July 17, 2001
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
COUNTY OF NEW YORK
BANCO NACIONAL de MÉXICO, S.A.
Plaintiff,
v.
Index No. 00603429
MARIO RENATO MENÉNDEZ RODRIGUEZ,
AL GIORDANO, and
THE NARCO NEWS BULLETIN,
Defendants.
____________________________________________
MOTION AND MEMORANDUM TO FILE AS
AMICUS
BY REBER BOULT
IN SUPPORT OF DEFENDANTS' MOTION
TO DISMISS
GENERAL INTEREST OF THIS AMICUS
I have practiced law
most of the time since 1964. I have been licensed and had offices
in Tennessee, Georgia and New Mexico. I have been admitted to
practice before the Supreme Court of the United States, five
United States Courts of Appeals, several United States District
Courts, the United States Court of Military Appeals, and the
Tax Court of the United States. I have had full time jobs with
the Southern Regional Office of the American Civil Liberties
Union, Federal Public Defender for the District of New Mexico,
and with organizations defending the rights of American Indians
and people in the U.S. military abroad. My private practice
has included a great deal of defense of those accused of crime,
most often federal crime. I have for the last 15 years been
a volunteer Legal Director for the ACLU of New Mexico. I have
worked as a sales clerk, as a mechanic, and in the U.S. Navy.
By professional background I have a strong interest in this
case. My association with studying and advocating for enforcement
of the Constitution and defending it from infringement started
at Vanderbilt Law School almost 40 years ago. More specifically,
I am a citizen, living outside of New York, who reads www.narconews.com,
and whose words have been published on that international Internet
site.
An oft-quoted lodestar is Justice Brandeis' warning that
"dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachments by men
of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding." Olmstead
v. United States, 277 U.S. 438, 479 (1928)(dissenting opinion).
It's used in the hard cases. Less often quoted, because less
often needed, is the sentence that precedes it: "Men born
to freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty
by evil-minded rulers." Id. In this case the dangers to
liberty are from men of power, ill-meaning and with perfect understanding.
That we do not traditionally think of them as "rulers"
doesn't lessen the danger.
A journalist, Al Giordano, formerly with the Boston Phoenix
and former talk radio host, speaks through a web site named narconews.com.
He dispatches from south of the U.S.-México border, from,
in words he quotes from Simón Bolívar, "somewhere
in a country called América."
Narconews disseminated an investigative piece by Mario Menéndez,
the editor of a newspaper in Yucatán. Menéndez'
gumshoe work reported that Banamex general director Roberto Hernández-Ramirez
was a "narco-trafficker" and a money launderer. Banamex
sued Menéndez for defamation. A Mexican court dismissed
the suit.
Hernández and his bank (it's now merging with CitiBank)
went looking for a court more sympathetic to the rich and powerful
and less friendly to free speech. They came to New York and
again Banamex (again oddly not nominally joined as a plaintiff
by its President, the target of the accusations) sued for defamation,
this time adding Giordano and narconews. It seems to claim jurisdiction
here because Giordano had repeated some of Menéndez' reportage
at a couple of appearances on a trip to New York.
So a person not in the United States puts words written in
a newspaper not in the United States about a person and business
not in the United States onto a web site emanating from outside
the United States. A court in the country where all of the involved
entities are (until, that is, a United States bank bought into
the deal) says it's all right to publish those words.
When the people uttering those words have to come to the
United States to defend those words, free speech suffers.
When those people lack the money to come to the United States
to defend those words, free speech fails.
When speech is less free in the United States than in other
countries the United States is a hypocrite.
When the United States claims jurisdiction over all words
appearing on the internet, wherever uttered, the United States
claims to be the world's censor.
So far, the first amendment battles over internet censorship
have mostly been over efforts by well-meaning people seeking,
sometimes too zealously, laudable ends. But the effort to censor
the defendants here has no such redeeming value. These censors
are rich and powerful. These censored are broke, bled empty
by having to go abroad to defend. These censors are from the
dominant elite. They arrogantly complain that Mr. Giordano "has
no job or other means of supporting himself." (Plaintiff's
Memorandum at 7) These censored are of the less powerful classes,
uttering the cries of the less dominant races.
These ill-meaning men are censoring speakers who are more
like those Justice Brandeis lauded in Whitney v. California,
274 U.S. 357, 377 (1927)(dissenting opinion):
Those who won our independence by revolution were not
cowards. They did not fear political change. They did not exalt
order at the cost of liberty.
Are we still today "courageous, self-reliant [people],
with confidence in the power of free and fearless reasoning applied
through the processes of popular government . . ." id.?
