New Yorker Staats-Zeitung v. Nolan, 89 N. J. Eq. 387, 388, 105 A. 72: ‘If the township may prevent the circulation of a newspaper for no reason other than that some of its inhabitants may violently disagree with it, and resent it circulation by resorting to physical violence, there is no limit to what may be prohibited.’ The danger of violent reactions becomes greater with effective organization of defiant groups resenting exposure, and, if this consideration warranted legislative interference with the initial freedom of publication, the constitutional protection would be reduced to a mere form of words.

 Near at 722.

 (5) Conclusion

Mr. Valenti has not engaged in behavior that warrants issuance of a civil harassment protection order.  His speech on PlanetValenti.com neither constituted “fighting words” or “true threats.”  Mr. Valenti has a constitutionally protected right to publish truthful statements, lawfully obtained, about a public concern.  Moreover, the order was not only an unconstitutional prior restraint, but there is nothing in the civil harassment statue that allows a remedy of forcing a blogger to remove his or her content.

 

__________________________

Rinaldo Del Gallo, III

PO Box 1082

Pittsfield, MA 01202-1082

(413) 445-6789

BBO 632880

July 9, 2012

————————————————————————-

END

“OPEN THE WINDOW, AUNT MILLIE.”

LOVE TO ALL.

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Spectator
Spectator
11 years ago

I have some ignorant comments to make, but I’m gonna just say that it must have been infinitely embarrassing for Atty Brennan to be standing in that courtroom as Ms Nilan’s representative when that brief was read into the record. He must have wanted to flee like a rat deserting that sinking ship.

kevin jennings
kevin jennings
Reply to  Spectator
11 years ago

I have to disagree with ya SPEC…he gets paid by the hour, the longer the better.

Spectator
Spectator
Reply to  kevin jennings
11 years ago

I wasn’t referring to the money, but more the moral effect.
A lawyer is perceived to be only as good as the last case that they win. In this one, he stuck out looking.

Former Pittsfield Resident
Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

Dan,

This is my first post to Planet Valenti. I used to live in Pittsfield — grew up there and now live in a land far far away.

I like to keep tabs on my home town and the triple murders and this case here definitely grab your attention.

When you first received the court order to purge all posts about the Nilan story and cease and desist further comments, and decided to comply, I honest thought you were making the wrong decision. I though that any journalist worth his salt should fight for his first amendment rights. I even thought that Mr. Nilan may have made a contribution to a bank account of your choice in exchange for your compliance to this illegal court order.

However, I’m man enough to admit I was wrong about you. You showed up in court very, very well prepared and walking the thin line that leads to freedom.

You hired a lawyer and an ACLU lawyer was there to represent you. Your decision to comply with the first court order turns out to be the correct one. You bought some time to get the case together and lived to fight another day. Well done! I think you will be hailed as a local hero for a long time to come.

You not only got your 15 mins of fame but your lawyer got you 20. Or more likely six hours. Six hours in court and you didn’t know which way it was going to go. True freedom requires courage and you’ve proven you got it.

I normally would not bother to post on these sites but I felt compelled.

Thanks Dan — your are inspiring.

Molly
Molly
Reply to  Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

Wow – very nicely said. I agree! Please reconsider commenting on this site often.

Kevin
Kevin
11 years ago

Dan I kept thinking while reading todays blog about real victims of Violence and how Nilan’s abuse of the system effects future victims……unconscionable!

GMHeller
GMHeller
11 years ago

Mr. Valenti, Had Judge Vega issued her Order against The New York Times or The Berkshire Eagle, do you think the publishers of those papers would have deleted web content before first seeking an emergency stay of the judge’s order?
My purpose in posing this question is simply to show that there were indeed other options available than immediately complying with a plainly unconstitutional order from a misinformed judge.
And you would have been squarely within your legal rights to pursue an emergency stay pending Monday’s hearing or the filing of an appeal.

Former Pittsfield Resident
Former Pittsfield Resident
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

All thing being equal yes you are correct. However, Dan had to deal with 2 issues really.

Yes one was his first amendment rights were being trampled on.

But #2, he had to overcome a stalking accusation filed against him by Ms. Nilan.

That complicated things. With the Dept. of Homeland Security, the patriot act and all the new stalking laws in effect, it was not a straight cut and dry issue of the first amendment.

