Fells v. Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and District of Columbia ( 2022 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    Nos. 19-CV-1246 & 20-CV-0387
    KENDALL K.W. FELLS, APPELLANT,
    V.
    SERVICE EMPLOYEES INTERNATIONAL UNION and DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,
    APPELLEES.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (CAB3079-19)
    (Hon. Florence Pan, Trial Judge)
    (Argued February 3, 2022                              Decided September 1, 2022)
    Erik S. Jaffe, with whom Raymond J. Sterling and Brian J. Farrar were on
    the brief, for appellant.
    Kathleen M. Keller, with whom Devki K. Virk and April H. Pullman, were
    on the brief, for appellee Service Employees International Union.
    Norah E. Rast, Special Assistant Attorney General, with whom Karl A.
    Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Loren L. AliKhan, Solicitor
    General at the time, Caroline S. Van Zile, Principal Deputy Solicitor General at the
    time, Carl J. Schifferle, Deputy Solicitor General, and Mark S. Wigley, Assistant
    Attorney General, were on the brief, for appellee District of Columbia.
    Before BECKWITH and DEAHL, Associate Judges, and FISHER, Senior Judge.
    2
    DEAHL, Associate Judge: Kendall Fells was a high-level employee within the
    Service Employees International Union (SEIU).          After his seemingly forced
    resignation, SEIU issued a press statement tying his departure to an “ongoing
    investigation” that was triggered by another executive’s sexual misconduct, namely,
    sleeping with subordinates. In announcing Fells’ departure, the statement explained
    that Fells’ own “abusive behavior towards . . . predominantly female staff” was
    brought to light by that investigation. Fells sued SEIU for defamation and related
    claims. He contends that SEIU’s statement falsely implied that he was forced out
    due to sexual misconduct, when in fact, there is no dispute that Fells’ departure was
    not related to any sexual misconduct.
    SEIU filed a special motion to dismiss under the District of Columbia’s Anti-
    Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation, or “Anti-SLAPP,” Act. 
    D.C. Code §§ 16-5501
     to -5505. That Act provides defendants with a mechanism to summarily
    defeat suits “aimed to punish or prevent opposing points of view.” Am. Stud. Ass’n
    v. Bronner, 
    259 A.3d 728
    , 733 (D.C. 2021). The trial court found that SEIU made
    a prima facie case that its speech was protected under the Act, so that Fells’ suit
    would be dismissed unless he could demonstrate a likelihood of success on the
    merits. See 
    D.C. Code § 16-5502
    (b). The trial court dismissed Fells’ claims after
    concluding he could not meet that standard because SEIU’s statement did not imply
    3
    that he had engaged in sexual misconduct. Fells now appeals, and we reverse the
    dismissal of his defamation claim. We conclude, contrary to the trial court’s view,
    that a reasonable jury could find SEIU’s statement falsely implied that Fells was
    ousted for sexual misconduct.
    I.
    The core facts are not in dispute. Kendall Fells held various staff and
    leadership roles over the course of his thirteen-year career with SEIU. At the time
    of his resignation, Fells was interim President of the National Fast Food Workers’
    Union, a labor organization within SEIU that grew out of the “Fight for $15”
    minimum wage movement that he championed. While Fells was in that role, SEIU’s
    President, Mary Kay Henry, began actively encouraging employees to report sexual
    harassment and abuse amid the #MeToo movement.             As a result of several
    accusations involving inappropriate sexual relationships with subordinates, SEIU
    suspended its Executive Vice President, Scott Courtney, who resigned shortly
    thereafter. SEIU’s spokesperson told BuzzFeed News that Courtney engaged in
    “sexual misconduct and abusive behavior,” as revealed through a still-ongoing
    4
    “internal investigation launched to look into . . . sexual misconduct and abusive
    behavior towards union staff.” 1
    Ten days later, Fells resigned, seemingly under threat of termination. SEIU’s
    spokesperson issued a statement to multiple news outlets regarding Fells’ and
    another employee’s contemporaneous departure, indicating that those “personnel
    actions” were the result of its aforementioned “ongoing internal investigation” and
    pertained to “serious problems related to abusive behavior towards staff,
    predominantly female staff.” The statement in its entirety read as follows:
    As a result of information that has come to light through
    our ongoing internal investigation, today SEIU took action
    on two senior staff. These personnel actions are the
    culmination of this stage of the investigation, which
    brought to light the serious problems related to abusive
    behavior towards staff, predominantly female staff. We
    know that progress does not stop with these personnel
    actions alone. [SEIU] President Henry has taken important
    steps toward ensuring that our workplace environment
    reflects our values, and that all staff is respected, their
    contributions are valued, and their voices are heard.
    Several media outlets then published articles connecting Fells’ and Courtney’s
    resignations and, in at least one instance, expressly attributing Fells’ ouster to sexual
    1
    Cora Lewis, A Top Labor Executive Has Resigned After Complaints About
    His Relationships With Female Staffers, BuzzFeed News (Oct. 23, 2017), .
