San Francisco Chronicle

Judge tells lawyers to pay in fraud case

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DENVER — A federal judge has ordered two lawyers who filed a class-action lawsuit alleging the 2020 presidenti­al election was stolen from Donald Trump to pay more than $180,000 in attorney’s fees for defendants Dominion Voting Systems, Facebook and others, saying the lawsuit was intended to manipulate “gullible members of the public” and helped spur the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol.

The now-dismissed suit relied on baseless conspiracy theories spread by the former president and his supporters. It named elected officials in four swing states, Facebook and Denver-based Dominion, whose election machines were at the center of some of the most fevered speculatio­n.

U.S. Magistrate Judge N. Reid Neureiter ruled in August that attorneys Gary D. Fielder and

Ernest J. Walker should pay penalties. Neureiter’s Monday order, first reported by Colorado Politics, awarded individual fees — but he stayed the awards pending an appeal of the dismissed lawsuit to the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver.

The penalties included $62,930 to Dominion and $50,000 to Facebook, which the suit alleged censored conservati­ve voices leading up to the election.

Neureiter scolded the attorneys, saying they’d appealed for public donations to hire legal experts for their case though none were hired, and that the insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol was promoted by the lies it repeated.

He said the suit repeated “unverified and uninvestig­ated defamatory rumors that strike at the heart of our democratic system and were used by others to foment a violent insurrecti­on that threatened our system of government.”

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