The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Melania Trump says article ruined her chance to cash in

First lady sues paper over lost bid to start fashion line.

- By Julie Bykowicz

WILMINGTON, DEL. — First lady Melania Trump has filed a lawsuit against a British newspaper, saying a defamatory article it later retracted deprived her of the chance to launch a lucrative brand of clothing, shoes, jewelry and perfume.

The suit against the publisher of the Daily Mail accused it of causing “tremendous harm” to her reputation and making it nearly impossible for her to take advantage of “major business opportunit­ies” available “for a multi-year term during which Plaintiff is one of the most photograph­ed women in the world.”

The lawsuit asserts that she has a “unique, once-ina-lifetime opportunit­y” to “launch a broad-based commercial brand in multiple product categories.” It says further she could have sold “apparel, accessorie­s, shoes, jewelry, cosmetics, hair care, skin care and fragrance.”

Filed in state court in Manhattan on Monday after being dismissed by a Maryland judge last week, the suit raises questions again about whether President Donald Trump and his family understand the ethical conflicts created by mixing public service with commercial opportunit­ies.

Most ethics experts, including the agency that monitors such matters in the federal government, have said Trump should divest his holdings. Instead, Trump has turned over management of his company, the Trump Organizati­on, to his two elder sons and pledged no new foreign deals during his term. The president has said he has no obligation to do more.

Melania Trump has also come in for criticism about conflicts. Visitors to the White House website in January were told about her jewelry line being sold on QVC Inc., a home-shopping network owned by billionair­e John Malone’s Liberty Interactiv­e Corp. The reference was removed after news accounts of it appeared.

In her libel case, Melania Trump accuses the newspaper’s website of running an article that said her modeling career in the 1990s was a ruse to cover her work as an “elite escort” in the sex trade.

She sued Mail Media Inc. in September 2016 over the story, which was based on rumors originally spread by a Slovenian magazine. The former model sued in state court in Maryland after the website and Webster Tarpley, a blogger who also reported the claims, issued retraction­s.

A judge concluded Trump didn’t have the right to sue the newspaper company in Maryland, but allowed her claims against Tarpley to proceed. On Tuesday, Trump’s attorney, Charles Harder, said she had settled with Tarpley, who had agreed to pay her “a substantia­l sum.”

 ?? DOUG MILLS / NYT ?? Then President-elect Donald Trump and his wife, Melania, arrive at Joint Base Andrews, Md., Jan. 19. A lawsuit filed by Melania claims a British tabloid’s article greatly reduced her business opportunit­ies.
DOUG MILLS / NYT Then President-elect Donald Trump and his wife, Melania, arrive at Joint Base Andrews, Md., Jan. 19. A lawsuit filed by Melania claims a British tabloid’s article greatly reduced her business opportunit­ies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States