Ms. Nilan had muddied the waters using or should I say abusing laws designed to protect people from genuine stalkers who put people’s lives in danger.

rick
rick
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

g.m. i do believe dan took all the postings down for the respect of the law and that he would have his day in court, i also believe that there was shopping going on for the right judge to get the gag order issued.. i also believe it was a wrong move on ms.nilan to try and make herself look like she was being dogged by the planet….. bad case of damage control. i just hope that ms. nilan and her handlers know the way they tried to wiggle out of this was just plain wrong…. she will be seeing alot of the courts in the near future with civil cases, i hope she will stand with chin up and accepts what ever the verdict is . accidents happen in life and we must own up to them…

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  rick
11 years ago

F.P.R. and rick,
Dan Valenti could have paid full respect to both the law and to his own conscience as soon as he was made aware of Judge Vega’s Order by hitailing it over to the court in Springfield to file an appeal.
Associate Justice Wm. P. Hadley, who had reversed Westfield Magistrate Nathan Byrnes’ ruling in an earlier aspect of the Nilan hit-run matter, would likely have been the judge assigned to hear the motion due to his familiarity with the earlier criminal matter in re Meredith Nilan.
Seeking an emergency stay pending Monday’s hearing or pending an appeal if Monday’s hearing had gone against Valenti would have honored the rule of law.
Valenti would have been fully within his rights and he would also have been honoring the various options the law provides.
Do you think The New York Times or Berkshire Eagle would EVER have deleted ANYTHING from a blog or Web site without first pursuing all legal options?

Wilson
Wilson
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

First of all no judge would have dared to make that ruling under any circumstances. Both of those organizations are large corporations with political connections and staff attorneys. And while Mr. Valenti could have been more vigorous in his response, I doubt he is that passionate about the Nilan problem. Hard to maintain outrage against cockroaches, it’s just how they are.

CONCERNED
CONCERNED
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Yea and the New York Times has millions of dollars more than Dan, well thousands at least haha

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  CONCERNED
11 years ago

It would not have even taken thousands of dollars — just a 45-minute ride to Springfield to file a motion with the appellate judge.
You think Justice Hadley would sanction the clearly unconstitutional action by Judge Vega?
Not bloody likely!

Sheriff Dawg
Sheriff Dawg
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

I love it how these armchair experts so bravely advise Dan. Hello, McFly? DAN WON THE CASE!!! His plan and strategy was handled flawlessly!

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  Sheriff Dawg
11 years ago

Of course Valenti won reversal of Judge Vega’s plainly unconstitutional order.
(You were maybe expecting he was somehow going to lose on appeal?)
Yet, by Valenti’s giving in and deleting PlanetValenti’s posts — it’s now been two weeks — the damage to the notion of a free press is already done.

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

Actually, I think Heller makes a valid point in that the ability to seek these sorts of orders produce a “chilling effect” in the words of the SCOTUS.

But, Glenn, Dan could have sought immediate relief, but the chilling effect would still be present because the original liability is still present. Even now, the Nilans presumably believe accurately that future reporting of them will be more abstract.

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

Mr. Valenti,
Be honest. Ask yourself: Would The New York Times or Berkshire Eagle have deleted a single pixel of Web content if either publisher had been threatened with jail and issued Judge Vega’s unconstitutional order?
What legal risks would you have run by seeking an emergency stay of Judge Vega’s order before deleting content from your blog?

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

Dan,

The ‘unconstitutional’ vs. ‘legal’ distinction is a real problem. Constitutional arguments set future precedents, but rarely retroactively restore individuals harmed by misuse of the law. A town can issue an ordinance that is ‘illegal’ or even unconstitutional and proceed to sanction people who violate it. It becomes the individual’s onus argue it’s not valid.

As for defining what is legal, anything a judge orders is ‘legal,” and as an individual, you would have to think twice and more choosing to fight.

Joe Pinhead
Joe Pinhead
Reply to  Sheriff Dawg
11 years ago

Monday morning quarterbacking someone else’s game with nothing to lose is very easy. Fighting your own fight on your terms, for your beliefs and values in a foreign environment armed with nothing but the truth and a deep understanding of not just what is right but why it is right is much more difficult and I might add honorable and admirable. Congratulations to Dan Valenti the man, to his grand experiment the Planet as well as to us; those who benefit not from just what he writes but by his actions. A hearty thank you as well.
Should he have pulled the posts, I say he decided wisely and while others may not agree with it you wouldn’t have suffered or gained either way. You say you would do this or that but had nothing invested. Did you attend the proceedings to show support? Bear in mind his belief that we are a nation of laws. Thats his belief and he stood by them by removing the posts as instructed.
Also kudos to Mr. Del Gallo for both standing up and supporting Dan and doing so in a focused and professional manner.

Scott
Scott
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

hind sight is always 20/20

Shakes His Head
Shakes His Head
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Yes, they would have, or violated state and federal laws regarding orders. Regardless of the public perception of the plantiff, the laws that create the process for protection orders have a fair process for the defendants as well. This is serious stuff. For all the plaintiffs that file for orders, there are some that are reaching, but many many others that the systems protects from harassment and abuse.

