Trump refiles suit against Wall Street Journal

Summary

Trump refiled a $10 billion defamation suit against Wall Street Journal over a report on an alleged Epstein birthday letter.

Why this matters

The case could test how courts apply the “actual malice” standard in defamation claims involving public figures and major news organizations. It also adds to Trump’s wider legal campaign against media outlets.

President Donald Trump refiled a lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal, its parent company News Corp, Dow Jones, Rupert Murdoch, and reporters Khadeeja Safdar and Low Palazzlo over a report tied to Jeffrey Epstein.

The case focused on a Wall Street Journal article about a compilation prepared by Ghislaine Maxwell for Epstein’s 2003 birthday. The article reportedly described a sexually explicit letter allegedly signed by Trump. Trump said the letter was fake.

An earlier version of the lawsuit was dismissed by Judge Darrin Gayles in April after the court found it did not adequately establish the legal standard of “actual malice.” The dismissal allowed Trump to refile the case.

The amended complaint relied on Maxwell’s comment to Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche that she had no recollection of Trump submitting a letter, card, or note for Epstein’s birthday compilation.

Because the article was published before Maxwell’s 2025 interview with Blanche, Trump’s legal team argued that the newspaper had ignored evidence and that this met the standard for malice.

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