In 1776 one of the "repeated Injuries and Usurpations
. . . having in direct Object the Establishment of an absolute
Tyranny" and impelling us to declare independence was "transporting
us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended Offenses." The
Declaration of Independence.
SPECIFIC INTERESTS OF THIS AMICUS
In the spring of 2001,
Al Giordano published a daily series of commentaries and translations
from Spanish to English about a historic indigenous rights caravan
through 12 Mexican states, from Chiapas to Mexico City. My wife,
who is from México, and I had a personal interest in following
the news about the caravan because her brother was participating
in the two-week motorcade. There was very little information
available in the English-language press about this historic current
event. The Narco News Bulletin offered more than two dozen reports
from the caravan route, as well as web pages exploring the historic
roots and progress of the Mexican indigenous rights movement
and their relation to the site's theme of drug policy.
I did not know Mr. Giordano, but I contacted him by email
at narconews@hotmail.com and asked if he could get a message
to my brother-in-law along the caravan route, which he did. My
wife and I then traveled to Mexico to join the final days of
the caravan. We looked for Mr. Giordano in his neighborhood (a
working class section of a town that is majority indigenous)
and spoke to his neighbors (who regard him highly). They informed
us that he was off covering the caravan.
Later Mr. Giordano published my observations about the caravan.
I finally met Mr. Giordano two months later, in May 2001,
when he spoke at an international drug policy conference in my
city of Albuquerque and at a meeting of the New Mexico Green
Party in Santa Fe.
It's entirely obvious to me that Mr. Giordano has no assets
of appreciable value. Conventional legal advice would tell him
not to respond to any purported legal process because service
would not be valid and even if a court ruled otherwise he is
judgment proof. He told me, when we met in Albuquerque, that
he was actively defending the case because he felt that the plaintiff
was seeking to make bad law that would harm all Internet speech
as well as independent projects of citizen-journalism like his
own. I share his concern.
Free speech law evolves from the judiciary. I have a deep
concern that the plaintiff is trying to provoke to establish
dangerous precedents that strike at the heart of the protections
given by out state and federal constitutions to address grievances
and seek redress.
Banamex asks the Court for the kind of holding that could
subject me to expensive litigation far from home on account of
the article I wrote that was published at www.narconews.com.
And I confess that an element of my interest here is personal
indignation (I prefer to characterize it as professional indignation)
that a big law firm could allow itself to be hired to so transparently
offend basic principles of fair play and justice (as well as
trifle with the Canons of Ethics). The firm makes legally absurd
claims, resulting in factually absurd claims of damage to a billionaire
and his bank, all in order to silence voices the client and/or
the firm wish would go away. The client and/or the firm certainly
are announcing that they perceive these voices credible and important,
enough so to fight dirty. The billionaire who claims to be defamed
doesn't even join the suit, apparently thinking he can protect
himself from discovery with his corporate veil. 1 By being the plaintiff, Banamex seems to
be piercing its own corporate veils perhaps inviting proof that
its new parent launders money.
1
Or perhaps his lawyers foresee that the coming inquiry under
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964) will reveal
that he is a sufficiently public figure that the statements,
clearly made without malice, are protected by the first amendment.
But this same analysis should also apply to and through his
bank.
It's especially odious to me that the plaintiff and its law
firm 2 mount their attack
based on what was said at a university. In the ACLU there is
a rule of thumb often suggested on the university context: "The
remedy for bad speech is good speech." Plaintiff here offers
no good speech (again suggesting that defendants are telling
the truth); instead, it sues for silence.
2
I am aware that ad hominem observation is usually poor
rhetorical technique in legal advocacy. But at some point the
quality of the opposition's presentation betrays an impermissible
agenda or abysmal analysis. After all, courts instruct juries
that untruth in one part of a witness' testimony affects the
overall believability of that witness, as does bias. It may
be more so when analysis and reasoning are at issue.
Obviously the case is not about what Mr. Giordano said at
Columbia Law School and on a non-profit radio station. Rather,
these are plaintiffs' bootstraps to punish a Mexican journalist
and close a web site.
It's troubling to see forum shopping go worldwide 3, and so escaping from concepts like res judicata.
3
"According to Tamsin Allen, a specialist in media law at
City law firm Bindman and Partners, Banamex is practising a form
of 'forum shopping'. 'It happens quite often,' says Allen. 'What
it means in effect is that the bank is looking around for a forum
which is going to give it the best result."' Sean Dodson,
Hacks Hit In Drugs War The Guardian (London)(June 25,
2001), http://media.guardian.co.uk/mediaguardian/story/0,7558,512177,00.html
I infer from press reports I've seen and heard about that
the lawyers are assiduously avoiding repeating their more scurrilous
allegations, extortion and illegal presence in México
for example, in places unprotected by the defamation privilege
accorded to pleadings.
