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Both CEO Bill
Morgenstern and Rent Way Inc. have filed a civil lawsuit for
defamation against an anonymous
Yahoo message board poster
with the screen-name
"goodbyerentway".
Ron DeMoss, Rent Way VP and General Counsel told
RTO Online "The objective of this suit is to learn who is
posting these malicious lies." The "malicious lies" he refers to
are various postings over an extended period alleging the
involvement of Rent Way CEO Bill Morgenstern in the accounting
scandal that has plagued Rent Way for over two years. Three
former executives were convicted in the scandal. CEO Morgenstern
was cleared of any wrongdoing. Once the true identity of "goodbyerentway"
is known, the company hopes to seek monetary damages for the
alleged defamation.
According to DeMoss, the person identified as "goodbyerentway"
posted nearly 200 messages on the Yahoo board. Most were
negative, Rent Way claims some of the postings alleged criminal
activity by senior executives who are still at Rent Way. "We
are absolute firm believers in the first amendment and freedom
of speech, but we also think that there are limits" said Mr. DeMoss. He cited Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
famous phrase "You can't yell fire in a crowded theater" and
added "We don't believe that Pennsylvania law permits you to
call people criminals and do it anonymously and have no proof of
it." DeMoss indicated that once the government investigation was
complete and current executives cleared, the allegations should
have ceased. He posed the question "Should senior management be in a position that,
for the rest of their lives, they're going to have postings
indicating they were involved in criminal activity?"
Mr. DeMoss claims that Rent Way decided to
pursue legal action only after the company began experiencing morale
problems as a result of the anonymous postings. "Our employees
are suffering morale issues because they are seeing this up
continually." he said. No mention was made as to any other
direct affects of the postings.
Recent related court decisions have landed
squarely on the side of free speech. A New Jersey court ruled
against the plaintiff in
Dendrite v. Does. Dendrite, an IT company specializing in
the pharmaceutical industry, subpoenaed Yahoo for the identities
of anonymous posters who made what the company claimed were
false statements. The court denied the request. In the first
appellate decision to address the issue, a New Jersey appeals
court established stringent procedural and evidentiary
standards that must be met before the identity of an anonymous
online poster can be disclosed through litigation. The court
recognized the constitutional right to communicate anonymously
and refused to order the identification of a "John Doe" speaker
who had posted comments on a Yahoo! message board.
This is not Rent Way's first attempt to learn
the identity of online message posters. Earlier
this month, Rent Way went after the identity of another Yahoo
message board user "curtcantspell". "curtcantspell" claimed to
be a Rent Way employee who was, among other things, stealing
from the company. Rent Way subpoenaed Yahoo to learn
"curtcantspell's identity. "curtcantspell" retained a lawyer who
brokered a deal requiring an
online apology in return for
dropping the lawsuit. (It was learned that "curtcantspell" was
an ex-employee of Rent Way)
With the proliferation of internet chat-boards
and the ability of users to post content at will, this type of
lawsuit is becoming more common. Some are legitimate, others are
commonly known as CyberSLAPPs (Strategic Lawsuits Against Public
Participation) and are viewed by the online community as frivolous attempts to silence
public opinion. Some states have enacted
Anti-SLAPP statutes.
According to
chillingeffects.org, a joint project of the Electronic
Frontier Foundation and Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley, University
of San Francisco, and University of Maine law school clinics,
the most common complaints by CyberSLAPP plaintiffs are
defamation, trademark or copyright infringement, and breach of
contract. Speech that involves a public figure, such as a
corporation, is only defamatory if it is false and said with
"actual malice." It also must be factual rather than an
expression of opinion. In the US, because of strong free speech
protections, it is almost impossible to prove defamation against
a public figure.
While company officials are adamant that Rent
Way does not wish to silence anyone, the move is guaranteed to
be
viewed that way by the online community. The following was
posted on the Yahoo board as a result of the "curtcantspell"
apology :
Wanted: Lawyer to scan various websites for
individuals posting anti-RentWay material and use threat of
legal action to get them to stop. You will be responsible for
writing 'last post' statements that make it look like Rwy is
wonderful. Job is typical of most RWY uppermanagement
positions, paying 3-4 times what you are worth and many
fringes.
Experienced web-surfers know two things. 1) 99%
of negative posts on public boards are meaningless dribble. 2) Responding to
online critics only causes them to breed. And the more you
respond, the more creative and vicious the attacks become. In
most cases it's better to hit the ignore button and move on.
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only independent source of news for the rent-to-own, rental-purchase,
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