Los Angeles Times

Trump sanctioned for ‘frivolous’ suit

Judge fines the former president and a lawyer $938,000 for ‘pattern of abuse of the courts.’

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NEW YORK — A Florida judge sanctioned former President Trump and one of his attorneys Thursday, ordering them to pay nearly $1 million for filing what he said was a bogus lawsuit against Trump’s 2016 rival Hillary Clinton and others.

In a blistering filing, U.S. District Judge Donald M. Middlebroo­ks accused Trump of a “pattern of abuse of the courts” for filing frivolous lawsuits for political purposes, which he said “undermines the rule of law” and “amounts to obstructio­n of justice.”

“Here, we are confronted with a lawsuit that should never have been filed, which was completely frivolous, both factually and legally, and which was brought in bad faith for an improper purpose,” he wrote.

Citing Trump’s recent legal action against the Pulitzer Prize board, New York Atty. Gen. Letitia James, big tech companies and CNN, Middlebroo­ks described Trump as “a prolific and sophistica­ted litigant” who uses the courts “to seek revenge on political adversarie­s.”

“He is the mastermind of strategic abuse of the judicial process,” he wrote.

The ruling required Trump and his attorney, Alina Habba, to pay nearly $938,000 to the defendants in the case. A spokesman for Trump and Habba did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Middlebroo­ks in September dismissed the suit Trump had filed against Clinton, former top FBI officials and the Democratic Party, rejecting the former president’s claims that they and others conspired to sink his winning presidenti­al campaign by alleging inappropri­ate ties to Russia.

The lawsuit had named as defendants Clinton and some of her top advisors, as well as former FBI Director James B. Comey and other FBI officials involved in the investigat­ion into whether Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign had coordinate­d with Russia to sway the outcome of the election.

Middlebroo­ks said then that the suit contained “glaring structural deficienci­es” and that many of the “characteri­zations of events are implausibl­e.”

In the wake of the sanctions, Trump on Friday withdrew his lawsuit against Atty. Gen. James in New York. That case, in federal court in Florida, had also been before Middlebroo­ks.

Trump sued James in November in response to her lawsuit alleging he and his company mislead banks and others about the value of assets in a practice she dubbed “the art of the steal.”

Trump, a Republican, also sought to prevent James, a Democrat, from having any oversight over the family trust that controls his company. His complaint rehashed some claims from his previously dismissed suit against James in federal court in New York, irritating Middlebroo­ks, who wrote in a December order: “This litigation has all the telltale signs of being both vexatious and frivolous.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK Associated Press ?? FORMER President Trump uses the courts “to seek revenge on political adversarie­s,” a federal judge said.
ANDREW HARNIK Associated Press FORMER President Trump uses the courts “to seek revenge on political adversarie­s,” a federal judge said.

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