Suzy-Q
Suzy-Q
11 years ago

WEll I have to say, DV looks like Sean Connery. Who wants to take on 007? Theres a lot of women out there who noticed,as I found out at work yesterday!!! Oh yeah, glad the 1st won for all of us. Thanks Dan

Dawn
Dawn
Reply to  Suzy-Q
11 years ago

OMG that picture is hot.

Michael Hitchcock
Michael Hitchcock
11 years ago

Good work by you and especially by your lawyer.

I have one incredibly shallow reaction I’d like to share. Every time your lawyer quoted Nilan’s brief, he cited it with the Latin legal term Id, which I started reading as a totally contextually justified lol as he demolished each of her “arguments.”

skier1
skier1
11 years ago

Dan, at the beginning you say she should’ve stood up to to the charges against Mr. Moore with honesty, maturity and forthrightness. Yes, she should’ve done this. Who is she going to learn this from? Certainly not her father. The sad thing is, she still does not get it. Daddy or his lawyers will wiggle her out of this, she doesn’t show any remorse and just thinks of herself. She should not be driving period. It is a priviledge and she abused it.

Ron Kitterman
Ron Kitterman
11 years ago

Got to give Mr. Heller the nod on this one Dan…

Ed Shepardson
Ed Shepardson
Reply to  Ron Kitterman
11 years ago

Never should have removed those posts. The order to remove them was illegal.

Molly
Molly
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

I agree, Dan. And I also agree with Joe Pinhead – it was only you who had the investment in this — i.e., only you who would be sitting his butt in jail for a very long time and paying a big fine. Yes, I believe that you would’ve eventually won, but that meanwhile can be hell. And especially with THIS case – I wouldn’t bet anything on the outcome of any aspect of this case – NO WAY!

You handled every aspect of this case perfectly, And also showed respect for the law. You went slowly in that you didn’t make any rash decisions; methodically in the way you built your team and your case and strategically. I say Great Job!!!

Spectator
Spectator
Reply to  Molly
11 years ago

Yes, I believe that the underlying message to be sent may be that unlike the Nilan’s, who clearly think that they solely are immune from the LAW, that DV abides by these laws that are are put into place. I would construe it as a shot across the bow of the USS Corruption that flies the Nilan flag.

Kit
Kit
11 years ago

While I was out mowing the lawn yesterday (the best place to think) I kept pondering something that has bothered me for a while.

I’m sure I have my timeline confused, so I welcome clarification. Mr. Moore was run down in the evening. Ms. Nilan “thought” she hit a dog or a deer and “said” that she stopped and looked around and upon finding nothing she went to her father. He supposedily called the cops. And then supposedily called his attorney. All of this happened that night.

Meanwhile, Mr. Moore upon regaining conciousness, stumbles home and wraps himself in a blanket to sleep off the trauma. He awakens at roughly 4:00 in the morning and his wife Robin gets him to the hospital.

So, where I need clarification is: If Ms. Nilan was so sure she hit a dog or a deer then why did her father call an attorney?

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  Kit
11 years ago

Kit,
GRAND SLAM!

Spectator
Spectator
Reply to  Kit
11 years ago

Prolly the same reason he homesteader the house. Civil lawsuits.

Joe Blow
Joe Blow
Reply to  Kit
11 years ago

She said in open court that she looked for 45 minutes….give me a break! If she just stayed at the scene and called the police this would have been over long ago. I suspect only 1 reason to leave the scene…hiccup!

GMHeller
GMHeller
11 years ago

Mr. Valenti, Isn’t it malicious prosecution to allege civil harassment under Mass. Gen. L. c. 258E against someone whom one has never met nor had any contact whatsoever?

Levitan
Levitan
11 years ago

Thanks for sharing Del Gallo’s statement. A real gem of legal writing. He has my respect.

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  Levitan
11 years ago

Also, your comparison of court to basketball much stronger than that to chess.

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

Nope, in chess, both players share the same board, same pieces.

Basketball – the court (both senses) are never the same, and who knows what your opponent will bring along. Not to beat the metaphor to death, but in chess you get on move. In the other, you keep the floor as long as you can.

Ron Kitterman
Ron Kitterman
11 years ago

It’s over Dan go to bed have a pop tart and get some rest…

Tim
Tim
11 years ago

Can you print the first nilan statement, and the one doctored by lawyers?
Are they public documents now?

Spectator
Spectator
11 years ago

Title to this entry is delightfully snarky.

rick
rick
11 years ago

homesteading the house after the fact wont hold up in a court of law. if the house was homesteaded before the accident they would have been protected……..what they should have done was to title the car in her name.

