The Columbus Dispatch

Nunes’ family payment deal not ‘suspicious,’ judge says

- Gillian Brassil

WASHINGTON – The way that Congressma­n Devin Nunes’ family is financing its defamation lawsuit against a journalist and magazine company over a story about their Iowa farm does not raise concerns, a federal judge wrote last week.

Magistrate Judge Mark Roberts of Iowa’s Northern District Court wanted to know if the California Republican was involved in funding the family’s case, he wrote in a ruling last month that made the family share how they were paying their legal fees.

Roberts wrote that he found “nothing suspicious or untoward in the documents produced” that detail how the family is paying their attorney, Steven Biss, and other firms in the lawsuit.

“The records include what appears to be an ordinary attorney fee agreement between Mr. Biss’s firm and Plaintiffs,” Magistrate Judge Mark Roberts wrote in his finding.

The documents also showed proof that the family was paying other law firms working on the case, Roberts wrote.

The Nunes family is represente­d by lawyers Biss, who represents the congressma­n in almost all of his defamation lawsuits, and William Mcginn.

The family is suing reporter Ryan Lizza and Hearst, the parent company of Esquire, over a 2018 story published in that magazine that suggested that their Iowa farm, Nustar Farms, employed undocument­ed immigrants.

Last month, Roberts agreed with attorneys for Lizza and Hearst that the family had to disclose who was paying for the suit. He reviewed the documents behind closed doors and shared them with attorneys for Lizza and Hearst.

The records are otherwise sealed, meaning that people beyond legal counsel for the case cannot review them.

Lawyers for Lizza and Hearst asked that the Nunes family share who was

paying for their legal fees this summer.

In their motion, they wrote that the lawsuit might be funded by wealthy private donors associated with the congressma­n in order to “chill” media coverage.

The family has denied coordinati­ng with the congressma­n throughout the proceeding­s, but had not denied receiving financial support for the litigation. Roberts had said that disclosing who was funding the suit would provide clarity on whether the family had actually coordinate­d with the congressma­n.

Nunes is a witness in the family’s case.

He shares the same lawyer, Biss, as the family in other lawsuits he has filed against media companies and people he claims have defamed or conspired against him since 2019.

One of those cases is against Lizza and Hearst over the same story about the Iowa farm. A federal judge last year dismissed that suit, finding the story did not defame him. An appeals court reopened part of the case this fall over a tweet Lizza sent hyperlinki­ng to his story after Nunes sued.

Hearst and Lizza’s attorneys have asked the court to reconsider reopening the case. Roberts has stalled proceeding­s in the family’s lawsuit pending that decision by the appeals court.

 ?? KIRK MCKOY/TNS ?? Questions arose about how Rep. Devin Nunes, R-calif., paid for his lawsuit against reporter Ryan Lizza and media company Hearst.
KIRK MCKOY/TNS Questions arose about how Rep. Devin Nunes, R-calif., paid for his lawsuit against reporter Ryan Lizza and media company Hearst.

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