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Gibson’s Bakery Store Clerk Intervenes Against Attempt By Oberlin College-aligned Media to Unseal His Facebook Records

Gibson’s Bakery Store Clerk Intervenes Against Attempt By Oberlin College-aligned Media to Unseal His Facebook Records

Allyn D. Gibson: WEWS-TV “deserves no relief in this action because [it] is not a disinterested media company seeking to report on a legal case; instead, [it] has directly allied itself with Oberlin Parties and its campaign to bully and destroy the Gibson Parties’ family, reputation, and brand.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Jm5V1KzbN8&t=6s

We still await the Ohio 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decision in which (1) Oberlin College is challenging the compensatory and punitive damage awards totalling, after reduction under Ohio tort reform law, $25 million, plus over $6 million in attorney’s fees, bringing the judgment to over $32 million, and (2) the cross-appeal by Gibson’s Bakery and two members of the Gibson family (including the widow of the late David Gibson) seeking to restore the full $33 million punitive damages award.

As we have been covering for years, there is a second piece of this puzzle, a vindictive and transparently collusive attempt by certain media entities to unseal confidential Facebook records of Allyn D. Gibson, the store clerk whose stop of a black Oberlin College student shoplifter led to protests, boycotts, and false accusations of racial profiling. Allyn D. was not a party in the case, was not called as a witness, and the Facebook records — produced during discovery under a court ordered confidentiality agreement — were not even offerred as exhibits.

The Facebook records played zero role in the trial and verdicts, but first Oberlin College then its Cleveland media friends tried unsuccessfully to get the records unsealed as part of a post-trial attempt to smear the Gibsons as racists. Is it just coincidence that the one media entity, WEWS-TV, still pursuing this in the Ohio Supreme Court also is where Oberlin College’s lead trial counsel formerly was a legal commentator for a decade? LOL if you believe in coincidences.

The last time we checked in on the proceedings in the Ohio Supreme Court was in Oberlin College-aligned Media Effort To Unseal Gibson’s Bakery Clerk Facebook Records Goes To Briefing In Ohio Supreme Court.

The case in the Ohio Supreme Court is a Complaint for a Writ of Mandamus ordering the trial court to unseal the records. Judge John Miraldi is the named respondent, but as expected, Allyn D. has moved to intervene, filing a Motion to Intervene (pdf.) attaching an Answer (starting at page 9 of the linked pdf.) and Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings (starting at page 39 of the pdf.).

From the Motion to Intervene (emphasis in original):

Intervenor was a nonparty to the Gibson-Oberlin Lawsuit. He was not a plaintiff and wasnot awarded any damages as part of the jury verdict. During the course of discovery, OberlinParties served Intervenor with a substantially overbroad subpoena and subjected Intervenor tomultiple days of deposition testimony. As part of the subpoena, the trial court ordered Intervenor to produce to Oberlin Parties a mirror image copy of his Facebook account. The Facebook account is not connected to Gibson’s Bakery, Dave, or Grandpa Gibson. Instead, it was Intervenor’s private, personal Facebook account. Exhibit G contains a grouping of unauthenticated, private Facebook messages that allegedly came from the mirror image of Intervenor’s Facebook account.

Exhibit G was filed in conjunction with an affidavit executed by one of Oberlin Parties’ attorneys, Cary M. Snyder, and attached as an exhibit to Oberlin Parties’ Joint Reply in Support of Motions for Summary Judgment. The Facebook messages contained in Exhibit G were not authenticated during the discovery phase of the Gibson-Oberlin Lawsuit. Even though he was deposed for numerous days, Intervenor was not questioned on the contents of Exhibit G nor asked to authenticate Exhibit G. Intervenor was not called as a witness during trial by any party. Further, Oberlin Parties made no attempt to admit Exhibit G as evidence during the six-week public trial.

Several months following judgment against Oberlin Parties, and despite no attempt to (1) authenticate Exhibit G, (2) refer to Exhibit G at trial, (3) call any witnesses regarding Exhibit G’s putative contents, or (4) proffer Exhibit G at trial, Oberlin Parties filed a motion attempting to unseal Exhibit G. Respondent denied Oberlin Parties’ motion, specifically stating “[a]t trial, [Oberlin Parties] made no attempt to introduce these materials as evidence of the Bakery’s reputation in the community.”. (See, Sep. 16, 2019 Journal Entry, p. 2, attached hereto as Exhibit 4 [emphasis added]). When Oberlin Parties were unsuccessful, WEWS stepped in to attempt to do the same.

Allyn D. argued that granting him intervenor status was required because while Judge Miraldi had an interest in defending his decision, Allyn D. has an interest in the records themselves remaining private.