Banamex shamelessly injects its newly acquired parent into
the mix. (Plaintiff's Memorandum n.6) The world's largest financial
institution is paying $12.5 billion for a bank that is cobbling
a Kafkaesque attack on Mr. Giordano that launches with the charge
that he "apparently has no job or other means of supporting
himself" (Plaintiff's Memorandum at 7) 4. The law firm has tipped its client's hand
(or its hand). This is of course what the case is about-the
moneyed believe their money entitles them to silence the unmoneyed.
4
One of the Memorandum's bizarre twists invests Mr. Giordano with
the capability to get the United States government to freeze
Banamex' assets.
Does Banamex' law firm think Citigroup is its after-acquired
ticket into New York's courts (a fitting parallel with the illogic
of its claim that Mr. Giordano's coming to New York to defend
affects the jurisdictional calculus)? Has it been toiling so
long and so deep in the moneypits it thinks others, like it,
measure justice by the thickness of its clients' purses? Is
it blinded by Citigroup's CEO getting paid $150,000,000 last
year? 5 Is it emboldened
by its knowledge of Citigroup's massive contributions to politicians?
6 Is it too arrogant
to care that maintaining this case adds credence to the widespread
charge that Citibank particularly exploits the poor? 7 Is it disdainful of press accounts that
keep finding Citibank's fingerprints on decades of laundering
the money of dictators and drug dealers? 8
5
As reported in Carol J. Loomis, 'This Stuff Is Wrong'
FORTUNE 73, 78 (June 25, 2001)(highest CEO pay in the nation).
6
As in, for example, being the largest campaign contributor to
a South Dakota Senator, All things Considered, NATIONAL
PUBLIC RADIO (June 21, 1901).
The attack dances further into the absurd with the proposition
that if a person can afford one lawyer or find one to work free
or cheap, he can afford or find two. (See Plaintiff's Memorandum
at 1, 11, 26-27) Lest the reader misunderstand, the writers
assert a corollary: when they've further depleted Mr. Giordano's
resources by his having to come to New York to defend, it shows
he can dig deeper and spend more. (Plaintiff's Memorandum at
26) They buttress their house of illogical cards by attacking
him for trying to raise money for defense. (Id.)
Banamex Raises Irrelevant Issues To Smear Defendants
The Alleged "Illegality" Of Giordano's
Presence In Mexico
Because my wife is from México and we have family
on both sides of the border, and because I have practiced law
in this border state of New Mexico, I am generally familiar with
Mexico's immigration laws.
I also have some knowledge of Mr. Giordano's perfectly legal
presence in Mexico because when he arrived in Albuquerque in
May of this year, invited to speak at various forums, he had
his Mexican visa-an official Mexican government document granting
him permission to be in that country-with him. Apropos of Banamex'
schizophrenic alternating claims of either poverty or wealth
by Giordano, it's interesting that he arrived in Albuquerque
by Greyhound bus, after crossing the border into El Paso by foot,
because he couldn't afford to fly to Albuquerque for the speaking
engagement (plaintiffs' law firm will undoubtedly have trouble
with the fact that people who speak on the side of issues that
oppose their own seldom get paid for their speeches and usually
don't even get their expenses reimbursed). I picked him up at
the bus station. It was the first time I had met him face to
face.
Banamex complains:
"Giordano declines to divulge his address or telephone
number, even to the Court. Instead, he insists that all communications
with him be by e-mail, or through the Massachusetts attorney
he has retained to represent the Narco News Bulletin. Giordano
does not explain on what basis he is residing in Mexico, or whether
he has Mexico's permission to reside there. Indeed, given that
he apparently has no job or other means of supporting himself
in Mexico, there is ample reason to suspect that he cannot reside
there legally" (Plaintiff's Memorandum at 7 n.7)
"If he does live in Mexico, he may very well be doing
so illegally . . . ." (Id.)
This relevant only in that is signifies of Banamex' agenda:
use the courts to harass, malign and, above all, silence.
Banamex' law firm's claim that "Giordano declines to
divulge his address or phone number, even to the Court."
is demonstrably wrong and, apparently, knowingly false. I understand
Mr. Giordano has told the court what he has told me-he gave Judge
Harold Baer's office his telephone number and it used that number
to call him. 9
9
This is not to say that plaintiff or the public can be given
Mr. Giordano's physical address without his life being jeopardized.
I say that as someone with an understanding of Mexico; others
can infer the same from a statistic-during its last President's
watch 29 journalists were assassinated. Mr. Giordano has exposed
criminals, paramilitaries, and corrupt officials.
2. Banamex' Using After-the-Fact Events to Establish
Jurisdiction.
