After four days of testimony, a Cobb County jury has ruled in favor of Tea Party Patriots, Inc. in a more than two year battle over who owns its email list and intellectual property. At odds are two recognized figures within the two and a half year old Tea Party Movement--two founders of the original Tea Party Patriots organization—Roswell, GA resident, Amy Kremer currently Chairman of Tea Party Express, and TPP President, Jenny Beth Martin, of Kennesaw, GA—co-workers after CNBC reporter, Rick Santelli called for ‘a tea party’ in protest to a pending stimulus bill by President Barak Obama and Congress in February of 2009.
The Woodstock-based Tea Party Patriots Inc. alleges that Amy Kremer, who lives in the Roswell ea of Cobb, wrongly retained control of the group’s email list and intellectual property, including its trademark name and websites, after she was removed as a member of the group’s board of directors in September 2009.—Marietta Daily Journal. Both sides asked for punitive damages and attorney fees but were denied.
Now more than two and half years after the two women began working on tea parties together, Kremer sat on the witness stand telling her side of why in September following the 9/12 March on Washington that drew an estimated 1.2 million at the Capitol she was ‘kicked off a board that I never agreed to be a part of.” Testimony was limited to events through December 2009 when the court restricted Kremer from access to her websites and email lists.
Kremer testified that she offered in September of 2009 to turn over the Intellectual Property in exchange for three things: an apology, reimbursement of three months of expenses totally just more than $3,000 and access to her Constant Contact account. The TPP Board of Directors instead filed suit against Kremer. TPP, Inc. has sued individuals/groups to stop them from using the Tea Party Patriots name since 2009 in efforts to own trademark rights exclusively.
“I was ‘set up’ by Martin and other initial organizers: Mark Meckler, a lawyer from Sacramento, CA; Rob Neppell who Kremer says became involved by ‘default’ when another initial organizer Michael Patrick Leahy of TCOT (Top Conservatives on Twitter), recommended Neppell’s technical involvement; and legal counsel, Doug Chalmers, a political law attorney from Atlanta suggested by Martin in May of 2009.
Tea Party Patriots grew exponentially following the March on Washington in numbers of members and donations. Martin has given interviews nationally claiming millions of members and thousands of local groups under the umbrella of the corporation since then. Donations, estimated in the millions of dollars, are solicited through its website, emails and other promotional pieces on a regular basis.
Martin testified that early on she was the only one paid and Meckler (treasurer) added during testimony, “It wasn’t based on the volume of work but the need…Jenny Beth couldn’t remain working.”
Kremer was paid $3,000 for her work for the month of August 2009 but not for June through September which became part of her countersuit for reimbursement of those expenses incurred on behalf of TPP for road trips to Washington with Martin and with Kremer’s 21 year old daughter, Kylie.
“How could they be squabbling over $134 food receipt when they are spending $150,000 in TPP donations to litigate this case against the woman that created it? The donors don’t know that their money isn’t going toward fighting for fiscal responsibility, limited government and free markets—but rather for lavish buffets, high end hotel suites and near six digit salaries for Jenny Beth and Mark,” said Toby Walker, a Texas tea party organizer and member of TPP. Walker was in town to support Kremer and sit in on the proceedings.
Billie Tucker, Co-founder of First Coast Tea Party of Jacksonville, Florida said after court adjourned that she was disappointed that the judge interrupted her testimony saying it was not admissible since she had never met Kremer and had only been told by other board members they wanted a settlement with Kremer in September, but TPP filed a lawsuit instead. Tucker, a professional corporate governance consultant, resigned from the TPP Board of Directors due to concerns over the focus on the Kremer controversy and lack of transparency and governance by the board of directors.
On re-cross examination, Meckler was asked about his role as treasurer for TPP, Inc. and said, “It’s about being good stewards over the donors’ money.” During closing arguments, he shook his head a number of times when Kremer’s attorney said that both Meckler and Martin had a reason to maintain control—“the sound of money.”
Meckler and Martin are said to earn salaries upwards of six digits and extensive expense accounts according to Scott Boston of St. Louis before closing arguments on Friday. Boston was Martin’s assistant during the March on Washington in 2009 and later hired by TPP in January of 2010. “They used their accounts for everything.”