    5
    misconduct allegations. 2 In fact, as SEIU concedes, Fells’ departure was not related
    to any claims of sexual misconduct.
    Fells sued SEIU for (1) defamation, (2) false light invasion of privacy, (3)
    public disclosure of private information, and (4) intentional infliction of emotional
    distress. SEIU filed a special motion to dismiss under the District’s Anti-SLAPP
    Act, asserting that its statements were made “in furtherance of the right of advocacy
    on issues of public interest.” 
    D.C. Code § 16-5502
    (a). After briefing, the court held
    an evidentiary hearing on the motion, as required by statute. 
    D.C. Code § 16
    -
    5502(d).
    At the hearing’s conclusion, the trial court found that SEIU made a “prima
    facie showing that the claim at issue arises from an act in furtherance of the right of
    advocacy on issues of public interest,” satisfying its initial burden under the Act.
    2
    See Penny Starr, Tally: Four SEIU Officials Out of a Job Because of Sexual
    Misconduct Charges, Breitbart (Nov. 4, 2017), www.breitbart.com/politics
    /2017/11/04/tally-four-seiu-officials-out-of-a-job-because-of-sexual-misconduct-
    charges/; https://perma.cc/VE5G-CWEL; see also Cora Lewis, The Organizing
    Director of the Fight for 15 Has Resigned Amid Harassment Investigation,
    BuzzFeed News (Nov. 2, 2017), www.buzzfeednews.com/article/coralewis/seiu-
    new-york-director-of-the-fight-for-15-resigned;       https://perma.cc/B7HV-D38K.
    The other articles that the Superior Court considered were part of a factual proffer
    made by Fells at a hearing on SEIU’s special motion to dismiss.
    6
    
    D.C. Code § 16-5502
    (b). The court reasoned that Fells’ ouster satisfied the statutory
    definition of an “issue of public interest” for two distinct reasons: (1) it pertained to
    “community well-being”; and (2) Fells is a limited-purpose “public figure” on issues
    related to the treatment of women in the workplace. See 
    D.C. Code § 16-5501
    (3).
    The latter conclusion was based on Fells’ leadership role in SEIU and the multiple
    media appearances and statements he had made in connection with workers’ rights,
    sometimes regarding sexual harassment specifically. With SEIU having made out a
    prima facie case, the burden shifted to Fells under the statute to demonstrate a
    likelihood of success on the merits.
    The court concluded that Fells had not met that burden. There was no express
    defamation, the court reasoned, because SEIU’s press statement did not expressly
    state that Fells had engaged in any sexual misconduct. As for implied defamation,
    the court opined that a BuzzFeed article about the series of firings and resignations,
    supra note 2, was the strongest basis for an implied defamation claim. After
    scrutinizing that article, however, the court concluded that Fells was not likely to
    succeed on the merits because a reader would not “reasonably understand” from the
    article “that Mr. Fells was being investigated for sexual misconduct.”
    7
    The court dismissed all of Fells’ claims with prejudice and later awarded SEIU
    $98,025.68 in attorneys’ fees and costs pursuant to the Anti-SLAPP Act’s fee-
    shifting provision. Fells now appeals.
    II.
    At the outset, we note that Fells’ only preserved challenge is to the dismissal
    of his defamation claim. His opening brief did not challenge the dismissals of his
    other claims, as SEIU correctly points out, and so we affirm those dismissals. 3 Our
    focus is thus exclusively on the propriety of the dismissal of his defamation claim
    under the Anti-SLAPP Act.
    3
    In his reply brief, Fells asserts that he did in fact raise a challenge to the
    dismissal of his other claims in his opening brief. As support for that assertion, he
    points us to a single sentence in his opening brief’s recitation of facts in which he
    says that “the court disposed of each of the claims” based on the same “narrow
    view.” His reply brief then argues “[i]f that reasoning was erroneous as to one it
    was erroneous as to all.” Maybe so, but he did not urge that inference or make that
    argument in his opening brief, and so he waived it. Stockard v. Moss, 
    706 A.2d 561
    ,
    566 (D.C. 1997) (“It is the longstanding policy of this court not to consider
    arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief.”). The premise of his argument
    is also subject to serious doubt with regard to the public disclosure and intentional
    infliction of emotional distress claims, as the trial court gave independent reasons
    that those claims were not likely to succeed on the merits.
    8
    The District’s Anti-SLAPP Act protects the free exercise of political rights by
    allowing defendants to quickly dispense with suits “filed by one side of a political
    or public policy debate aimed to punish or prevent the expression of opposing points
    of view.” Competitive Enter. Inst. v. Mann, 
    150 A.3d 1213
    , 1226 (D.C. 2016)
    (quoting Report on Bill 18-893, at 1). The Act permits a defendant to file a “special
    motion to dismiss” in which they “must first show entitlement to the protections of
    the Act by ‘mak[ing] a prima facie showing that the claim at issue arises from an act
    in furtherance of the right of advocacy on issues of public interest.’” 
