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Memorandum Opinion - the Circuit Court for Baltimore City

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circulation - over 600,000 copies - in Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, so <strong>the</strong> defendants knew <strong>the</strong> harm of <strong>the</strong>allegedly tortious activity would be felt in Cali<strong>for</strong>nia. “The Supreme <strong>Court</strong> upheld <strong>the</strong>exercise of personal jurisdiction over <strong>the</strong> two defendants because <strong>the</strong>y had ‘expressly aimed’<strong>the</strong>ir conduct towards Cali<strong>for</strong>nia.” Revell v. Columbia University School of Journalism, 317F.3d 467, 472 (5 th Cir. 2002) (citation omitted).In Revell <strong>the</strong> <strong>Court</strong> applied <strong>the</strong> Calder effects test in <strong>the</strong> context of a website. Revell,a Texas resident sued Lidov, a Massachusetts resident, and Columbia University, whoseprinciple place of business is New York, <strong>for</strong> defamation arising out of Lidov's authorship ofan article that he posted on an internet bulletin board hosted by Columbia. Id. at 569. Lidovhad never been to Texas and was unaware that Revell <strong>the</strong>n resided in Texas. Id. In <strong>the</strong> articleLidov accused Revell, <strong>the</strong>n Associate Deputy Director of <strong>the</strong> FBI, of being part of aconspiracy of senior members of <strong>the</strong> Reagan Administration that, despite clear advancewarnings, failed to stop <strong>the</strong> terrorist bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, which exploded overLockerbie, Scotland in 1988. Id. Revell claimed damage to his professional reputation inTexas and emotional distress arising out of <strong>the</strong> alleged defamation. Id. Because Texas's longarmstatute reaches to <strong>the</strong> constitutional limits, <strong>the</strong> question be<strong>for</strong>e <strong>the</strong> <strong>Court</strong> was whe<strong>the</strong>rexercising personal jurisdiction over Lidov and Columbia would offend due process. Id. at469-70. The <strong>Court</strong> noted that “[a]nswering <strong>the</strong> question of personal jurisdiction in this casebrings . . . settled and familiar <strong>for</strong>mulations to a new mode of communication across statelines.” Id. at 470.Revell argued that “given <strong>the</strong> uniqueness of defamation claims and <strong>the</strong>ir inherentability to inflict injury in far-flung jurisdictions,” <strong>the</strong> <strong>Court</strong> should not apply <strong>the</strong> Zippo scale.The <strong>Court</strong> rejected that argument and noted that “defamation has its unique features, but28

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