“I believe Doug Chalmers saw this as a ‘cash cow’” as he worked with the other board members to have me removed.”Kremer stated matter of factley. Why? “He knew this was becoming big…His August bill was outrageous…”
Deborah Ausburn of the Galleria-based Taylor English Duma firm, Martin’s attorney, played a taped recording that Kremer provided the court of the conference call where Meckler, Martin and Neppell agreed if Kremer remained on the board of directors’ conference call that she is stating that she is part of the board to protect confidentiality. Repeatedly Kremer explained she was protecting her interests and was afraid of if ‘these people are capable of doing this, then what else can they do?”
Martin never contested Kremer’s statements as fact that she indeed purchased and created sites using Tea Party Patriots name. Kremer’s attorneys, Shaun Daugherty and Kevin Leipow of the Atlanta firm Hall, Booth, Smith & Slover entered receipts as evidence of social networking sites that she purchased as early as March 6, 2009—teapartypatriots.ning.com and teapartypatriots.org and later .us, .net and .info domains. She also created a Tea Party Patriots group on the Smart Girl Politics website using the name of her personal website “Southern Belle Politics” name to direct traffic to tea parties being planned nationally for Tax Day Tea Parties (TDTP). “It had Southern Belle name and I used my picture,” Kremer told Martin’s attorney, when asked if her name was found anywhere on the created pages early on.
Tea Party Patriots became Tea Party, Inc. following an incredibly successful TDTP effort, led by Kremer as the Nationwide Coordinator, when it became necessary to incorporate in order to solicit donations. The legal process required establishing a nonprofit and the initial four organizers decided on a 50l C4 status in lieu of a PAC which could support candidates. That decision laid the foundation for a controversy surrounding Kremer’s involvement with the Tea Party Express, Our Country Deserves Better PAC, that had received national attention with its promotional bus tour across the country—on its way to the Tax Day Tea Party in Washington, D.C. on April 15, 2009.
Meckler was not part of the initial team of nationwide organizers and Kremer said Meckler had sent her emails wanting to be involved since he organized tea party efforts in Sacramento, CA. “I never would sit on a board with Mark Meckler and Rob Neppell, never. I didn’t know these people.” Meckler testified that he was the one who began talking with Martin and later was introduced to Kremer. As events unfolded Meckler would be the one to suggest Kremer accept an invitation to join the TPX bus tour representing TPP as well as the one to push for incorporation, hiring Chalmers as legal counsel, and later with Martin and Neppell, Kremer’s removal from ‘the board’.
In testimony, Chalmers admitted he had researched ‘how to remove someone from the board’ the night before after having discussions with Meckler, Martin and Neppell. Kremer testified Chalmers never returned her calls the night before all three voted her to be removed from the board of directors of TPP.
Today, Kremer is Chairman of TPX and is seen regularly on all network and media outlet. In 2010, she was named The Most Influential Person in the Tea Party by a United Kingdom media outlet. Martin was listed among the Most Influential People in the World by Time Magazine in 2010.
“I’m just a regular person who had never been active in politics but I was concerned about the direction my country was going in,” explained Kremer. “I saw a void and I wanted to fill it.”
Martin, mother of boy and girl twins, testified that she was also concerned and had spent countless hours ‘tweeting’ about what was happening in Washington. “I was one of its (Twitter) first adopters...’Mommy’ blogging.” A self proclaimed active participant in politics since age 14, Martin listed her involvement in campaigns and associations with elected officials as well as her technical business training from Reinhardt College ’90 and University of GA ’92.
“I heard (about Santelli’s Rant) on Rush (Limbaugh) radio show,” while cleaning houses at the time, explained Martin who had lost her home with husband, Lee in bankruptcy and foreclosure before the tea party movement began. She testified that she posted on the Smart Girl Politics internet site and was asked by its founders, Teri Christop and Stacy Mott to be actively involved.
It wasn’t long before Kremer’s and Martin’s social networking crossed paths. Kremer credits Michael Patrick Leahy of TCOT as the one who got ‘the movement’ organized and set a conference call of 22 across the nation to decide how to move forward after Santelli’s rant. Martin asked Kremer to be one of those on that first conference call. She and Kremer would talk privately immediately after that initial call and determine to host a tea party at the GA Capital a week later.