    Id. at 1227
    (quoting 
    D.C. Code § 16-5502
    (b)). If the defendant is able to make this prima facie
    showing, the burden then shifts to the plaintiff to produce evidence showing that
    they are “likely to succeed on the merits.” 
    D.C. Code § 16-5502
    (b).
    The “likely to succeed on the merits” standard in the Anti-SLAPP context
    does not require a plaintiff to show that it is more likely than not that they will
    succeed, as the statutory language seems to say. Imposing that high of a bar for a
    suit to survive a motion to dismiss would raise “serious constitutional concerns.”
    Mann, 150 A.3d at 1235. To avoid those concerns, we have interpreted the phrase
    to mean that a plaintiff need only “present an evidentiary basis that would permit a
    reasonable, properly instructed jury to find in the plaintiff’s favor.” Id. at 1262. This
    standard is akin to the summary judgment standard under Superior Court Rule of
    9
    Civil Procedure 56, except that the non-moving party bears the burden under the
    Anti-SLAPP Act. Id. at 1237.
    We review the Superior Court’s application of the Anti-SLAPP Act de novo.
    Saudi Am. Pub. Rels. Affs. Comm. v. Inst. for Gulf Affs. (SAPRAC), 
    242 A.3d 602
    ,
    610-11 (D.C. 2020). For the reasons that follow, we agree with the trial court that
    SEIU made out a prima facie case “that the claim at issue arises from an act in
    furtherance of the right of advocacy on issues of public interest.” 
    D.C. Code § 16
    -
    5502(b). We disagree, however, with its conclusion that Fells failed to show that his
    implied defamation claim was “likely to succeed on the merits” under the refined
    standard articulated in Mann. 4
    A. SEIU’s Prima Facie Case that Anti-SLAPP Act Applies
    In filing a special motion to dismiss under the Anti-SLAPP Act, SEIU had the
    initial burden of providing “a prima facie showing” that Fells’ defamation claim
    4
    Fells also argues that if the trial court’s ruling is allowed to stand, then the
    Anti-SLAPP Act is unconstitutional as applied to him. The District of Columbia
    filed a brief responding to that argument. Because we reverse the Superior Court’s
    dismissal of Fells’ defamation claim, and he did not preserve any challenge to the
    dismissal of his remaining claims, supra note 3, we do not reach his challenges to
    the Act’s constitutionality.
    10
    “arises from an act [1] in furtherance of the right of advocacy [2] on issues of public
    interest.” 
    D.C. Code § 16-5502
    (b). This burden is not onerous, Doe No. 1 v. Burke
    (Burke I), 
    91 A.3d 1031
    , 1043 (D.C. 2014), and the trial court found SEIU met it.
    Fells now argues that SEIU’s statement is not covered by the Anti-SLAPP Act
    because it was neither (1) “in furtherance of the right of advocacy,” nor (2) related
    to “issues of public interest.” We address each argument in turn.
    1. “In Furtherance of the Right of Advocacy”
    Fells first argues that SEIU’s statement did “not even remotely constitute
    ‘advocacy,’” as contemplated by the Anti-SLAPP Act, because it “advocated
    nothing.”   It was instead an announcement “of a private employment action
    terminating the employment relationship between SEIU and Fells,” in his view. His
    argument does not withstand scrutiny.
    The Anti-SLAPP Act defines advocacy very broadly. In defining what
    constitutes an “[a]ct in furtherance of the right of advocacy on issues of public
    interest,” it includes “[a]ny . . . expression or expressive conduct . . . communicating
    views to members of the public in connection with an issue of public interest.” 
    D.C. Code § 16-5501
    (1). Focusing just on the italicized phrases—setting aside the “issue
    of public interest” language addressed in the next subsection for a moment—it is
    11
    clear that advocacy refers to anything that is expressive and communicates views to
    members of the public. That would seem to encompass any public expression of
    views whatsoever. Fells never attempts to reconcile his argument with this statutory
    definition.
    Fells persists that his lawsuit differs substantially from those targeted by the
    “central purpose of the Act” because he “has no intention of intimidating SEIU into
    silence on the issue of workplace sexual harassment.” Maybe so, but even if we
    accept Fells’ description of the Act’s central purpose, its plain terms clearly extend
    beyond that core purpose. We have rejected a similar attempt to distinguish between
    the category of suits to which the Act applies on its terms and those that are “classic
    SLAPP suits” in the fee-shifting context, noting that “nowhere does the Act refer to
    or define a ‘classic’ SLAPP suit, as distinct from one against which the defendant
    may invoke the statute’s protections after a threshold prima facie showing.” Doe v.
