The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta company sues House candidate Greene

Mortgage provider files defamation suit for Twitter remarks.

- By Tia Mitchell Tia.Mitchell@ajc.com

An Atlanta-based mortgage provider has filed a lawsuit against congressio­nal candidate Marjorie Taylor Greene, saying she defamed the company by spreading misinforma­tion about the firing of an employee.

The lawsuit filed in Fulton County also names Melissa Rolfe, an ex-employee of Equity Prime Mortgage, as a defendant. Her stepson, Garrett Rolfe, was charged in the officer-involved shooting of Rayshard Brooks in June. Greene and Melissa Rolfe have claimed she was fired from Equity after her stepson was charged, but Equity’s attorneys said that was not the case.

The home lender last week asked Greene to retract and apologize for comments on social media that called Rolfe’s terminatio­n politicall­y motivated. When that didn’t happen, the company moved forward with its defamation suit.

“We were targeted with death threats, hate mail, and a boycott because of a national media firestorm based on statements by Marjorie Greene’s campaign and Melissa Rolfe,” Equity President and CEO Eddy Perez said in a statement. “We are committed to setting the record straight and defending our good name.”

Lin Wood, an attorney who represents Greene’s campaign and Rolfe, said they have not done anything wrong and were only exercising their First Amendment rights to free speech. He said the recent actions taken by Equity, including the lawsuit, are part of a smear attack intended to influence the election, and he is considerin­g filing a lawsuit of his own.

Wood also said he plans to file a motion soon to dismiss Equity’s defamation case on the grounds it is a frivolous attempt to silence protected speech.

“It is errant nonsense and an abuse of the legal system,” Wood said of the case.

Greene won the Republican nomination in Georgia’s strongly conservati­ve 14th Congressio­nal District on Tuesday and is expected to easily win November’s general election.

Even before she began campaignin­g with Rolfe, she was a controvers­ial figure. Greene has repeated baseless QAnon conspiracy theories and has made anti-Semitic, anti-Muslim and racist comments on videos posted to social media.

After Garrett Rolfe was charged with felony murder in the Brooks case, Greene posted on social media that Melissa Rolfe had been fired from Equity as a result.

“First her stepson (who was acting in self-defense) lost his job & was charged with murder!” she wrote on

Twitter on June 30. “Then Melissa’s employer caved to the mob and wrongfully fired her!”

The company said Rolfe was under investigat­ion well before the Brooks shooting and was ultimately terminated for making sexist and racist comments that resulted in numerous employee complaints.

In the suit, the company accuses Greene and Rolfe of conspiring to publish false and defamatory statements that resulted in boycotts and a flurry of “furious messages from people who believed the lie.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States