Spectator
Spectator
Reply to  rick
11 years ago

even that would have been an attempt to retroactively cover their ass.
A few years ago in CT a dump truck with no insurance came barreling down Avon Mountain and hit a school bus and killed kids. The dump truck owner tried to activate insurance later that day. They got caught and it didn’t work. There is a lot of precedent that could be taken from that case.

Spectator
Spectator
Reply to  rick
11 years ago

even that would have been an attempt to retroactively cover their ass.
A few years ago in CT a dump truck with no insurance came barreling down Avon Mountain and hit a school bus and killed kids. The dump truck owner tried to activate insurance later that day. They got caught and it didn’t work. There is a lot of precedent that could be taken from that case.

Scott
Scott
Reply to  Spectator
11 years ago

That’s a big difference when it comes to insurance they be ok with a home stead but whatever the judge decides.

tito
tito
11 years ago

Even at this point of the accident, something doesn’t make sense, something is missing.

Former Pittsfield Resident
Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

Questions:

If Judge Vega willfully issued an illegal court order that she knew was Unconstitutional, does that not make her incompetent?

If defendants in other trials are ruled against by her could they not use this case as a basis to get their cases thrown out of court because of her incompetence?

The fact that Dan Valenti was not informed of and had no opportunity to be there in the initial hearing to defend himself, does that not invalidate the order right from the start?

tito
tito
11 years ago

Lawn Signs are unconstitutional.

Former Pittsfield Resident
Former Pittsfield Resident
Reply to  tito
11 years ago

Lawnsigns? Is this the definition of a troll Dan? Is this guy your resident troll for this site?

Anyway, all I’m saying is that a basic right of every single American citizen is the right to free speech. You don’t have to be a Philadelphia Lawyer to know that. You can teach that to a kindergartner.

For a sitting Judge not to know that the order issued in this case was illegal calls into question the competence of that Judge.

If it were ever me that had to appear before that Judge, I would ask for another Judge and cite this illegal court order as a precedent in my request.

Spectator
Spectator
Reply to  Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

I’ll fight for that troll distinction

Sheriff Dawg
Sheriff Dawg
11 years ago

Whats interesting here is that this website as all other media had put the Nilan story to rest. Then she has to go an pull her harassment stunt, now this story is making national news, , and Meredith’s actions are in the spotlight again, and DV is a superstar journalist, defender of America, the First Amendment. A true hero with the biggest set around. Guess you could say it was an exploding cigar she lit up.

Joe Pinhead
Joe Pinhead
Reply to  Sheriff Dawg
11 years ago

SD
Great points I wonder if there isn’t a larger motive behind the action. It was a PR blunder of a monumental proportion to put a new set of spotlights on the entire fiasco. The Nilan’s know their way around both the court system and the court house. I can only wonder if somehow this latest chapter will somehow be used in a future defense in a civil case.

Molly
Molly
Reply to  Joe Pinhead
11 years ago

The Nilan’s lost – how could they use it in a future defense in a civil case? I think that Cliff has been seething with every new post from Dan (and us) and he was just waiting for his chance at ‘payback’/revenge. I did notice that there wasn’t any delay with the BB publishing an article about this – no delay at all. Interesting…

levitan
levitan
Reply to  Joe Pinhead
11 years ago

Joe P.,

Wiley courtroom behavior is rare, but not so rare you don’t hear about it. People abound who believe exciting displays in court exemplifies success, such as submitting 350 page affidavits 5 minutes before trial; lawyers protesting to judges that they have been temporarily fired by their firms; and too much more for me to count.

Outfox
Outfox
11 years ago

DV took a hit on behalf of all of us who post here, and showed us that maybe, just maybe, corrupt Pittsfield is on its way out. The Nilans were obviously using this restraining order as a retaliatory strike against the Planet and to show all of us Planetarians that they still held power in the courthouse but the triple threat of Valenti, del Gallo and Newman showed us that it is no longer true. DV didn’t just talk the talk of the voice of the little guy, he walked the walk. It is the perseverance of Dan and journalists like him, that shines the light into ythe dark corners of our world and brings about change. Thank you, Dan.

dusty
dusty
11 years ago

I do not think the whole slander/harassment charge would have been filed without running it by the top levels of the Pittsfield justice system. It seems to me that the DA and Co. would have been consulted and if so apparently gave support.

Meredeth may have been used as a tool in an attempt to slap Dan down and hopefully dampen all comments on his site. There are after all, many other subjects they wish be kept in the closet.

Just thoughts that occur to me in light of the way things happen around Pittsifled.

Scott
Scott
Reply to  smh
11 years ago

Yet she doesn’t even understand the importance of free speech. I think Deval sucks to be honest with you. He’s not even a good Liberal Democrat he’s always cutting funding to those who need it most and a $20,000 a plate dinner at his house in Richmond? Give me an f’n break! Oh yeah and he is trying to do away with stand your ground laws in Mass.

smh
smh
Reply to  Scott
11 years ago

Guessing the nomination next goes to the Governor’s Council, for ‘advice and consent’.