    Burke (Burke II), 
    133 A.3d 569
    , 573 (D.C. 2016). The same is true here. This is a
    broadly-worded statute, and for better or worse, its terms extend beyond lawsuits
    meant to silence one side of a public policy debate. Nothing in the legislative history
    that Fells relies on suggests that was an unintended consequence of inartful
    legislative drafting, as opposed to a deliberate choice that the statute sweep broadly.
    12
    Fells also contends that the press statement was more a statement of fact than
    of any particular opinion, so that it did not express “views” as that term is used in
    the statutory definition above. That is wrong for two reasons. First, as a descriptive
    matter, the statement went beyond recounting facts to expressing opinions, such as
    describing workplace abuse as a “serious problem[]” that it is “important” to take
    steps to root out, and that Fells’ ouster constituted “progress.” Second, even
    recounting facts can constitute expressing views if the surrounding context makes it
    clear that the speaker has some opinion about those facts, as here. In Fridman v.
    Orbis Bus. Intel. Ltd., for instance, we held that purely factual assertions in the now-
    infamous Steele Dossier regarding the nature of the plaintiffs’ relationship with
    Russian President Vladimir Putin “communicate[d] the view that [plaintiffs] are
    powerful figures who can affect relations between Russia and the United States.”
    
    229 A.3d 494
    , 504 (D.C. 2020). In finding those defendants had made a prima facie
    case under the Anti-SLAPP Act, we rejected the plaintiffs’ argument that “the phrase
    ‘communicating views’ applies only to beliefs or opinions and cannot be ‘stretched
    to encompass the compiling and conveyance of raw intelligence.’” 
    Id. at 503
    . Much
    like the “raw intelligence” in Fridman, even the factual portion of the statement with
    which Fells takes issue communicated views about the circumstances surrounding
    Fells’ termination to the press. 
    Id. at 504
    . It conveyed that workplace abuse was
    conduct worthy of termination and should not be tolerated.
    13
    2. Related to an “Issue of Public Interest”
    We now turn to whether SEIU made out a prima facie case that the statement
    was related to an “issue of public interest.” The Act defines “[i]ssue of public
    interest” as “an issue related to health or safety; environmental, economic, or
    community well-being; the District government; a public figure; or a good, product,
    or service in the market place.” 
    D.C. Code § 16-5501
    (3). We “liberally interpret[]”
    what qualifies as an issue of public interest, and a given statement need only “relate”
    (rather than expressly refer to) one of the above topics to fall within the Act’s
    protections. SAPRAC, 242 A.3d at 611. The Superior Court determined that because
    Fells held a leadership role in SEIU—“the second largest Union” representing about
    “two million workers”—“his firing and the circumstances surrounding it . . . is a
    matter of public interest.” SEIU now offers two independent justifications for that
    conclusion, tracking the statutory definitions above: (1) that the statement “related
    to health or safety” or “community well-being,” and (2) that it related to “a public
    figure.” We consider those contentions in turn.
    i. SEIU’s Statement Related to Health or Safety, or Community Well-Being
    The trial court was correct that a high-level employee’s misconduct-related
    separation from the second-largest labor union in the country is of public interest.
    14
    How workers are treated at one of our nation’s largest labor unions undoubtedly
    relates to community well-being, so much so that the proposition approaches the
    self-evident. 5 The public generally has an interest in the standards to which various
    organizations hold their high-level employees. That is particularly true when the
    organization is a labor union that bills itself as fighting against the very type of
    abuses that several of its leaders were accused of committing.
    Fells counters by pointing to a carve-out in the Act, which states that an “issue
    of public interest . . . shall not be construed to include private interests, such as
    statements directed primarily toward protecting the speaker’s commercial interests
    rather than toward commenting on or sharing information about a matter of public
    significance.” 
    D.C. Code § 16-5501
    (3). In his view, SEIU’s statement falls into that
    category because it addressed a purely private concern related to a personnel matter.
    We disagree, for three reasons.
    5
    Other courts are in accord. For example, in Dossett v. Ho-Chunk, Inc., the
    court was clear that “[a]lleged workplace misconduct by the highest-ranking legal
    officer in a national organization that resulted in discipline is of interest to more than
    just the alleged victims of the misconduct, as it puts future employers, colleagues,
    and others on notice of alleged misconduct and resulting discipline.” 
    472 F. Supp. 3d 900
    , 909 (D. Or. 2020); see also McGarry v. Univ. of San Diego, 
    154 Cal. App. 4th 97
    , 109 (2007) (noting that a sports coach’s firing was important not only to
    those immediately affected by it, but also to fans of the team and competitor
    schools).
    15
    First, both the statutory text and our precedents make clear that statements
    “intermixing public and private interests” fall within the scope of the Anti-SLAPP
    Act. SAPRAC, 242 A.3d at 611. The fact that SEIU’s statement partially concerned
    a private matter does not bring it outside of the Act, “so long as it [was] not ‘directed
    primarily’ at a private interest.” Id. (quoting 
    D.C. Code § 16-5501
    (3)).
