Sun-Times seeks dismissal of defamation suit centered on Trump Tower
reporting
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[September 26, 2024]
By Jerry Nowicki
SPRINGFIELD – In a case testing the limits of a state law designed to
protect citizen participation in government, the Chicago Sun-Times is
asking the Illinois Supreme Court to dismiss a defamation suit filed
against it by a former state official.
Mauro Glorioso, a former chair of the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board
who later became its executive director, sued the newspaper in 2021,
alleging he was defamed by the Sun-Times’ coverage of the board’s
handling of a property tax appeal for Trump Tower in downtown Chicago.
The court, which heard oral arguments in the case last week, is not
being asked to rule as to whether the Sun-Times engaged in defamation.
It is rather asked if the lawsuit should be dismissed under a state law
designed to protect against litigation that “chills and diminishes
citizen participation in government” before the case can proceed in
circuit court.
The news reporting
The February 2020 news article by investigative reporter Tim Novak
centered on an anonymous November 2019 complaint to the state’s Office
of Executive Inspector General that named Glorioso and others. The
complaint, a copy of which was obtained by the paper, outlined alleged
misconduct that occurred when Glorioso was the PTAB’s chairman, but not
yet its executive director.
The complaint, which has since been ruled unfounded by the OEIG, claimed
that Glorioso, a Republican, told staff “he wanted a large reduction in
the assessment of Trump Tower because the owner of the property was the
president of the United States.”
Staff had not initially recommended reducing property taxes, but
ultimately altered their decision to recommend a $1 million reduction. A
chief administrative law judge later said that decision was made to
rectify an overassessment that occurred in 2011, and the recommendation
to reduce the assessment was upheld by an appellate court last year.
The February 2020 article included a quote from Gov. JB Pritzker’s
administration which said it was “determined to get to the bottom” of
the situation and would “ensure that a thorough investigation is
conducted.” Pritzker had appointed Glorioso as executive director of
PTAB in 2019.
A Pritzker spokesperson quoted in the article directed the PTAB to avoid
action on the appeal pending the investigation, saying “it would be
entirely inappropriate for a legal decision on a property tax appeal to
be impacted by any of the conduct alleged in this complaint, including
the allegations of political motivations improperly driving the
decision-making.”
The Sun-Times’ attorney, Damon Dunn, emphasized in oral arguments before
the court the importance of Pritzker’s office being a source in the
story in showing that the lawsuit is “meritless.”
“The statements to the reporter are from Gov. Pritzker,” he told the
justices last week. “That’s what was published. They didn’t publish on
an anonymous tip. They filed FOIA requests. They sought comment. They
went all the way to the governor’s office.”
The lawsuit
Glorioso’s lawsuit, however, contends that the article improperly
misstated Glorioso’s motivation as political and overstated his
involvement in the decision. It also took issue with the newspaper’s
October 2020 reporting on Glorioso’s termination from the board.
The lawsuit didn’t dispute that an investigation had occurred, but
rather contended that the newspaper knowingly mischaracterized it.
“Defendants’ Articles falsely reported to thousands of readers that
Glorioso spearheaded a corrupt scheme to funnel a more than $1 million
warranted property tax reduction to Trump Tower, based solely upon
political allegiance,” his legal team argued in a court filing.
More than a year after that story was published and after Glorioso sued
the paper, the OEIG issued a redacted report finding the underlying
accusations unfounded. But it also found that Glorioso violated state
law and PTAB policy by deleting files and emails in October 2020.
The Sun-Times sought to dismiss the case under the state’s Citizen
Participation Act, which specifically targets lawsuits aimed at
“intimidating, harassing, or punishing citizens” for engagement in
“public affairs.” Glorioso’s suit, Dunn argued, was a Strategic Lawsuit
Against Public Participation, or SLAPP, and should be dismissed.
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Trump Tower is pictured in Chicago. The Chicago Sun-Times’ reporting
on a state official’s handling of a property tax appeal on the
building is the subject of a defamation lawsuit before the Illinois
Supreme Court. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Adams)
The 1st District Appellate Court ruled 2-1 in May 2023 that the
Sun-Times did not meet its burden to show that the lawsuit was a SLAPP.
A lower court had ruled the same.
Glorioso’s attorney Steve Zisook argued before the justices last week
that the Sun-Times article didn’t seek any “government relief” as
outlined in statute. Because of that, he argued, the lower courts
correctly reasoned that the news article was not protected under the
Citizen Participation Act – referred to as the ICPA.
“You’re just reporting news, and that is what happened in this case, and
that is why the defendant’s speech in this case is not an ICPA case, and
the motion was denied in the trial court,” he said.
The question for review
The appellate court opinion written by Justice Aurelia Pucinski said the
paper’s lawyers failed to show that the lawsuit by Glorioso was both
meritless and retaliatory. A “reasonable finder of fact,” could have
read the Sun-Times coverage as having “overstated Glorioso’s role and
motivations in the alleged scheme beyond the actual allegations made by
the whistleblower,” she wrote.
The appellate court also stated the paper failed to meet its burden to
show that the lawsuit is retaliatory, in part because Glorioso requested
only $50,000 in compensatory damages, along with punitive damages and
legal fees. The amount, and the fact that he waited 11 months to file
suit after he was no longer employed by the PTAB, “does not provide
evidence that the lawsuit was retaliatory,” the majority wrote.
Justice Michael Hyman wrote a dissenting opinion that took issue with
the “meritless and retaliatory” standard cited by the majority and urged
the Supreme Court to clarify its precedent on the Citizen Participation
Act.
By requiring a defendant to show that the lawsuit is both meritless and
retaliatory, he wrote, recent judicial interpretations have “essentially
weakened a potent deterrent to groundless lawsuits that target those who
protest or raise concerns on matters of public interest.”
“Allowing this non-meritorious suit to continue accomplishes what the
Act was designed to prevent—the wasting of time, resources, and effort
by the parties and the courts on unjustifiable and unsustainable
claims,” Hyman wrote.
Zisook, meanwhile, urged the court not to take part in what he dubbed a
“judicial amendment” to an act of the legislature – though Dunn
countered that previous appellate court decisions are what constituted
judicial amendments.
Judging intent
As for the facts of the case, Hyman argued the majority improperly
considered “what implications a reader or listener might draw from the
reporting,” when the actual law does not.
“Just because the anonymous complaint that launched the investigation
named other individuals who took part in the alleged misconduct (but
conspicuously were not the subject of the OEIG investigation), the Sun-Times’s
reporting on the investigation into Glorioso was neither false nor
misleading,” he said.
But during oral arguments, Supreme Court Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis
noted the statute “seems to require some inquiry into the intent on the
part of the plaintiff,” in this case Glorioso.
“I think that’s, to me, that’s kind of the difficult part,” she said.
“How does a court determine intent, whether or not the purpose for the
lawsuit was, in fact, retaliatory, was to chill free speech, or was it,
in fact, to pursue a constitutional right to damages for damage to one’s
reputation?”
Dunn argued the justices don’t have to reconsider that interpretation in
order for the Sun-Times to prevail, since, he said, the plaintiffs
haven’t shown the paper acted with “actual malice.” But he said he
believes the court should reconsider it anyway.
“I don’t believe that the legislature intended that at all,” he said of
judging a plaintiff’s intent in filing suit. “They intended to put the
burden directly on… the plaintiff who files a case that chills speech
about public affairs.”
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