Elizabeth
Elizabeth
11 years ago

Wow that was a long read, but well worth it. forget basketball or chess analogies….I say liken dans strategy to the greatest game on earth…GOLF! Course management baby!;)

Elizabeth
Elizabeth
11 years ago

Wow that was a long read, but well worth it. forget basketball or chess analogies….I say liken dans strategy to the greatest game on earth…GOLF! Course management baby!;)

Bull Durham
Bull Durham
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

Well, unless you’re playing the 8th and 9th holes at Stamford in a sleet storm, Danny.

Bull Durham
Bull Durham
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

I play my best in sleet, especially on those holes. The par 5 dogleg… not so much. And let’s not even talk about the 7th hole and water hazard.

Elizabeth
Elizabeth
11 years ago

Oops!!! Sorry for the double post. I’m not good at this stuff..yet

Suzy-Q
Suzy-Q
11 years ago

DV is now the new pinup in the secretary pool! Sean Connery has been bumped.

Former Pittsfield Resident
Former Pittsfield Resident
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

Bump Sean Connery?

you are walking a very, very fine line.

Buck
Buck
11 years ago

For those worried that Dan’s Nilan posts were gone once he obeyed Judge Vega and removed them from The Planet, your fears are misplaced. The internet is not like a paper book where a judge can order every copy to be burnt. The internet has Google.

Google makes a copy of almost every web page it can find and stores that in a public place called the Google cache. You (and Ms Nilan and Judge Vega) can go find Dan’s posts in the Google cache. http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache://planetvalenti.com/2012/01/an-unexpurgated-recreation-of-the-meredith-nilan-case-and-why-it-stands-as-an-indictment-of-the-pittsfield-courts/

Judge Vega’s order was unconstitutional, but worse, it ignores the very reality of how the internet works. Sure, she can (temporarily) force Dan to remove the Nilan posts from The Planet, but those posts are already stored in other places beyond the reach of her order.

Unlike the physical world of paper and pen, the digital world of bits and electrons cannot be so easily censored. Dan’s posts might have been ‘taken down’ but they were always available.

Spectator
Spectator
Reply to  Buck
11 years ago

Buck how can I load in a picture of myself like you did when I post comments?

Hilly Billy 2 in Ward 4
Hilly Billy 2 in Ward 4
Reply to  Buck
11 years ago

Nice Buck!

Susan Moore
Susan Moore
11 years ago

Again Dan, many thanks from the Moore Family! Tom looks forward to seeing you next time he is in the area to celebrate your victory. To everyone who thinks there will be millions in a civil case please tell me where those millions will come from. I doubt there will be enough to cover the medical bills — by now the lawyers have gotten it all! We are grateful that Peter is alive and for the community’s support during this terrible time. The Judicial System may have let us down but the Planet and the People of Pittsfield did not!!!

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  Susan Moore
11 years ago

Susan,

Having been involved in a civil suit involving a brain injury, I’m afraid that Mr. Moore will need to save every penny he can get for some hopefully distant time down the road. I understand that the civil suit is not a vengeful act, but one that is financially necessary for him.

I wish him well.

tito
tito
11 years ago

Valenti, Dan Valenti!

Gray Area
Gray Area
11 years ago

Mrs. Moore, I hope your family receives more than enough to cover your med bills, lawyer fees, and for pain and suffering. I cannot imagine what it must be like to go against the GOB network in Pittsfield. It must be like pushing a boulder up a hill but hopefully in the end, your family can come out on top. I hope Ms. Nilan has to live with the guilt of nearly killing someone and trying to get away with it for the rest of her life.

Suzy-Q
Suzy-Q
11 years ago

Be still my heart!

tito
tito
11 years ago

Eliminate Lawn Signs!

Tim
Tim
11 years ago

Dan
Didnt one of your previous posts now missing due to the order state that a server at patricks claim m nilan came in to see c nilan and she actually said to him that she hit a person? I always found it weird that with all the details and important facts in this case, i only remember reading it that once. Hope you can help the moores get this witness brought in for civil trial. Also might explain the 45 min timeline she claims she searched but didnt find anything

Tim
Tim
11 years ago

Oops meant to add that i only read it once, but you reprinted many of the details so many times

tito
tito
11 years ago

You know how lawyers bring in a paid expert to produce positive evidence or contradict the opposition, well for a nominal fee, nothing, I will be an expert for the Moores. I can almost say for certain, that if a human skull nearly hits the driver through a windshield and leaves a hole the size of a human skull, then it wasn’t a deer, bear wolf, dog, gnat, dingbat, duck, or frog, it had to be Mr. Moore.

