Fake News Impresario Patrick Byrne Gets Canadian Court Deadline
Update: Byrne's appeal was rejected by the British Columbia Court of Appeals. The decision is posted here. The Supreme Court of Canada rejected Byrne's appeal on August 9, 2018, putting an end to the legal battle. The judgment was paid on August 30, 2018.
A longer version of this post appeared in The Huffington Post. See also this follow-up HuffPost article.
Another setback for Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne, as he fights the There’s been a victory in the struggle against fake news, and chances are you’ve never heard about it.
“Deep Capture” is pretty much defunct in recent months, and now is only dusted off on occasion to give the rare skeptical journalist a shot across the bow. The last time he did that was in November 2015,in a post attacking M.L. Nestel of the Daily Beast, one of thew few mainstream publications to probe Byrne. Nestel was not scared off. Most journalists are, I’m sad to say.
While it was still active, “Deep Capture” churned out a steady diet of convoluted conspiracy theories and childish name calling (I was once compared to “Scaramouch,” which I guess is supposed to be an insult). One of those “articles” targeted an obscure Vancouver businessman named Aly Nazerali. It’s not clear why he targeted Nazerali. He was not a critic of Overstock, but was a secondary player in a conspiracy theory whipped up by Mitchell as “investigative journalism” to burnish the site’s luster.
. . . Mitchell described Nazerali as a man in cahoots with “Osama Bin Laden’s favorite financier,” and said that he worked with a variety of criminal outfits around the globe, including La Cosa Nostra, the Colombian drug cartel, the Russian mafia, and various “jihadi terrorist groups” including al Qaeda’s Golden Chain. [The site] also accused Nazerali of “delivering weapons to war zones in Africa and to the mujahedeen in Afghanistan,” of orchestrating “small-time ‘pump and dump’ scams… [and] bust-outs, death spiral finance and naked short selling,” and of carrying out dirty work for “a Pakistani ISIS asset” who “works for the Iranian regime.”
The reasonable inference to draw is that they knew from the beginning of the trial that they could not justify the Articles’ false and extravagant language. Their approach to the defence of the action was an attempt to intimidate the plaintiff and to humiliate him into abandoning his lawsuit.
The decision spells out all the ingredients that go into running a fake news site:
- Contempt for the truth. “Mitchell did not attempt to contact the plaintiff before posting the Articles” and blew off Nazerali’s effort to get him to remove his lies. “No effort of consequence was made after Mr. Nazerali contacted Mr. Mitchell to review the Articles to determine if they were false. On the contrary, Mr. Nazerali’s approach to Mr. Mitchell was treated with scorn.”
- Personal animosity. The decision noted that Byrne said to Nazerali during a deposition, in the presence of the court reporter and parties: “I know your kind, you are not the kind that does the dirty work themselves. You employ others to do your dirty work. I hate your kind of people.”
- Use of “journalism” as a bludgeon. The decision points out that Mitchell once emailed Byrne, saying “I am open to changing the story if he can provide other verifiable information that would be valuable” and “I might even suggest that I will be willing to remove his name from the story altogether if he were to provide me with, say, trading records” on a “global terrorist.”
- Deception. Mitchell added: “if Nazerali agrees, nothing lost, after he gives me the information I will just put him back in the story. Sleazy, but, well it is what it is”;
Mitchell, Byrne and Deep Capture LLC engaged in a calculated and ruthless campaign to inflict as much damage on Mr. Nazerali’s reputation as they could achieve. It is clear on the evidence that their intention was to conduct a vendetta in which the truth about Mr. Nazerali himself was of no consequence. Their mission was to expose what they conceive to be corrupt business practices damaging to the global economy. Mr. Nazerali became a convenient means to that end, even when he himself could not be demonstrated to be corrupt.
He slammed the defendants for demonstrating “an indecent and pitiless desire to wound.”
Byrne’s tactics have been effective as discouraging critical coverage of the company. For every M.L. Nestel there are perhaps ten journalists who are scared away—and some who become conduits for fake news. Perhaps the most egregious example is Cade Metz, who retailed Byrne’s stock market conspiracy theories for The Register, a British technology blog, and went on to write flattering articles on him for Wired. Early in 2014 he wrote a lengthy profile that mentioned neither the libel suit nor forgery conviction that had snared Bagley, even though he had written about numerous times for the Register and Wired.
A June 2016 article in Columbia Journalism Review described how vicious—and effective—the attacks can be. Noted journalist Bethany McLean was viciously attacked by Byrne after she wrote a critical article on Overstock. Among other things, she was accused of trading sexual favors to advance her career. The article observed that she “decided to stop covering him. McLean had gone up against many powerful companies in her day, most notably Enron, but as the mother of two small children, she didn’t want the risk. In that way, she says of Byrne, ‘he won.’”
Byrne eventually lost because he tangled with a man well-heeled enough to sue for libel. As a Canadian resident, he was able to take advantage of that country’s pro-plaintiff libel laws. The court awarded Nazerali C$1,205,000, very large by Canadian standards, of which C$750,000 consisted of aggravated and punitive damages.
Byrne appealed, and that’s where the day of reckoning comes in. In a December 2016 ruling the British Columbia court of appeals required Byrne to post security for the entire amount of the judgment. Subsequent rulings, most recently a Feb. 9 ruling granting Nazerali legal fees, bring the total to just under C$1.5 million. He has until February 28 to post a letter of credit for the full amount, which is over $1.1 million in US dollars. If he doesn’t Nazerali can get the appeal dismissed.
It’s a lose-lose proposition for Byrne. But either way it’s a big victory in the fight against fake news.
Postscript: Byrne finally paid the judgment on August 30, 2018. Here's the breakdown (all sums in Canadian dollars):
General damages $400,000
Aggravated damages $200,000 (final amount on appeal, lowered from $500,000 awarded by trial judge)
Punitive damages $250,000
Special costs $55,000
Trial costs $200,000
Supreme Court appeal costs $1,000
Pre-judgement interest $30,700
Post judgement interest $24,600
Interest on trust funds $8,700
Total $1.17 million, approximately $892,000 in U.S. dollars at recent exchange rates.
© 2018 Gary Weiss. All rights reserved.
Postscript: Byrne finally paid the judgment on August 30, 2018. Here's the breakdown (all sums in Canadian dollars):
General damages $400,000
Aggravated damages $200,000 (final amount on appeal, lowered from $500,000 awarded by trial judge)
Punitive damages $250,000
Special costs $55,000
Trial costs $200,000
Supreme Court appeal costs $1,000
Pre-judgement interest $30,700
Post judgement interest $24,600
Interest on trust funds $8,700
Total $1.17 million, approximately $892,000 in U.S. dollars at recent exchange rates.
© 2018 Gary Weiss. All rights reserved.
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