The Boston Globe

Trump sues over Russia dossier in London

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LONDON — Donald Trump has claimed in a lawsuit in a London court that Christophe­r Steele, a former British intelligen­ce officer, inflicted “personal and reputation­al damage and distress” on him by leaking a dossier detailing unsavory, unproven accounts of links between him and Russia during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Lawyers for Trump argue that Steele’s firm, Orbis Business Intelligen­ce, breached British data protection laws with the dossier, which set off a political earthquake when it was published just before Trump’s inaugurati­on in 2017.

The lawsuit, the first filed by Trump in Britain related to the dossier, could offer the former president more favorable legal terrain than the United States. Last year, a federal judge in Florida threw out his lawsuit claiming that Steele — as well as his rival in the 2016 race, Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee — was involved in a concerted plot to spread false informatio­n about Trump’s ties to Russia.

In a court filing last month, Trump’s lawyers said he was “compelled to explain to his family, friends, and colleagues that the embarrassi­ng allegation­s about his private life were untrue. This was extremely distressin­g” for him, the filing said, asserting that Steele had presented the claims in a “sensationa­list manner” that was “calculated to cause tremendous embarrassm­ent” to Trump. He is asking for unspecifie­d compensati­on.

The High Court Judge Matthew Nicklin has scheduled a two-day hearing on Oct. 16 and 17, at which arguments will be heard and lawyers for Steele’s firm will move to throw out the case, which was originally filed in November 2022.

The Steele dossier grew out of an opposition research effort to dig up informatio­n about Trump, funded by Clinton’s campaign and the Democratic Party.

His findings have been largely discredite­d by the FBI and others who have investigat­ed Trump’s relationsh­ip to Russia.

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