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Donald Trump > News > Judge Urged to Dismiss Trump’s Revised Lawsuit Over Story on Jeffrey Epstein Letter
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Judge Urged to Dismiss Trump’s Revised Lawsuit Over Story on Jeffrey Epstein Letter

By Victoria Jones June 11, 2026 News
Judge Urged to Dismiss Trump’s Revised Lawsuit Over Story on Jeffrey Epstein Letter
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Wall Street Journal urges dismissal of Donald Trump’s amended defamation suit over story about Jeffrey Epstein-linked letter

The Wall Street Journal has asked a federal judge to throw out the amended lawsuit filed by former President Donald J. Trump that challenges a Journal article discussing a purported letter connected to convicted financier Jeffrey Epstein. In a sharply worded motion, the newspaper contends the piece is protected speech under the First Amendment, summarizes public records and contemporaneous reporting, and that the amended complaint still does not allege facts sufficient to sustain a defamation claim by a public figure.

What the Journal says the complaint lacks
– Failure to identify specific falsehoods: The Journal argues the amended pleading does not point to particular statements in the story that are false and defamatory.
– No plausible actual malice: Under the legal standard for public-figure plaintiffs, the paper says the complaint does not plausibly allege that reporters knew the story was false or acted with reckless disregard for the truth.
– Procedural and factual gaps: According to the filing, the suit relies on conclusory assertions instead of the detailed factual allegations required by federal pleading rules.

By pressing for early dismissal, the Journal frames the dispute as one that can and should be resolved before costly discovery – both to protect editorial sources and to avoid chilling investigative journalism.

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Legal framework at issue
The motion invokes bedrock First Amendment precedent, especially New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964), which established the “actual malice” requirement for defamation claims brought by public figures. That standard demands proof that a publisher either knew a statement was false or acted with reckless disregard for its truth – a high threshold intended to shield reporting about public affairs.

The Journal also warns that federal courts have tools to deter meritless litigation. Its filing asks not only for dismissal (with prejudice) but also seeks Rule 11 sanctions, attorneys’ fees under 28 U.S.C. § 1927, and fees under the court’s inherent authority if the suit is deemed frivolous or filed for an improper purpose.

Plaintiff’s position and procedural posture
Trump’s amended complaint seeks damages and maintains that the Journal’s reporting harmed his reputation by repeating or suggesting a link to the alleged Epstein-related letter. The newspaper’s motion to dismiss is the latest procedural test: if the court agrees the complaint fails to allege falsity and actual malice with required specificity, the case could end without discovery. If not, the litigation will proceed, likely leading to contested discovery motions over source materials and witness testimony.

Typical next steps include a briefing schedule on the motion to dismiss, a possible hearing, and judicial decisions about whether to stay discovery while dispositive motions are pending.

Why the outcome matters beyond this case
Defamation suits from prominent figures against news organizations can set influential precedents about how aggressively public figures may use litigation to challenge reporting. A dismissal would reinforce protections for mainstream outlets that rely on public records and multiple corroborating sources; a decision allowing the case to proceed could encourage more suits seeking to force discovery into journalistic processes.

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Practical reforms and courtroom practices urged by the Journal
The Journal’s filing and commentary from media-law experts urge a combination of judicial and newsroom reforms to reduce abusive suits while preserving responsible reporting:

For courts
– Require more precise pleadings from plaintiffs: identify the exact words alleged to be false, where they appeared, and the factual basis for alleging falsity.
– Expedite motions that determine speech protections, including early consideration of motions to dismiss and anti‑SLAPP-style relief where applicable.
– Limit burdensome discovery into editorial processes absent a sufficient pleading showing.

For news organizations
– Strengthen documentation: maintain contemporaneous records – edit histories, sourcing notes, and verification checklists – to demonstrate careful reporting.
– Institutionalize legal training: regular briefings for reporters and editors on defamation law and source-handling best practices.
– Protect source integrity: pursue source-preservation orders and narrowly tailored discovery compromises when courts allow intrusion into journalistic materials.

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Context and comparable trends
The balance between reputation protection and press freedom continues to be litigated across the country. Over two dozen states have anti‑SLAPP statutes designed to quickly dispose of meritless suits that target protected speech; federal protection, however, remains uneven and fact-dependent. Journalists and newsrooms increasingly rely on detailed recordkeeping and transparent editorial processes to defend against legal challenges.

A practical analogy: just as a referee will not overturn a game on vague protests without specific evidence, courts are generally reluctant to allow defamation claims to proceed without concrete allegations pointing to particular false statements and proof of a culpable state of mind.

Conclusion – what to watch
A judge’s ruling on the Journal’s motion to dismiss will determine whether this dispute stops at the pleading stage or becomes a protracted discovery battle over journalistic materials. The decision could influence how courts apply the actual malice standard to reporting about high-profile individuals and affect the frequency and strategy of defamation suits filed against news organizations.

We will continue to follow filings and court rulings in the case and report developments as they occur.

TAGGED:Donald TrumpNewsUSA
By Victoria Jones
A science journalist who makes complex topics accessible.
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