    Second, SEIU used Fells’ separation as a moment to reassure the broader
    community of its values regarding the appropriate treatment of workers. That is
    undoubtedly an issue of public concern, on which SEIU holds itself out as a standard-
    bearer. We have previously held that statements that on their face are “mostly” about
    a single individual, even one who was deemed not to be a public figure, may
    nonetheless relate to “larger concern[s] . . . of community well-being.” 
    Id.
     at 612-
    613 & n.13. The same is true here. SEIU’s statement described the organization’s
    views that: abusive behavior toward staff was a “serious problem”; that “progress
    does not stop with these personnel actions”; and that it would continue to take
    “important steps toward ensuring that our workplace environment reflects our
    values.” Placed in the context of the #MeToo movement and SEIU’s ongoing
    investigation into the misconduct of its own higher-ups, this was another of its
    entries into the public debates about worker’s rights and workplace abuse.
    16
    Third, while Fells speculates about the self-interested reasons SEIU had for
    disseminating this press statement—including what he describes as SEIU’s desire to
    pander to its mostly female base with “virtue-signaling” around the #MeToo
    movement—that is of no moment. Even if there was some commercial motivation
    behind SEIU’s statement, that would not mean that the statement pertained primarily
    to private interests. A speaker need not “disprove commercial motivation . . . where
    such motivation is not apparent from the content of the speech,” Burke I, 91 A.3d at
    1043, and SEIU need not disprove any private motivation here. A speaker’s self-
    interested motivations say little about whether the content of their speech is related
    to issues of public interest. In our country’s fiercest public debates, some of its
    loudest voices are quite handsomely paid for expressing their views, and are no
    doubt at least partially motivated by that remuneration. That does not change the
    fact that the content of their commentary relates to issues of public interest.
    ii. There Was a Prima Facie Case that Fells Was a Limited-Purpose Public Figure
    Having already concluded that SEIU made out a prima facie case under the
    Anti-SLAPP Act—that its statement was “[1] in furtherance of the right of advocacy
    [2] on issues of public interest”—we might bypass the question of whether SEIU
    presented a prima facie case that Fells was a public figure. We nonetheless think it
    17
    prudent to address the public figure question, in the interests of judicial efficiency,
    because it affects the showing Fells will ultimately need to make to sustain a
    defamation claim on remand. See Mann, 150 A.3d at 1251 (there is a “heightened
    showing of fault—actual malice—that must be proved in defamation cases that rely
    on statements made about public figures concerning matters of public concern”)
    (citing N.Y. Times Co. v. Sullivan, 
    376 U.S. 254
    , 279-80 (1964)). We agree with the
    trial court that SEIU presented a prima facie case that Fells was a limited-purpose
    public figure.
    Section 16-5501(3) defines an “issue of public interest” to include “an issue
    related to . . . a public figure.” The Act does not define public figure, however, so
    we have imported the relevant standards applied in defamation law. Burke I, 91
    A.3d at 1041. Those standards instruct that there are both “general public figures,”
    and “limited-purpose public figures.” No one contends that Fells is a general public
    figure, which is somebody who has “achieve[d] such pervasive fame or notoriety
    that he becomes a public figure for all purposes and in all contexts.” Gertz v. Robert
    Welch, Inc., 
    418 U.S. 323
    , 351 (1974). SEIU contends only that he is a limited-
    purpose public figure, a label that applies to those who “assume roles ‘in the
    forefront of particular public controversies in order to influence the resolution of the
    issues involved,’ and who are deemed public figures only for purposes of the
    18
    controversy in which they are influential.” Moss v. Stockard, 
    580 A.2d 1011
    , 1030-
    31 (D.C. 1990) (quoting Gertz, 
    418 U.S. at 345
    ).
    We apply a three-part test when determining whether somebody is a limited-
    purpose public figure: (1) “whether the controversy to which the defamation relates
    was the subject of public discussion prior to the defamation”; (2) whether the subject
    of the alleged defamation “achieved a special prominence in the debate,” either by
    “purposely trying to influence the outcome” or because the plaintiff “could
    realistically have been expected, because of his position in the controversy, to have
    an impact on its resolution”; and (3) if the first two elements are satisfied, whether
    the alleged defamation was germane to the role the subject played in the public
    controversy. 
    Id.
     An allegedly defamatory statement is germane unless it is “wholly
    unrelated to the controversy” for which the plaintiff is a limited-purpose public
    figure. Id. at 1031. There is sufficient evidence that Fells satisfies that three-part
    test.
    As to the first prong, it is uncontested that the controversy relates to a subject
    of public discussion. The only disagreement between the parties is what that relevant
    controversy is, and how one frames it could affect the second and third parts of the
    test considered below. SEIU seeks to frame it broadly as a controversy about “the
    19
    treatment of workers.” If that is the correct framing, then the second and third steps
    of this test become quite easy, as Fells does not dispute that he attained a special
    prominence in that discussion and that SEIU’s statement pertained to it. Fells
    therefore seeks to frame the relevant controversy more narrowly, as one about
    “sexual harassment and abuse,” as “brought to prominence by the #MeToo
    movement,” a subcategory where his prominence was at the very least diminished.
