Woodward Asks Court to Dump Trump’s Complaint
The Briefing by the IP Law Blog - A podcast by Weintraub Tobin - Fridays
Journalist Bob Woodward asked the court to dismiss former President Trump’s copyright infringement claim regarding Woodward’s audio book “The Trump Tapes,” which consists of 20 raw audio interviews with Trump. Scott Hervey and Josh Escovedo talk about this case on this episode of The Briefing by the IP Law Blog. Watch this episode on the Weintraub YouTube channel here. Cases Discussed: * Trump v. Woodward * Taggart v. WMAQ Channel 5 Chicago Show Notes: Scott: Veteran investigative reporter Bob Woodward conducted an audio interview of former president Donald Trump for Woodward's book, Rage. Woodward later released these recordings as a separate audiobook, and Trump claimed that Woodward did not have his permission to release these audiotapes as a separate audiobook and sued Woodard and his publisher for, among other claims, copyright infringement. Woodward filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that Trump's complaint is without legal merit. We are going to talk about this. Scott: These are the facts according to Trump's complaint against Woodward and his publisher, Simon and Schuster. Woodward sought and obtained President Trump's consent to be recorded for a series of interviews with President Trump. Woodward interviewed Trump, both in person and over the phone, on numerous occasions during 2019, mostly during his term as president. Trump contends that he did not give permission for the recordings to be released as audio recordings and claims that he owns the copyright in the entire sound recording or at least Trump's response to the interview questions. Josh: We previously covered this when Trump initially filed his complaint, and we questioned the merits of his copyright claim. Did Woodward's motion to dismiss track our analysis? Scott: Woodward did raise one of the same as us - that Trump lacks any copyright ownership in the answers to interview questions. His motion even cites Taggart v. WMAQ Channel 5 Chicago, which we noted in our story. In that case, a Chicago television station videotaped a prison interview with a convicted sex offender in connection with a report on the lax regulation of summer camps. Taggart alleged that he had requested that the tape not be used in any manner, and when WMAQ broadcast an excerpt, he sued for copyright infringement and other claims. In ruling on the station's motion to dismiss, the court held that Taggart did not have a copyright interest in unprepared and spontaneous utterances during an interview and dismissed his copyright claim. The basis of this finding is the Copyright Act's lack of protection for ideas. While courts have recognized common law protection for the spoken word, according to the Taggart holding, courts have not and cannot recognize a proprietary interest where there is no tangible embodiment of the expression of an idea Josh: To qualify as an author under the Copyright Act, one must supply more than mere direction or ideas. According to the Supreme Court in Community for Creative Non-Violence v Reid, "an author is the party who actually creates the work, that is, the person who translates an idea into a fixed, tangible expression entitled to copyright protection." Scott: And based on that, the court found the responses given by Taggart "are not an expression of an idea for the purpose of copyright law." On a more practical level, the judge noted that the granting of protection for the answers to questions "gathered in the daily task of the news reporter would essentially bring the industry to a halt." Josh: Woodward raises a few additional grounds in his ...