Paul M
Paul M
11 years ago

Riddle me this:

If when Ms. Nilan hit the “dog or deer” and if she stopped immediately, wouldn’t she have seen Mr. Moore lying unconcious on the road?

If she did stop and saw nothing why, when she got home did she and her father call a lawyer, then call the police?

ambrose
ambrose
11 years ago

Talk about coincidence. Its little wonder that Barrister DelGallo was so persistant in the pursuit of justice. It was only a few short months before the Winesap incident that Rinaldo himself was mowed down by an 18 wheeler right in front of the courthouse.

The professor (and Mary Ann
The professor (and Mary Ann
11 years ago

Hussah to DV and Mr. DelGallo, et al!Great decision to abide by Vega’s kangaroo ruling until the day in court.If contempt was charged and prosecuted in this loony town,DV would be taken into custody and would face a bagman for the GOB.Unlike our coarse,wanderering drug dudes,He would not go before Free ‘Em Freddy Rutberg.DV would be in The GOB Gulag with more charges than an AAA truck in an ice storm .DV and team,you out played the homers.Well Done!

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  The professor (and Mary Ann
11 years ago

To The Professor (and Mary Ann):
You write, “DV would be taken into custody and would face a bagman for the GOB.”
Maybe, maybe not.
Judge Vega, faced with the possibility of putting in jail not the driver of the hit-run vehicle, but the journalist who wrote about it, surely might have had Valenti arrested, but then again she also might have released him on his own recognizance pending Monday’s hearing.
Further, one could do worse than to go to the local hoosegow on a matter of great Constitutional principle — especially one for which the court judge would certainly have been vilified in the national press the very next day and for weeks/months/years thereafter.
But of course we will not now know how that would have turned out because Mr. Valenti opted to take the course of least resistance which would not put any of those great principals truly to the test.

Hilly Billy 2 in Ward 4
Hilly Billy 2 in Ward 4
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

Are you channeling Charlie Sheenan here DV?

Former Pittsfield Resident
Former Pittsfield Resident
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

I wonder how many people are sitting (rotting) in prisons who are “right” or within their rights for what they’ve done.

I wonder how many people are buried in cemeteries who are “dead right”.

Does it make any sense that while Dan would be locked up trying to get his defense together for another round of Nilan’s brand of justice, and Clifford Nilan and Judge Vega are out at the 99 drinking Pina Coladas?

The reason troops retreat in war-time is because they are losing the battle — retreating allows them to live and fight another day.

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

Mr. Valenti and F.P.R.,
Why do you continue to presume that Dan Valenti would have been turned down in a motion for an emergency stay of Judge Vega’s Order?
Even had Valenti been turned down, he could certainly have proceeded to delete his posts to comply with Judge Vega or chosen then to appeal to the Mass. Supreme Judicial Court or even to the federal district court in Springfield.
But Valenti DIDN’T EVEN TRY, his first act was to retreat; to censor himself, to comply with what he and his lawyer firmly believed was an unconstitutional Order.
Would Sulzberger at The New York Times or Graham at the Washington Post have stooped to that just to escape one clueless judge’s unconstitutional mistake?

Former Pittsfield Resident
Former Pittsfield Resident
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Mr. Heller asks …..”Why do you continue to presume that Dan Valenti would have been turned down in a motion for an emergency stay of Judge Vega’s Order?”

Dan was dealing with Cliff NIlan who has proven to the world that the law means nothing to him by getting a new Judge to issue an illegal, unconstitutional court order.

The way Dan handled it proved a stunning Victory and exposed this judge and Nilan to be an embarrassment to Pittsfield.

It could have turned out quite different indeed. Locking horns with Cliff Nilan and Judge Vega by being in contempt of court in defiance of the court order could have forced Dan to appear in court in an orange jumpsuit — who knows perhaps before even Judge Vega herself who would NOT rescind her own order….. or an incompetent Judge just like her.

“The Force” was with Dan on that day and hindsight indicates his decisions were sound.

Perhaps Mr. Nilan would have a judge issue a similar order against Berkshire Blog so you can prove all your points.

Shakes His Head
Shakes His Head
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

An emergency order would not have been issued. Heller, study up on ‘due process’. What grounds would have merited an ’emergency’???

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

Further, had Valenti prevailed in getting an emergency stay of Judge Vega’s Order, he would not only have forestalled having to delete anything on his blog, but he would also have been in a very strong position tactically for the hearing set to follow before Judge Mark Mason on Monday July 9th.
A stay from an appellate judge, however temporary, does not go unnoticed by a district court judge who is to hear arguments in a case.

dusty
dusty
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Heller, as someone who apparently has been resisting compliance with the law for years perhaps you could tell us how it has made your life better.

and then let’s drop the subject so this site does not take on Topix -like moronic, beat-it-to -death nonsensical bullshit.