    We will assume, without deciding, that Fells’ framing of the relevant controversy is
    the better one, because even under that framing he satisfies the limited-purpose
    public figure test.
    As to the second prong, there is substantial evidence that Fells achieved
    “special prominence” in the debate, even when narrowly framed as one about sexual
    harassment and abuse. Despite Fells’ attempts to describe himself as simply an
    advocate for fair wages, he was much more than that as interim President of the
    National Fast Food Workers’ Union. By its nature, his role as a high-level union
    representative who frequently spoke in the press suggests an intent and capacity to
    influence the outcome of the debate surrounding all manner of labor concerns. See
    Cox v. Galazin, 
    460 F. Supp. 2d 380
    , 389-90 (D. Conn. 2006) (collecting cases and
    endorsing view that “[u]nion officers are generally held to be public figures for
    purposes of union business where their activities place them in a controversy which
    20
    invites scrutiny of their integrity, character, and professional ability”). In fact,
    contrary to Fells’ assertions, there is substantial support for the proposition that Fells
    “voluntarily thrust” himself into the debate on sexual harassment in the workplace
    in particular. Burke I, 91 A.3d at 1042-43. 6
    As to the third prong, the alleged defamation was germane to the role Fells
    played in the public controversy. Fells’ alleged employee mistreatment cannot be
    considered “wholly unrelated” to the controversy for which he was a public figure:
    proselytizing about unionizing as a means of tamping down on workplace
    misconduct. It is, in fact, a very tight fit.
    6
    See e.g., Emily Peck, McDonald’s Workers Detail Horrifying Sexual
    Harassment, Huffington Post (Oct. 5 2016), www.huffpost.com/entry/mcdonalds-
    harassment-complaint_n_57f5385ae4b0b7aafe0b4584;              https://perma.cc/BY6V-
    QEC3 (“Fells said that his organization regularly hears complaints from McDonald’s
    workers about sexual harassment,” and quoting him as saying, “[i]f these workers
    had a union the process would be a lot different. You would have a voice on the
    job.”); Daniel Wiessner, McDonalds, Franchisees Hit with Sexual Harassment
    Complaints, Reuters (Oct. 5, 2016), www.reuters.com/article/us-mcdonalds-
    complaint/mcdonalds-franchisees-hit-with-sexual-harassment-complaints-
    idUSKCN1251YN; https://perma.cc/U9RR-ST6J (quoting Fells because of his
    status as “organizing director for Fight for $15,” “[a] union-backed group” that “had
    filed complaints on behalf of 15 U.S. McDonald’s workers who say they were
    sexually harassed on the job”).
    21
    We thus agree with the trial court that SEIU made out a prima facie case that
    its speech related to issues of public interest. SEIU did so in two ways: (1) it
    demonstrated that the statement was related to health or safety, or community well-
    being, and (2) it presented substantial evidence that the statement pertained to a
    limited-purpose public figure.
    B. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
    Because SEIU made a prima facie showing in support of its special motion to
    dismiss under the Anti-SLAPP Act, the burden shifts to Fells to show that his
    defamation claim was “likely to succeed on the merits.” 
    D.C. Code § 16-5502
    (b).
    Fells contends that he met that burden because reasonable jurors could conclude that
    SEIU’s statement falsely implied that he was fired for sexual misconduct. The trial
    court disagreed, but in doing so, it seemed to apply an erroneously heightened
    standard of what it means to show a likelihood of success under the Anti-SLAPP
    Act. Correcting for that misstep, we conclude that Fells demonstrated a likelihood
    of success on the merits so that his defamation claim may proceed.
    22
    1. The “Likely to Succeed on the Merits” Standard
    In order to rebut a defendant’s prima facie case that the Anti-SLAPP Act
    applies, the plaintiff must “demonstrate[ ] that the claim is likely to succeed on the
    merits.” 
    D.C. Code § 16-5502
    (b). As we explained in Mann, the “[u]se of the word
    ‘demonstrate’ indicates that once the burden has shifted to the claimant, the statute
    requires more than mere reliance on allegations in the complaint, and mandates the
    production or proffer of evidence that supports the claim.” 7 150 A.3d at 1233. But
    we also clarified that the Act does not require a plaintiff to show that it is more likely
    than not that they have a meritorious claim. That interpretation, while perhaps the
    most natural reading of the statute, would raise “serious constitutional concerns,” as
    it would threaten to “encroach[] on the role of the jury.” Id. at 1235. To avoid those
    constitutional concerns, we interpreted the phrase to mean that the plaintiff must
    7
    While it is true that we likened the standard we articulated in Mann to the
    summary judgment standard under Superior Court Rule of Civil Procedure 56, that
    similarity does not extend to the allocation of the burden, as Fells asserts. Both the
    Act and Mann are clear that the non-moving party seeking to defeat an Anti-SLAPP
    special motion to dismiss bears the burden of showing a likelihood of success.
