Three prominent pastors from Apologia Church in Mesa, Arizona—Jeff Durbin, Luke Pierson, and Zachary Morgan—have filed a defamation lawsuit in Maricopa County Superior Court against a married couple from Florence and an independent journalist. The case, initiated in October, stems from public criticisms and accusations that the pastors breached confidentiality during marital counseling.
The dispute began when Hailey Osborn-Merris and Cameron Merris sought counseling from the pastors as newlyweds. Hailey shared personal struggles, including triggers from past physical abuse during intimacy and an incident where Cameron called police after she grabbed a gun amid relationship tensions. Months later, Hailey received a screenshot showing the pastors’ adult daughters discussing the gun-related police call, leading her to believe confidential information had been shared outside the counseling sessions.
This prompted Hailey to post a series of videos on TikTok expressing her complaints and accusing the pastors of betrayal. Independent journalist Sarah Young, who focuses on church misconduct issues, investigated the claims after viewing the videos. Despite receiving threats of a lawsuit from the pastors—who refused to specify any inaccuracies in her reporting—Young published her story.
The pastors allege that the couple and Young defamed them by making “false, misleading” statements that portrayed them negatively, causing reputational harm. They are seeking monetary damages and a broad court order prohibiting the defendants from discussing the pastors, the church, or the lawsuit—even while the case is ongoing.
Legal Arguments and Challenges
The pastors must prove defamation under Arizona law: that the statements involved a false verifiable fact, were published to third parties (e.g., via TikTok or Young’s website), were made with knowledge of falsity or negligence, and caused actual harm.
Defendants’ attorney Gregg Leslie, from Arizona State University’s First Amendment Clinic, argues that the statements were “merely their personal impressions and opinions,” which are protected under the First Amendment. He has invoked Arizona’s anti-SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) statute, which allows for early dismissal of lawsuits deemed retaliatory attempts to silence protected speech. Leslie suggests the suit may be motivated by a desire to quash dissent.
If the pastors are considered public figures—given Apologia Church’s high-profile stance on issues like abortion abolition—the bar is even higher: they must demonstrate “actual malice,” meaning the defendants knew the statements were false or acted with reckless disregard for the truth.
Subjective terms like calling the pastors “domineering” are unlikely to qualify as defamatory facts. The case highlights the difficulty of proving defamation against opinions and the protections for criticism of influential figures.
Broader Implications
Unless settled, this ongoing lawsuit could clarify the limits of free speech in Arizona, particularly when personal criticisms of religious leaders cross into unprotected territory. It underscores tensions between reputational protection and First Amendment rights, as well as how powerful entities sometimes use litigation to deter critics.
Author attribution: This rewritten article is based on the original piece by Taylor Seely, First Amendment Reporting Fellow at The Arizona Republic / azcentral.com, published on NewsBreak (via azcentral) around January 16, 2026, with related reporting from January 12, 2026.

