| Investment Adviser Roberts Did Not Defame Sabratek, Judge Says- Stock adviser Mark Roberts, whose newsletter ``Off Wall Street' is circulated widely among
 investment firms, did not defame Sabratek Corp. when he suggested
 that company management was defrauding investors, a judge ruled
 today.
 Roberts wrote disparagingly about Niles, Illinois-based
 Sabratek, a maker of medical devices, in four editions of ``Off
 Wall Street' last year. He called management ``disingenuous' and
 suggested the company was falsifying sales figures.
 The company and its chairman, K. Shan Padda, sued, calling
 the articles defamatory and claiming they drove share price down
 by a third. Also, in a stock fraud claim, the company alleged that
 Roberts had himself short-sold the stock, betting that the price
 would fall so he could personally profit.
 U.S. District Judge Harold Baer dismissed the suit, ruling
 that Sabratek had put forth no facts to support its claims and
 that Roberts' comments were merely opinion and not defamatory.
 ``All that is alleged is that Roberts made negative and
 allegedly false statements in his newsletter,' Baer wrote.
 ``There is no allegation that any shareholders did in fact sell
 their shares or were influenced by Roberts' statements.'
 Sabratek filed for bankruptcy in January. Its stock, which
 rose as high as 30 1/2 in June, was trading at .15 late Wednesday.
 In its suit, Sabratek complained of numerous comments
 appearing in ``Off Wall Street' beginning last March. Roberts
 said that Padda was ``not credible' and remarked, ``We think that
 it is more likely that Sabratek stuffed someone with (their
 product) to make a decent showing for the quarter.'
 Roberts, who sells yearly subscriptions to his Cambridge,
 Massachusetts-based newsletter for $30,000, was also accused of
 telephoning investors and urging them to sell shares. He allegedly
 called Padda a ``pathological liar' and ``fraud.'
 Meanwhile, Roberts was selling Sabratek shares short, hoping
 to profit from an anticipated price decline, the lawsuit alleged.
 Sabratek shares eventually fell sharply as the company lost some
 $90 million in market value.
 In his ruling, Baer said the lawsuit was long on accusations
 but short on facts. ``These conclusory allegations provide scant,
 if any, specificity about the facts on which plaintiffs base their
 beliefs,' the judge said.
 In addition, Baer noted that while assertions of fact may
 form the basis of a defamation claim, expressions of opinions do
 not. He classified Roberts' comments as opinions.
 ``When the defendant's statements, read in context, are
 readily understood as conjecture, hypothesis, or speculation, this
 signals the reader that what is said is opinion, not fact,' Baer
 said.
 
 --David Glovin in U.S. District Court in New York (212) 732-9245,
 or at dglovin@bloomberg.net, through the New York newsroom (212)
 893-3665/ep
 |