Ninth Circuit Lets #TheyLied Suit Against Lawyer Lisa Bloom Go Forward

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An interesting decision from last week, Wynn v. Bloom, decided by a Ninth Circuit panel (Richard Clifton, Jacqueline Nguyen, and Mark Bennett):

Defendants-Appellants Lisa Bloom and the Bloom Firm … appeal from the district court’s denial of their [anti-SLAPP] Special Motion to Dismiss ….

Wynn has demonstrated a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether Bloom Defendants acted with actual malice [i.e., knowledge or reckless disregard as to falsehood] in publishing the Press Release…. To constitute reckless disregard, the defendant must have published a false statement with a “high degree of awareness of [its] probable falsity,” or “entertained serious doubts as to the truth of [the] publication.”.

The Press Release suggests that Wynn instructed—personally or through a third party—female ShowStoppers performers “to strip down to bras and panties, put on heels, and apply extra makeup so as to be sexually appealing” to him and that Wynn directly or indirectly retaliated against Angelina Mullins when she refused to comply.

However, neither Mullins nor Samuel Cahn-Temes told Bloom Defendants that they heard Wynn give the instructions or had knowledge that the instructions came from Wynn. In fact, at her deposition, Mullins testified that although she assumed the instructions came from Wynn, she “made it clear” to Bloom Defendants that she had no personal knowledge that they did.

Furthermore, Mullins and Cahn-Temes gave Bloom Defendants reason to doubt that Wynn was responsible. Both Mullins’s and Cahn-Temes’s depositions highlighted the differences between New York Broadway and Los Angeles Commercial styles of performance and how performers’ styles and professional experiences may have shaped their understandings of appropriate attire and behavior. While Mullins’s style was New York Broadway, choreographer Marguerite Derricks’s style was Los Angeles Commercial.

Mullins testified that she told the Bloom Firm, before the Press Release was issued, that other dancers that worked for Derricks in the past thought that it “seemed very normal … to be asked to wear what they were wearing for [Derricks] in this context” and that those performers’ understanding of “what is acceptable for Broadway style show rehearsals and … go-go or burlesque dancing was sort of blurred.” Cahn-Temes testified that he told Bloom Defendants that Mullins and Derricks had a “clash” of personalities and style—New York versus Los Angeles—and that Mullins was pushed to the back or removed from numbers, at least in part, due to that clash. {Jordan Oslin, a Bloom Firm attorney, testified that he recalled Cahn-Temes telling him about the clash between the New York Broadway and Los Angeles Commercial styles but asserted that Cahn-Temes made it clear to him that the retaliation was a result of Mullins’s refusal to sexualize herself for Wynn. Cahn-Temes’s testimony contradicts Oslin’s.}

Bloom Defendants chose to publish the Press Release inculpating Wynn after learning that none of the witnesses could confirm that Wynn played any role in giving the instructions and without considering alternative explanations or investigating further. Under these circumstances, though the result may not be certain or perhaps even likely, a reasonable jury could find that Bloom Defendants acted with actual malice in publishing the Press Release….


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