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Dusty,
You seriously think that a fellow like Clifford Nilan has influence at the state appellate level or in the federal court system?
Associate Justice Wm. Hadley of Springfield proved that notion to be incorrect when he overturned Clerk-Magistrate Nathan Byrnes’ original ruling in Meredith Nilan’s hit-run case.

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Good argument, GH, but I’d follow Valenti’s strategy and not gamble a day of prep work which is exhausting.

The trouble with the courts is that if you do not settle, your fate is largely unpredictable, whether you are the plaintiff or the defendent.

Ask Ms Nilan, she certainly had a surprise that day.

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Postscript:

I also agree that Dan Valenti engaged in ‘self-censorship’ as you described it, but it was certainly self-censorship under duress.

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Levitan,
The bottom line question that I continue to ask here remains unanswered:
Would The New York Times or Washington Post been so quick to retreat, as Valenti indeed did, on the main issue and would The Times or Post delete, self-censor, or otherwise curb news or commentary in the face of a lower court judge’s dubious ruling that zeroed-out First Amendment protections?

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Glenn,

The answer to your question is “No, the NYT’s would pull all legal options and resist removing content. The NYT would likely file immediate appeals for a stay on the order as well as prepare for the worst case scenario. That is what their legal department does.

Can an individual both spend a day on the road and at the same time prepare adequately for a hearing coming up soon? Time flies fast, and little work can happen on the weekends save what you have at your immediate disposal.

DV self-censored under duress, one time. That’s the sensible thing to do when you don’t have a legal department pursuing different tracks simultaneously. He probably should begin to censor outrageous comments when they come up such as rousing a mob to assault private residences.

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Levitan,
Please, wimpy excuses don’t cut it in the real world.
Dan Valenti is not a lawyer and no one expects of him to be one.
But he did have TWO lawyers on his team, at least one of whom he stated he is is paying.
Only one would have been necessary to file an emergency motion for stay of Judge Vega’s Order before the Springfield appellate judge.
If Valenti’s lawyers had obtained that stay, then Valenti would have had no immediate legal necessity to delete anything from his Web site, and simultaneously he would, going forward, have been in a favorable position from a tactical standpoint because then there would have been no urgency to any of the proceedings.
His attorneys could even have moved for a postponement of the July 9th hearing before Judge Mason to have more time to prepare their respective briefs.
Alternatively, had the motion for stay been refused by the appellate judge in Springfield (frankly, an unlikely event), then Valenti would have been no worse off tactically than he was when he entered Judge Mason’s courtroom last Monday.
Also, had the appellate judge in Springfield refused a motion for stay, Valenti’s attorneys had the option of appealing to even higher courts, specifically the Mass. Supreme Judicial Court and even to the federal district court because of the First Amendment issues at bar.
It’s not useful here to make excuses for why there was not enough time to do this or to do that; that’s why one pays attorneys the big hourly rates.
It’s part of the attorney’s job description to manage all aspects of a case and to make sure that all those extra things that need getting done do in fact get done and in a timely manner.
The decision not to seek an emergency stay and the decision to knuckle under to Judge Vega’s unconstitutional Order by deleting Web content were big mistakes in the manner in which Nilan v. Valenti was defended.
Valenti’s attorneys did indeed prevail before Judge Mason, but it was not a defining victory by any stretch, and the notion that any journalist and any news-gathering organization in Massachusetts can now be prosecuted and subject to prior restraint by anyone who is the subject of a crime story via that person alleging violation of MGL Ch. 258e is leaving a bad taste in a lot of mouths (except of course at The Berkshire Eagle).

tito
tito
11 years ago

Deacon Dan Valenti is this years,”King of the Swamp”!

GMHeller
GMHeller
11 years ago

CORRECTION: The above comment was meant to address both Dusty’s and F.P.R.’s comment.

Former Pittsfield Resident
Former Pittsfield Resident
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

In the “Good Ole Boy” system of justice that you seem to have there in Pittsfield, you don’t know who knows who or what markers remain to be called in for favors done.

It is possible that Nilan knows a guy who knows a guy in the state appellate level or in the federal court system.

Look at what Nilan has been able to pull off … initially got the case dismissed in Springfield, got a Judge to join him in his GOB network — you don’t know how this could have turned on Dan.

Everyone is getting an education on just how things really work.

Hilly Billy 2 in Ward 4
Hilly Billy 2 in Ward 4
Reply to  Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

Viva Valenti,

@ Former Pittsfield Resident, I love your suggestion to Heller about having Cliffy put the same order on his blog posting and see what Heller do? The critical difference here of course being that NO ONE READS HELLER’s BLOG BUT HELLER!