In the Answer, Allyn D. asserted as an Affirmative Defense, among other things, that WEWS-TV had no legitimate media interest in the records because it barely showed any interest in the case, and in fact its parent company filed an amicus brief trying overturn the verdicts:

3. Relator deserves no relief in this action because Relator was not actively involved in reporting on this case. Indeed, from the Gibson Parties’ review, Relator has only carried four stories related to this case over the past four years, and three of the stories were merely picked up from the Associated Press….

4. Relator deserves no relief in this action because Realtor’s parent company, The E.W. Scripps Company, is actively challenging the jury’s verdict on behalf of Oberlin Parties.

5. Relator deserves no relief in this action because Relator is not a disinterested media company seeking to report on a legal case; instead, Relator has directly allied itself with Oberlin Parties and its campaign to bully and destroy the Gibson Parties’ family, reputation, and brand.

In the Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings, these points were repeated, and Allyn D. also hammered the collusive aspect of the attempt:

With its clear antipathy to this case before the jury verdicts, Relator’s crusade to access Exhibit G is puzzling until we consider:

First – Relator’s parent company, The E.W. Scripps Company, is actively challenging the jury’s verdict on behalf of Oberlin Parties. WEWS is owned by The E.W. Scripps Company. The E.W. Scripps Company filed an amicus curiae brief in the Ninth District Court of Appeals in favor of Oberlin Parties that, using faulty legal reasoning, asked the Court to overturn the jury’s verdict. [June 8, 2020 Amicus Curiae Br. of Reporter’s Committee and 19 Media Organizations, Gibson Bros., Inc., et al. v. Oberlin College, et al., 9th Dist. Case Nos. 19CA011563 & 20CA011632].

Second – Oberlin Parties’ lead trial counsel was a ten-year commentator for Relator. In addition to its overt support for Oberlin Parties, Relator also used Oberlin Parties’ lead trial counsel, Ronald Holman, II, for ten years as an on-air contributor.3 [See Exh. 1 to Gibson Parties and ADG’s Dec. 2, 2019 Br. In Opp. to WEWS’ Mtn to Unseal (Exh. H to Relator’s Compl.)]. Instead of a disinterested media company seeking to report on a legal case, Relator has directly allied itself with Oberlin Parties and their campaign to bully and destroy the Gibson Parties’ family, reputation, and brand.

After distinguishing the case law cited by WEWS-TV, and also documenting the threat of violence against the Gibson’s that necessarily informed the trial court’s decision not to unseal the records, Allyn D. made a point that is critical — and one I’ve made before — that unsealing these records will damage the court discovery process:

First – public policy requires restricted access to Exhibit G. Relator is seeking unrestricted
access to a nonparty’s private information based solely on the fact that Oberlin Parties, the party
that issued the subpoena, attached the private documents as an exhibit to a summary judgment
motion. Considering the extremely broad scope of civil discovery,6 under such a rule, there would be no limit to the invasive and public airing of private information. The scope of discovery is much
broader than the scope of admissible evidence. Civil litigation creates an upside-down funnel
effect. Discovery begins at the top of the funnel and makes up the majority of the funnel because
the scope of discovery is extremely broad. See Civ.R. 26(B)(1). The bottom of the funnel and the
smallest portion of the funnel is the scope of trial evidence, which requires all evidence to meet
numerous hurdles for admissibility, including hearsay and relevancy. The point here is that parties
receive significant portions of discovery materials which ultimately are inadmissible at trial. And
the reason most civil cases do not take decades to complete is that discovery is intended to be
agreeable and reciprocal, i.e. a voluntary free flow of responsive information without the need for
constant court intervention. See 1994 Staff Notes to Civ.R. 37 (“The purpose of the amendment is
to endorse and enforce the view that, in general, discovery is self-regulating and should require
court intervention only as a last resort.”).

Accepting Relator’s position that all discovery materials filed with the court are thereby
accessible by the public undercuts the current structure of discovery. Parties and non-parties would
need to decide whether to: (1) produce materials during discovery and thereby risk the public’s
access merely because the other party may file the materials in court; or (2) file for protective
orders at every turn. This would create a chilling effect on discovery by causing parties to not
produce responsive materials and would grind the courts’ dockets to a halt by exponentially
increasing the number of discovery motions.

To me, this last point is the key point. Unsealing records that the parties agreed would be confidential and that were never even offerred or used at trial will severely damage the court system’s ability to manage its case load. Ohio is going to have to hire more judges if WEWS-TV gets its way here.

The Ohio Supreme Court electronic online docket does not yet reflect Judge Miraldi having filed an Answer. He has counsel from the Lorain County Prosecutor’s Office, so that is surprising. Perhaps the filing just hasn’t been uploaded yet, or he got an extension of time. We’ll see.

We will continue to follow this and the main appeal.

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Our prior coverage of the Facebook issue:

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Comments

The ongoing harassment is sickening.

Reminder- it’s a good day to order something from Gibson’s Bakery.

