Albany Times Union

Alec Baldwin faces defamation lawsuit

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The widow and two sisters of a U.S. Marine killed in Afghanista­n are suing Alec Baldwin, alleging the actor exposed them to a flood of social media hatred by claiming on Instagram that one sister was an “insurrecti­onist” for attending former President Donald Trump’s Washington, D.C., rally on Jan. 6 last year.

According to the lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Cheyenne, Wyo., the sister, Roice Mccollum, protested peacefully and legally; was not among those who stormed the U.S. Capitol that day; and, after being interviewe­d by the FBI, “was never detained, arrested, accused of or charged with any crime.”

The lawsuit comes as Baldwin is immersed in an ongoing investigat­ion into the death of a cinematogr­apher and the wounding of a director last fall after a prop gun the actor was holding on a movie set went off.

Last year, Baldwin sent Mccollum a $5,000 check to help the widow of her brother Marine Lance Cpl. Rylee Mccollum of Jackson, who was among 13 U.S. soldiers killed in a suicide bombing Aug. 26 at the Kabul airport, according to the lawsuit.

On Jan. 3 of this year, the lawsuit says, the actor privately messaged Roice Mccollum on Instagram soon after she posted an almost year-old photo of the Trump rally, asking if she was the same woman who’d taken his donation. The suit says Mccollum confirmed she was at the protest and told Baldwin, “Protesting is perfectly legal.“

The suit says Baldwin responded by remarking that “her activities resulted in the unlawful destructio­n of government property, the death of a law enforcemen­t officer, an assault on the certificat­ion of the presidenti­al election,” and told Mccollum that he’d reposted the photo to his 2.4 million Instagram followers.

“Good luck,” Baldwin wrote, according to the lawsuit.

“Baldwin plainly ignored Roice’s denial of rioting and the assertion that she was cleared by the FBI for participat­ing in any of the conduct Baldwin chose to falsely attribute to her via his massive following,” the lawsuit reads.

Representa­tives for Baldwin didn’t immediatel­y return email and phone messages Wednesday. FBI officials in Denver didn’t return email messages Wednesday asking if the lawsuit’s assertions about Roice Mccollum are true. Federal court records reviewed by The Associated Press did not show any criminal charges against her.

After Baldwin shared the photo of the Jan. 6 protest on social media, Roice Mccollum got “hundreds upon hundreds of hateful messages,“including one telling her to “get raped and die” and that her brother “got what he deserved,” according to the lawsuit.

In a post under his Instagram account, #alecbaldwi­ninsta, Baldwin called that message “abhorrent,” and told Roice Mccollum, “There are hateful things posted toward you that are wrong,” according to computer screenshot­s filed in the case.

The lawsuit says Baldwin didn’t do anything to remedy the situation, however. And by sharing the photo, he “lit the match and blew on the fire,” resulting in the hateful messages and death threats not only against Roice Mccollum but also against Rylee Mccollum’s other sister, Cheyenne Mccollum, and widow, Jiennah Mccollum, it says.

The lawsuit, first reported by the Casper Startribun­e, alleges invasion of privacy, defamation, negligence and intentiona­l infliction of emotional distress, and seeks $25 million in damages.

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RYLEE MCCOLLUM
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BALDWIN

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