Chattanooga Times Free Press

Judge: Michael Avenatti must pay $4.85 million in ex-lawyer’s lawsuit

- BY AMANDA LEE MYERS AND MICHAEL BALSAMO

LOS ANGELES — Porn actress Stormy Daniels’ lawyer Michael Avenatti must pay $4.85 million to an attorney who worked at his former law firm, a California judge ruled Monday, marking the first time the potential presidenti­al candidate is being held personally liable in the lawsuit over back pay.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Dennis Landin ordered the payout by Avenatti because he had personally guaranteed a settlement with attorney Jason Frank. Frank alleged Avenatti’s firm misstated its profits and that he was owed millions of dollars.

Avenatti, who is best known for representi­ng Daniels in her lawsuit against President Donald Trump following an alleged 2006 affair, did not appear at Monday’s hearing and never filed arguments in the case.

He told The Associated Press that Frank owes him and the firm $12 million “for his fraud.” He did not provide details and declined to comment further. It’s unclear whether Avenatti has filed any litigation in the matter against Frank, whose attorney said Frank doesn’t owe Avenatti a dime.

Avenatti, who is toying with a possible 2020 presidenti­al run, can appeal the ruling but since he never filed arguments about why he shouldn’t have to pay the $4.85 million, any such effort would be “dead in the water,” said Frank’s attorney, Eric George.

“He’s managed to delay this for ages,” George said. “At the end of the day, this is money that’s owed. No matter how you try to spin it, it comes back to the fact that he took money, it wasn’t his and now there’s a judgment saying it’s owed to my client.”

Asked whether he thinks Avenatti will pay the sum, George said that “it’ll be important to keep an eye on him and sources of money that are coming in, see what his assets are, and take it from there.”

Frank had worked at Avenatti’s former firm under an independen­t contractor agreement and was supposed to collect 25 percent of its annual profits, along with 20 percent of fees his clients paid, court documents say.

The action Monday comes after a U.S. bankruptcy court judge ordered Avenatti’s former firm to pay $10 million to Frank in May. The $4.85 million for which Avenatti is now personally liable is in addition to that judgment.

In July, the Justice Department accused Avenatti of making misreprese­ntations in the bankruptcy case and said his former law firm owed more than $440,000 in unpaid federal taxes.

Avenatti’s lawyer said at the time that the matter had been resolved. The Justice Department insisted settlement negotiatio­ns were continuing but the debt was still owed.

The ruling against Avenatti comes a week after a federal judge dismissed Daniels’ defamation lawsuit against Trump.

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