    Mann, 150 A.3d at 1238 n.32 (“[T]he special motion to dismiss is different from
    summary judgment in that it imposes the burden on plaintiffs and requires the court
    to consider the legal sufficiency of the evidence presented before discovery is
    completed. As concerns the standard to be employed by the court in deciding
    whether to grant the motion, however, the question is substantively the same:
    whether the evidence suffices to permit a jury to find for the plaintiff.”).
    23
    “present an evidentiary basis that would permit a reasonable, properly instructed jury
    to find in the plaintiff’s favor.” Id. at 1262. In other words, dismissal should follow
    “only if the court can conclude that the claimant could not prevail as a matter of law,
    that is, after allowing for the weighing of evidence and permissible inferences by the
    jury.” Id. at 1236.
    It is not clear that the trial court applied this more relaxed standard, rather than
    the “more likely than not to succeed” standard we rejected in Mann. The trial court
    did not reference Mann, or otherwise demonstrate an understanding that Fells’
    burden was more akin to the burden on a party seeking to avoid summary judgment,
    namely, to show that material facts were in genuine dispute. Id. at 1237. Instead,
    the trial court appears to have inserted its own assessment of the merits without any
    recognition that the phrase “likely to succeed on the merits,” as it appears in the
    Anti-SLAPP statute, should not be given its most literal interpretation. Because our
    review is de novo, any potential misstep about the applicable standard does not affect
    our analysis. But the possible confusion compels us to reiterate that the likelihood
    of success standard in the Anti-SLAPP Act is a more relaxed standard than is
    apparent from the face of the statute.
    24
    2. Did SEIU’s Statement Imply that Fells Was Ousted for Sexual Misconduct?
    When properly understood, the question at this stage is whether Fells
    presented evidence from which a reasonable jury might conclude that he was
    defamed. Id. at 1262. Fells has no viable claim for express defamation—SEIU’s
    statement did not expressly state he was terminated for sexual misconduct 8—leaving
    him to resort to a theory of implied defamation.
    Defamation by implication concerns not what somebody literally stated, but
    what their statement implies. Guilford Transp. Indus., Inc. v. Wilner, 
    760 A.2d 580
    ,
    597 (D.C. 2000); see also White v. Fraternal Ord. of Police, 
    909 F.2d 512
    , 518 (D.C.
    Cir. 1990). To sustain a defamation-by-implication claim, Fells had to demonstrate
    that SEIU’s statement, viewed in its entire context: (1) “was capable of bearing a
    defamatory meaning”; and (2) “that it contained or implied provably false statements
    of fact.” Guilford, 
    760 A.2d at 597
    . Because no one contends that Fells was ousted
    for sexual misconduct, there is no dispute that he has satisfied the second part of that
    8
    Fells raises in a footnote the possibility that SEIU defamed him by asserting
    that he engaged in any kind of “abuse,” even of a non-sexual variety, so that it was
    expressly defamatory. He did not raise that argument in the trial court and we will
    not entertain it in the first instance. See Oparaugo v. Watts, 
    884 A.2d 63
    , 75 (D.C.
    2005) (“Points not raised and preserved in the trial court will not be considered on
    appeal,” barring exceptional circumstances).
    25
    test if SEIU’s statement “was capable of bearing” the meaning that Fells was forced
    to resign because of sexual misconduct. As to the first and only disputed part of the
    above test, we have explained that it is not enough that a statement can “be
    reasonably read to impart the false innuendo, but it must also affirmatively suggest
    that the author intends or endorses that inference.” Id. at 596 (quoting Chapin v.
    Knight-Ridder, 
    993 F.2d 1087
    , 1092-93 (4th Cir. 1993)). Evidence that supports
    such a finding includes “suggestive juxtapositions, turns of phrase, or incendiary
    headlines.” White, 
    909 F.2d at 526
    .
    The SEIU statement at issue provided that Fells’ termination was “the
    culmination of this stage of the investigation, which brought to light the serious
    problems related to abusive behavior towards staff, predominantly female staff.” 9
    (emphases added). Recall that “the investigation” referenced was triggered by
    allegations that another recently ousted executive, Scott Courtney, was having
    inappropriate sexual relationships with subordinates. Fells argues that tethering his
    9
    The trial court’s focus on a particular BuzzFeed news article, supra note 2,
    as Fells’ “strongest evidence” was misplaced. Fells is not bringing suit against
    BuzzFeed for impliedly defaming him in an article, but against SEIU for the
    inferences that can be drawn from the text of its own statement. To the extent the
    trial court was looking at articles as evidence of how others might reasonably
    understand SEIU’s statement, then the Breitbart article, supra note 2, was clearly the
    stronger evidence on his side. Its very title indicated that Fells was “out of a job
    because of sexual misconduct charges.”
