THE CHAPARRAL GOES VIRAL You are on the management team at “Texas Chaparral,” a restaurant chain with 34 locations in NY, NJ and Pennsylvania. Texas Chaparral was an instant success when it was started two years ago, and the chain has grown quickly in the last year, in part due to a TV ad that went viral on YouTube because it contained a very catchy musical jingle with really cool images. But now there is a problem. The problem started last month when the Health Department in New Jersey cited three Chaparral restaurants for minor food-handling violations. Chaparral paid a $3,000 fine. The citations and the fine are, in a sense, public, because one can find them on the NJ Health Department’s web site -- if one knows where to look. But hundreds of restaurants receive similar citations each month, the data on the web site is not easily searchable and experience has shown that few folks check the State’s site. When the citations were issued, your company suspended the managers of those three restaurants, and the violations were quickly cured. The company thought the matter was over. Today, however, you learned that a video has been posted on YouTube by someone claiming to be a Texas Chaparral employee. The video is a clever mash-up of the successful (copyrighted) TV ad, including the musical jingle and images, but interspersed between video cuts are what appear to be photos of a dirty Texas Chaparral kitchen, spoiled food, and insects and vermin at one of the company’s restaurants. The company’s federally trademarked logo appears over-and-over again on the video. No consumer would think the viral video comes from your company, but still, the video is offensive and will likely quickly hurt the business. Your food inspection team is telling you that the photos are doctored, and that they do not reflect actual conditions at any of the company’s restaurants. There is already a rumor going around the company that the video was made and posted by one of the suspended managers, but you are not sure. It might even have been posted by a competing restaurant. All you know is that the poster used the pseudonym “Chaparral Sheriff.” There are already reporters calling from local news media, and the video is starting to get lots of hits on YouTube. Your management team has been asked to formulate a legal strategy for dealing with the video. Among the subjects you have been asked to consider are how the internet affects your company’s predicament, and what legal rights your company may have against the perpetrator, YouTube and any reporters that try and turn this prank into a story that may irreparably harm your business. (Note – your company already has a “Public Relations” department, and they will handle that aspect of the solution. You are asked to focus ONLY on what mechanisms in the law might help solve the problem; the quicker the better!).