It is simply outrageous that Banamex' law firm tries to use
of events after it filed the lawsuit in a desperate stab at establishing
jurisdiction in New York. Lawyers know that's not right. It
looks like the litigation technique of "just say anything
to keep the ball, and the enemies' expenses, in the air."
This is another self-revealing admission of defeat. More devils
are in the details:
· New York's courts are notoriously backlogged. Litigants
aren't expected to feel sorry for the courts' predicament. Nor
should they use the severe backlog to harass the opposition because
justice delayed is justice denied to those who must spend time
and money to get rid of a case their opponent knows it will not
win it a judgment.
· New York's liberal allowance of interlocutory appeals
keeps forum shoppers' unmeritorious claims in court longer and
at greater expense to the hapless defendants.
· New York City is expensive. The cost of its rent,
its food, its lodging can break visitors of modest means. Banamex
uses a Frank Sinatra approach: If they can break you there,
they can break you anywhere, it's up to you, New York, New York.
Plaintiff, a large corporation in México, sues impecunious
Mexican entities in New York. The defendants seek donations
(inevitably mostly from prospective donors with limited donable
income) to help defend in New York. In other words, seeking
charity makes one not a charity case.
Without enough to establish jurisdiction over events that
took place in Mexico regarding the commentaries on www.narconews.com,
Banamex repeatedly refers to Giordano's efforts to fight back
in New York. It refers five times in its Memorandum to post-filing
activity in New York, specifically, a publicity event for the
site, fundraising for this case, and preparation of the defense.
(Plaintiff's Memorandum at 8, 16. 26, 27) It adds a circumstance
that it admits is irrelevant-readers live in New York. (Id. at
8)
The implicit argument is that New York's pre-eminence as
a media, financing, and intellectual center burdens its courts
with jurisdiction over people from elsewhere who got sued here.
Some fallacies are so fallacious that it's unproductive to
try to argue against them. One of these is that when poor people
try to raise money to defend lawsuits they become poor no more.
(See Id. at 27, presenting the idea hand in hand with saying
money spent for a trip to publicize the site and raise money
to defend should have been spent on defense and would have been
more than a drop in that bucket)
Big law firms with billionaire clients are not the most reliable
judges of who is "too poor to defend himself." This
firm knows, though, what it would charge to defend a case like
this; Mr. Giordano says he has been quoted retainers of $50,000
to $250,000 (a lot more than plane tickets, already hard to afford).
This firm knows, too, that every day Mr. Giordano spends asking
for funds is a day he is not reporting from Latin America on
the drug war. It knows that last month he suspended journalism
to work on defending this case.
The International Internet Context,
or What They're Saying About Us
The European Commission is considering adopting a country-of-origin
rule to govern internet speech. This would harmonize internet
governance with other European laws and regulations. 10 "Publishers, merchants and others
have complained that [applying the laws of the country where
the consumer is situated] would smother e-commerce under legal
obligations and be so burdensome for small businesses as to make
Internet sales impractical for them." 11
11 Id.
The country-of-origin here is México. México
has protected this speech. 12
12
Banamex chides Mr. Giordano for citing New York law. This seems
to obliterate the distinction in conflict of laws between substantive
laws and laws pertaining to getting into court or not.
An internet business magazine warns "the Internet stands
a good chance of becoming hopelessly entangled in every country's
laws." 13 Members
of Congress are "squawking" about the "extraterritorial
impact" of European directives. 14
Will we listen when México squawks about our interference
with its journalism and web sites? Most of the article sees
other countries' regulation as a threat to "American tenets
of free speech." 15
14
Id.
15
Id. at 28.
Conclusion
Banamex is not playing fair. It has sued Mr. Giordano twice
for the same charges-once as Al Giordano and another as Narco
News Bulletin.
As I have worked on this document I couldn't find the point
to stop stating my interest in the matter and shift to arguing
the issues. My interest is the issues. I will leave the concepts
together.
This case seems to have progressed well beyond the traditional
pleadings-bound concept of motions to dismiss. I have stated
some facts, too. Accordingly, I am verifying this pleading.
I point out also that I have referred to a number of assertions
by others of matters beyond my personal knowledge; these are
stated for the purpose of showing that they have been asserted
rather than for personal knowledge of the truth of the assertions.
That assertions have been published can be judicially noticeable.
_____________________
REBER BOULT
3005 Carlota Rd. N.W.
Albuquerque, N.M. 87104
505-246-9345
reberb@speakeasy.net
This memorandum and accompanying
exhibits and affidavits are offered to the Court in support of:
And are filed together
with:

Key
Words for Search Engines: Banamex, Citigroup,
Akin,
Gump, Strauss, Hauer and Feld, Thomas McLish,
Michael
Madigan, Sandy Weill, Robert Rubin