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Trump is ordered to pay New York Times and its reporters nearly $400,000 in legal fees

A closeup of former President Trump against a backdrop of American flags
Former President Trump had sued the New York Times and three of its reporters over a Pulitzer-winning investigation into his family’s wealth and tax practices.
(Mary Altaffer / Associated Press)
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Former President Trump was ordered Friday to pay nearly $400,000 in legal fees to the New York Times and three investigative reporters after he sued them unsuccessfully over a Pulitzer Prize-winning 2018 story about his family’s wealth and tax practices.

The newspaper and reporters Susanne Craig, David Barstow and Russell Buettner were dismissed from the lawsuit in May. Trump’s claim against his estranged niece, Mary Trump, is still pending. He accuses her of breaching a prior settlement agreement by giving tax records to the reporters.

New York Judge Robert Reed said that given the “complexity of the issues” in the case and other factors, it was reasonable that the former president be forced to pay lawyers for the Times and the reporters a total of $392,638 in legal fees.

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“Today’s decision shows that the state’s newly amended anti-SLAPP statute can be a powerful force for protecting press freedom,” Times spokesperson Danielle Rhoads Ha said, referring to a New York law that bars baseless lawsuits aimed at silencing critics. Such lawsuits are known as SLAPPs, for strategic lawsuits against public participation.

“The court has sent a message to those who want to misuse the judicial system to try to silence journalists,” Rhoads Ha said.

The three-day holiday weekend and several inches of new snow are likely to draw crowds to the mountains, days after a rare avalanche at the Palisades Tahoe resort killed a skier.

In a separate ruling Friday, Reed denied a request by Mary Trump — now the sole defendant in the lawsuit — that the case be put on hold while she appeals his June decision that allowed her uncle’s claim against her to proceed.

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Mary Trump’s lawyers declined to comment on Friday’s ruling.

Donald Trump’s lawyer, Alina Habba, said they remain disappointed that the Times and its reporters were dropped from the case, but are pleased that the court has “once again affirmed the strength of our claims against Mary and is denying her attempt to avoid accountability.”

“We look forward to proceeding with our claims against her,” Habba said.

The former president’s lawsuit, filed in 2021, accused the Times and the reporters of relentlessly seeking out Mary Trump as a source of information and convincing her to turn over confidential tax records. He claimed the reporters were aware a previous settlement agreement barred her from disclosing the documents, which she’d received in a dispute over the estate of family patriarch Fred Trump.

The Times’ reporting challenged Donald Trump’s claims of self-made wealth by documenting how Fred Trump, his father, had given him at least $413 million over the decades, including through tax-avoidance schemes. Mary Trump identified herself in a book published in 2020 as the source of documents used in the Times report.

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The Times’ story said that Donald Trump and his father avoided gift and inheritance taxes by methods that included setting up a sham corporation and undervaluing assets to tax authorities. The Times said its report was based on more than 100,000 pages of financial documents, including confidential tax returns for the father and his companies.

The former president sought $100 million in damages, alleging that Mary Trump, the Times and the reporters “were motivated by a personal vendetta” against him. He accused them of engaging “in an insidious plot to obtain confidential and highly sensitive records which they exploited for their own benefit.”

In dismissing the Times and its reporters from the lawsuit, Reed wrote that legal news gathering is “at the very core of protected First Amendment activity.”

Mary Trump, 58, is the daughter of Donald Trump’s elder brother, Fred Trump Jr., who died in 1981 at age 42. She is an outspoken critic of her uncle, whom she has called “criminal, cruel and traitorous.”

In July, she filed a counterclaim against him under New York’s anti-SLAPP law, arguing that his lawsuit was “purely retaliatory and lacking in merit” and intended to “chill her and others from criticizing him in the future.”

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