    Olinser in reply to lc. | September 17, 2021 at 8:09 pm

    Reminder – this ENTIRE INSANE SAGA started because they had the audacity to stop a black student from shoplifting and a bunch of spoiled white liberals decided that was racist.

      guyjones in reply to Olinser. | September 18, 2021 at 10:01 pm

      Indeed. The tortious behavior of the school administrators (and, the students, although, their conduct wasn’t actionable) demonstrates the utterly callous, irrational, infantile, vindictive and self-aggrandizing narcissism of contemporary Leftist totalitarians and racial demagogues. Attacking and vilifying a small, family-owned business over absolutely nothing that was morally or legally wrong or improper, on the store owners’/staff’s part; attempting to make political and “Social Justice Warrior” hay out of absolutely nothing. I don’t think it’s hyperbole at all to call this behavior evil.

      Falsely accusing individuals and businesses of racism, with the intent to cause those people and businesses reputational and pecuniary harm, is evil.

It is a better day to not let your kids go to Oberlin. Every alum that I have kept in contact with have had all of their kids go to other schools.

    Milhouse in reply to MajorWood. | September 18, 2021 at 11:14 pm

    A friend just mentioned to me in an email message yesterday that his daughter is starting at Oberlin. I have no idea what, if anything, to write in reply! Where does one even start? Is it possible that he’s unaware of any of this and thinks it’s a respectable college? Or that the daughter has been so brainwashed that she chose this college because of its awful reputation?

This is high octane stuff. Glad it is being fought with smart minds on our side.

I’m surprised FB hasn’t just leaked it.

    The Friendly Grizzly in reply to Andy. | September 17, 2021 at 10:01 pm

    You and me, both.

    Voyager in reply to Andy. | September 18, 2021 at 12:07 am

    If they leaked it now while it’s still under legal contention they open themselves up to a ton of risk for very little gain. After all, WEWS-TV could still win.

    If they leak it, it will be after the legal avenues have been closed.

    I will go out on a limb and say that the reason Facebook hasn’t leaked it is because there is nothing there.

    Milhouse in reply to Andy. | September 18, 2021 at 11:27 pm

    That wouldn’t work. Remember that Oberlin has already seen this material, and has surely informed its friends at WEWS of its contents. So FB leaking it would be superfluous.

    The problem is that Oberlin is required to keep it confidential. If WEWS were to admit they’d already seen it, Oberlin would be in deep excrement. So before it can publish anything it has to get an official look at it.

    We can be pretty confident that this material is embarrassing to the Gibsons, and probably portrays Allyn D. as a racist. Otherwise WEWS wouldn’t be putting up this fight to get an official look at it. But Allyn’s views on race are completely irrelevant. It’s none of anyone’s business whether he’s a NAACP member or a Klansman. It shouldn’t affect the case at all; but unfortunately, even if we could be confident judges and juries would be influenced, customers would certainly be. Relevant or not, it could ruin their business. It could ruin Allyn’s life. And as Prof J. points out it would ruin the deposition process for everyone.

      I agree with most of your comment. However, ultimately I’m struck by the fact that prior to verdict, Oberlin did nothing to unseal the entire Facebook account, or to authenticate, interrogate Allyn about, or introduce into evidence the Exhibit G containing excerpts from it. If the account really did paint the bakery’s owners and/or employees as racists, Oberlin certainly would have examined Allyn endlessly about its contents and tried to introduce it into evidence. But they didn’t.

      Hence why I’m on the fence as to what’s really in the Facebook account.

I express thanks to Professor Jacobson, for his absolutely stellar coverage of this case. Prof J.’s legal insights and commentary on both the litigation side of things, and, the behind-the-scenes machinations of Oberlin and their media allies, is peerless. Nobody else is covering this case with the same depth and attention to detail.

Russ from Winterset | September 17, 2021 at 10:38 pm

Hear hear. LI’s coverage of this whole mess was stellar. I believe it to be both informative and impartial. This, the George Floyd trial & the Trayvon Martin trial are all examples I cite when recommending LI to friends & family.

Planned Pastry. Gibson is a witch… a warlock?, a “burden”. Abort him, cannibalize his profitable parts, and sequester his carbon pollutants. Oberlin’s Choice.

I applied to Oberlin and SMU back in 1963. Thank God I chose warm weather.

When Gibson wins, will they grab the college’s money from their bank (causing checks to bounce) or auction off the college to pay the judgment? It will be interesting to see.

    None of that the college has money to pay. It will hurt, but they can do it without selling anything.

    UnCivilServant in reply to surfcitylawyer. | September 19, 2021 at 6:37 am

    When the appeal was filed, Oberlin was required to put the amount of the initial judgement in escrow pending the results. The money exists and has already been removed from their accounts. The additional amount to the full punitive damages also won’t do enough damage.

    The real damage has been the ongoing destruction of their reputation, which they rightly deserve from their behaviour.