Former Pittsfield Resident
Former Pittsfield Resident
Reply to  Hilly Billy 2 in Ward 4
11 years ago

Yes sir, and you’ve touched on the problem here. What would seem to be the case to me anyway is that although Heller is not related to Valenti – there is a sort of sibling (type) rivalry at hand.

It appears Mr. Heller has more than a ting of jealousy toward Dan’s brilliant victory at playing his hand in Mr. Nilan’s own poker game.

Berkshire Blog has published much of the same things about the Nilan case on his blog as Planet Valenti has. However, Planet Valenti has received all the notoriety that Heller was craving.

What better to do than discount Dan’s victory and try and steal some of the thunder. Dan got his 15 mins — his lawyer got him 20 and Heller is trying to steal 10 of it.

Kevin
Kevin
Reply to  Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

BINGO

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

F.P.R.,
The point here is that what you claim has been a “brilliant victory” has actually resulted in a local blogger setting a poor precedent of caving-in to a lower court judge’s ruling simply out of fear for really having to test the judicial system for which the blogger continually professes he has so much respect.
If Valenti has so much faith in the system, why not test it in a matter where it really counts — in protecting one’s RIGHT of free speech and expression?
Where’s the brilliant victory?
Ms. Nilan proved she could successfully jerk the chain of a journalist pursuing a good story that was exposing how corruption insinuates into nearly every level of Berkshire County’s judicial system.
The journalist’s first response in this case was to cave in fear — and then go about deleting his own writings because of that fear.
Some victory; some brilliance!
Nilan didn’t get her permanent restraining order from Judge Mason, but she did indeed get Valenti to blink, to back off, and to cower for a period of time.
So much for freedom of the press.
To top things off, the weak editorial response from The Berkshire Eagle when someone local of their own Fourth Estate was being unjustly attacked shows just how clueless and morally compromised those who run that sleazy outfit have become.
Berkshire County is now officially a ‘No-Testosterone Zone’.

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  Former Pittsfield Resident
11 years ago

Heller,

I think you make a good case for considering the ramifications of Valenti’s strategy. But, I don’t see the response as weak, and M. Nilan has nothing to feel good about in this situation. In fact, look what we are now talking about. After we long buried this story and moved to bigger and better things, we are now filling cyberspace with speculation and opinion not just about the Nilans, but a fresh new Judge, just out of Grad school.

Did Valenti cower? Only Valenti would know. Going into court fully loaded and well prepared is not my definition of timidity.

Hey, I respect your courage, too.

Jeff Barcus
Jeff Barcus
11 years ago

Congrat’s Dan on the win.

One thing you might point out to the second guessers is that this order was sort of the equlivent of a Domestic Restraining Order. It is probably a zero likelyhood that the subject of a DRO is allowed in a hearing to establish that DRO. Quite the opposite, the victim doesn;t want contact or proximity, that is what they are there for to avoid.

It was actually a pretty astute move on Nilans part to go this route since it effectively sets up an ambush to which you have no, within the law, recourse or rebuttal at the onset.

Gald you won and Mr DelGallos breif was spot on!

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  Jeff Barcus
11 years ago

Jeff Barcus,
Exactly, and this is why a stay of Judge Vega’s unconstitutional order against journalist Valenti would likely have been granted by an appellate judge had Valenti merely had his attorney file the motion.

Jeff Barcus
Jeff Barcus
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Using the DRO concept again, its already an emergency order, put in place to “protect” the ‘victim”. As such I think it extremely unlikey that a subject of such an order would prevail in vacating it or getting it stayed in any but the most unusual situations.

In the DRO case, that is good for the victim and accomplishes their objective. We know folks voliate DRO’s all the time and there are what consequences??

Since Mr valenti’s order read quite like a restraining order, I suspect there are parrallels.

Thats my common sense take on it…I’m no lawyer.

Levitan
Levitan
Reply to  Jeff Barcus
11 years ago

Astute, perhaps, but rather misses the mark given Ms Nilan’s case is between her and Tom Moore and Peter Moore.

Let’s say the move was both very astute and very stupid. Who would take a gamble like that with a pending civil case against a different party.

Jeff Barcus
Jeff Barcus
Reply to  Levitan
11 years ago

Levitan, can’t disagree with any of that.

My point was only that it was clearly a good way to ambush Dan.

The “why it happened” frankly baffles me.

Beacon Hill Mob
Beacon Hill Mob
11 years ago

Dear Dan,

Congratulations and kudos!!!!

Maybe the Planet can shed some sunlight on why Mr. Nilan is still working for the state after enabling a diddler, a.k.a. Angelo.