    26
    departure to the same internal investigation that led to Courtney’s ouster days earlier
    indicated that he, too, had engaged in sexual misconduct, at least absent any
    indication to the contrary. See Toney v. WCCO Television, Midwest Cable &
    Satellite, Inc., 
    85 F.3d 383
    , 387 (8th Cir. 1996) (“[A] defendant does not avoid
    liability [for implied defamation] by simply establishing the truth of the individual
    statement(s); rather, the defendant must also defend the juxtaposition of” its
    statements). We agree that a jury could reach that conclusion.
    SEIU counters that the internal investigation was not exclusively about sexual
    misconduct. It highlights that, upon Courtney’s resignation, SEIU’s spokesperson
    described the investigation as one “look[ing] into questions about [1] potential
    violations of our union’s anti-nepotism policy, [2] efforts to evade our Code of
    Ethics and [3] subsequent complaints related to sexual misconduct and abusive
    behavior towards union staff.”10 It is hard to see how that changes the calculus.
    Sexual misconduct, nepotism, and ethical breaches may all be of a piece, and in the
    context of the investigation prompting Courtney’s resignation, it appeared that they
    10
    Lewis, supra note 1.
    27
    were. 11 In light of that context, the most natural reading is that the investigation was
    into higher-ups giving preferential treatment to subordinates who acquiesced to their
    sexual advances—or disfavoring those who did not—checking each box of sexual
    misconduct, nepotism, and ethical breaches.
    But even if that were not enough, there is a second problematic juxtaposition
    in SEIU’s statement suggesting that Fells engaged in sexual misconduct. It says that
    his ouster stemmed from “abusive behavior towards staff, predominantly female
    staff.” (emphasis added). When coupled with the earlier reference to an investigation
    that resulted in another high-level executive’s departure for sexual misconduct—and
    especially in the midst of the roiling #MeToo movement—a reasonable jury could
    conclude that this statement indicated Fells’ misconduct was sexual in nature, and
    that SEIU intended to so imply. Indeed, a Breitbart article drew that exact inference,
    with a headline positing: Four SEIU Officials Out of a Job Because of Sexual
    Misconduct Charges. 12
    11
    SEIU seemingly refers to “nepotism” in a broad sense when discussing
    Courtney’s departure and the investigation surrounding it to include preferential
    treatment not just of family members, but of friends or sexual partners as well.
    12
    Starr, supra note 2.
    28
    The Supreme Court of Minnesota found a similar juxtaposition potentially
    defamatory in Phipps v. Clark Oil & Refining Corp., 
    408 N.W.2d 569
     (Minn. 1987).
    In that case, a gas station attendant alleged that he was fired for refusing the request
    of a customer—who happened to be “handicapped”—to put leaded gasoline into a
    vehicle designed for unleaded gasoline. 
    Id. at 570
    . Gas station representatives then
    made factually accurate statements indicating that he had been fired “for failing to
    provide . . . service to a handicapped customer.” 
    Id.
     While technically true, the
    customer’s handicap had nothing to do with the employee’s refusal to assist them,
    and Phipps held that there was a triable question of fact as to whether the inclusion
    of the word “handicapped” gave rise to a false inference that the attendant refused
    to help the customer because of their handicap. 
    Id. at 573
    . Similarly here, it is not
    obvious why SEIU mentioned that the abuse was predominantly of women, and
    came to light as part of the investigation into Courtney’s sexual misconduct, if not
    to imply that Fells had engaged in conduct of the same nature. A jury could
    reasonably adopt Fells’ position that doing so amounted to defamation.
    Finally, SEIU contends that we might nonetheless affirm on the basis that
    Fells will be unable to show “actual malice,” as required to demonstrate defamation
    against public figures, as opposed to the negligence showing ordinarily required.
    The trial court did not resolve that issue, and we “exercise our discretion to leave [it]
    29
    for resolution by the trial court in the first instance.” Folks v. District of Columbia,
    
    93 A.3d 681
    , 686 (D.C. 2014).
    In sum, we conclude that a reasonable jury might conclude that SEIU’s
    statement included the false implication that Fells was ousted for sexual misconduct.
    We therefore reverse the trial court’s dismissal of Fells’ defamation claim and vacate
    its award of attorney’s fees and costs. 13
    III.
    We reverse the trial court’s dismissal of Fells’ defamation claim, vacate its
    award of attorney’s fees and costs, and affirm the court’s dismissal of Fells’
    remaining claims.
    So ordered.
    13
    An award of attorney’s fees and costs is permitted even if an Anti-SLAPP
    motion to dismiss is only partially successful. 
    D.C. Code § 16-5504
    (a). Because
    we have upheld the dismissal of three claims of Fells’ four claims, the trial court
    may yet decide that some fee award is warranted. We leave that for the trial court’s
    consideration on remand.