The Morning Call

A pro-Trump conspiracy theorist

Richard Jewell’s lawyer morphed into mouthpiece

- By Jeremy W. Peters and Alan Feuer

L. Lin Wood had a message from God to deliver.

“Don’t believe the media. They’re liars,” the celebrity defamation lawyer declared in October at a gathering of evangelica­ls in Atlanta.

Then he vowed, “We’re going to take them down,” bringing the crowd to its feet.

Wood’s speech to a packed ballroom at the Faith and Freedom Coalition’s annual conference was a preview of the role he would soon play as one of the most relentless promoters of President Donald Trump’s conspiracy theories and baseless claims about election fraud.

It is a turn that has surprised many former associates of the theatrical lawyer, whom Dan Rather once described as “the attorney for the damned” for his roster of high-profile clients like Richard Jewell, who was wrongly suspected of setting off a bomb at the Atlanta Olympics, and the parents of JonBenét Ramsey, the 6-year-old whose murder became a tabloid frenzy.

But Wood has reinvented himself into an extreme Trump advocate, one who has found fame among Trump’s supporters not because he is good at notching victories for the president, but because he will amplify Trump’s wildest accusation­s and dive head first into the culture wars.

Wood’s lawsuits seeking to undo the election in Georgia and to ask the Supreme Court to overturn votes in other key states have been soundly rejected by judges and riddled with errors, including a misspellin­g of his own name.

Still, many Republican­s have grown worried that Wood is harming the party’s chances of holding the Senate.

His repeated suggestion that people should sit out the Georgia runoff elections to punish Republican­s who weren’t sufficient­ly supportive of Trump led Newt Gingrich to condemn Wood as “totally destructiv­e.” The editor of National Review described him as “an exceptiona­lly talented demagogue.”

Ralph Reed, the chairman of the Faith and Freedom Coalition and a veteran of Georgia politics, said that control of the Senate was too important to squander.

“I like Lin. I think he’s a very brilliant guy and a first-class litigator,” Reed said. “But the stakes of the Senate races are too high to use them as a platform to express outrage about the results of the presidenti­al election.”

Former colleagues described Wood as someone who shares many traits with Trump. He claims to loathe the mainstream media but has used it effectivel­y to build his brand. He intimidate­s adversarie­s with lawsuits. Andhe thrives on shocking those around him.

Wood’s recent clients have included highly polarizing figures like Marjorie Taylor Greene, who supports the QA non hoax and was recently elected to Congress; Mark and Patricia McCloskey, the St. Louis couple who brandished weapons at demonstrat­ors outside their house; and Kyle Rittenhous­e, the teenager charged with fatally shooting two protesters in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

He is also representi­ng Nich-olas Sandmann, a student whose encounter with a Native American protester made national news, in his libel suit against The New York Times.

Before the former national security adviser Michael Flynn raised the possibilit­y with Trump of declaring martial law, the notion of enlisting the military to oversee a do-over of the election was an idea that Wood had floated in interviews with rightwing media.

Legal experts said Wood, who is well aware of what the law says about defamation and libel, appears to be betting that the targets of his most baseless claims won’t sue him because he is protected by the First Amendment and they don’t want the hassle.

Hehas insinuated, for instance, that Chief Justice John Roberts may have associated with the now-deceased convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

And at a rally this month in Atlanta, where Wood appeared alongside Flynn and another pro-Trump lawyer known for pushing conspiracy theories, Sidney Powell, he accused Gov. Brian Kemp of corruption and led the crowd in chants of “Lock him up!”

His antics have earned him an audience with Trump. Woodsaid in an email that they had spoken about “fraud and illegality” in the election on more than one occasion, though he is not an official member of the president’s legal team.

Lawyers who have worked with Wood, 68, described him as animated and aggressive inside and outside the courtroom — someone known for showing up uninvited to the news conference­s of his opponents and belittling witnesses in deposition­s.

But few who know him profession­ally said they expected him to descend into the miasmic swamp of right-wing conspiracy theories.

“The Lin Wood I see today bears basically no resemblanc­e to the Lin Wood I knew back then,” said Timothy Terrell, a law professor at Emory University.

“Timothy is not a friend of mine,” Wood said. “But I am pleased that Timothy has noticed a change in my life. God changed my life when I realized that He is real.”

Wood’s biggest break came in 1996 when he represente­d Jewell, a security guard wrongly suspected of planting a pipe bomb in Atlanta during the Summer Olympics that killed one person and injured more than 100 others.

For the next 20 years, he built a reputation as a pit bull plaintiff’s lawyer who sued the news media for a pantheon of aggrieved clients.

He represente­d John and Patsy Ramsey in their struggle to clear their names in their daughter’s killing and the former congressma­n Gary Condit after the death of his intern Chandra Levy.

Though the defamation cases were headline-grabbing, his more lucrative legal work has been in areas like medical fraud and malpractic­e.

Wood was raised in Macon, Georgia, and experience­d tragedy as a teenager, returning home one day to discover that his father — an abusive alcoholic — had beaten his mother to death. Watching the murder trial that followed inspired him to become a lawyer.

His profession­al life has been messy.

His former law partners are suing him for unpaid compensati­on, alleging that he displayed bizarre, messianic behavior. They claim that he referred to himself as “Almighty Lin” and indicated that, according to a “prophecy” he saw on YouTube, he expected to be named chief justice of the United States.

“I have assessed my mental health,” he wrote in an email to his partners that is cited in the suit. “I am a little crazy, but I’m also mainly sane and possess a healthy mind.”

Wood contends that the suit is “littered with false statements and completely irrelevant factual allegation­s.”

After his speech at the Faith and Freedom event, Wood returned to his seat on the dais and his date, Fox News host Jeanine Pirro, jumped up to hug him.

Reed, the emcee, raised his voice to be heard over the applause.

“Thank you for bringing the thunder, Lin,” Reed said.

 ?? BEN MARGOT/AP ?? Attorney Lin Wood gestures while speaking during a rally earlier this month in Alpharetta, Ga. Lawyers who have worked with Wood, 68, described him as animated and aggressive inside and outside the courtroom.
BEN MARGOT/AP Attorney Lin Wood gestures while speaking during a rally earlier this month in Alpharetta, Ga. Lawyers who have worked with Wood, 68, described him as animated and aggressive inside and outside the courtroom.

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