The Atlanta Tea Party event was created and Fox News made contact wanting to broadcast LIVE from the rally which drew more than an estimated 20 thousand, one of the largest of 48 held nationally that day. Martin credits her relationships with elected officials for their involvement at the rally and Debbie Dooley of Gwinnett County for securing the site permit and promotion on several media outlets. Both worked on the March on Washington in 2009.
Who knew behind the scenes of rallies, signs, and chants of ‘fiscal responsibility, constitutionally limited government and free markets’—the principles promoted by TPP—that their efforts and friendship would lead to the civil court and charges of wrongdoing individually and corporately in counter suits?
“It’s so sad. I thought she was my friend,” Kremer told the court tearfully. When asked if Kremer was a friend, Martin responded, “No, she was a political associate.”
“What would you do if you had ownership of Tea Party Patriots trademark again?” Ausburn asked ending her cross examination.
“It was never intended to be a money maker. I would return it back to what I envisioned at the beginning—a tool for others to connect and communicate in the movement.”
Kremer has filed an objection to Tea Party Patriots, Inc. federal trademark application under ‘first use’ provisions, which favors Kremer’s case more than GA state trademark laws.
Comments
7 comment(s) on this page. Add your own comment below.
Ms. Lohman appeared in court daily to support Amy Kremer, so her article is extremely biased and inaccurate on many points. We frequently criticize the main stream media for only presenting one side of the story and Ms. Lohman is doing the same thing. She actually mis-states many facts and I will write a rebuttal article. My article will include links to court documents - including the Contempt Citation Judge Grubbs issued against Amy a few months ago. I believe in arming the public with facts so they can make their own mind up.
I was part of the team trying to negoiate a settlement with Ms. Kremer and can tell you that we could never get Amy to even tell us what she wanted. The claims Ms. Lohman makes regarding that are absolutely false. Ms. Kremer's defense team presented a word document with a so-called settlement agreement that I had never seen before. We spend four hours on two different phone calls trying to get Amy to reach an agreement. Even during the lawsuit, we tried numerous times to get Ms. Kremer to reach a settlement and even offered money to settle because of the cost of litigation.
debbie0040 I did not know you monitored our local online papers.
From the Editor:
As a normal practice, I try to alert public officials and organization leaders to articles in cummingHome.com that may involve them or their organizations. I sent Debbie a link to the article and asked her for her response. CummingHome.com welcomes feedback and input from all sides of the stories we publish.
I am going to write a rebuttal article. I found emails that include an offer Tea Party Patriots made in January of 2010 to Amy through her attorney at the time. Our offer was more than what Amy claimed she agreed to. I also have the email from her attorney where he states Amy rejected the offer. I am getting permission to get this released publicly since it was communication between the Board and our attorney. The court ordered mediation right before the hearing and Amy demanded $500,000 to settle..
I think that we need some adults at the helm of both sides of this issue.
The Tea Party movement is too important to be derailed by this juvenile tit-for-tat.
Thank you for your comments. I am pleased to state that the Sr. Partner of the law firm representing TPP, Inc. sent me an email stating one of his partners was involved in the case mentioned in my article. He said he enjoyed the article and thought that it 'well done and very very even-handed.'
I also received an email from a Mr. Cunningham offering a response on behalf of TPP, Inc. regarding the outcome of the case. I thanked him and encouraged him to post the statement from TPP, Inc. as well.
Yes, I was in court four days and know most all those involved on both sides of this case and took great effort to take accurate notes. It is my understanding that a copy of the court transcript costs thousands of dollars. No recordings were permited by the court.
Ms. Dooley was quick to contact me by private email late Saturday evening with attachments of court documents of yet another case filed against Ms. Kremer and her boyfriend James Lyle. Her note said, "Here's something else for you to write about."
Thank you all for contributing your comments.
To be clear my article included statements entered as testimony before the court. The information presented in this article is sworn testimony by both sides.
According to testimony by Kremer and one witness, there was an effort to settle the grievances based on three conditions. Whether Ms. Dooley was part of another effort was not entered into testimony.
Ms. Dooley was a witness for the plantiff and was not in the courtroom at any other time that I saw. I was in the courtroom Tuesday through Friday and missed the beginning of opening testimony by the plantiff, the charge by the judge, and a follow up clarification requested by the jury during deliberation--maybe one hour cumulatively otherwise I was taking notes.
Stella Lohmann
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Please be civil.