Judge Tosses Wolff Suit, Clearing Path For $1B Melania Claim

A federal judge just torched a high‑profile lawsuit involving Melania Trump. In open court, she called it “contorted,” accused the journalist behind it of “tactical gamesmanship,” and threw the case out. But that was only the beginning. As explosive Epstein rumors, retracted articles, and claims of a “sham marriage” collide with threats of crushing lawsuits, both sides are now locked in a bitter, reputational death matc… Continues…

In the dismissed case, journalist Michael Wolff tried to turn Melania Trump’s legal threats against him into a preemptive strike, suing her first after she demanded he retract comments tying her to Jeffrey Epstein and calling the Trump marriage a “sham” and “trophy” union. Federal Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil refused to play along, condemning the maneuver as a “contorted” use of the courts and sending the dispute back to be handled like any other state case.

Melania Trump, through her lawyer and spokesperson, framed the clash as a stand against “malicious and defamatory falsehoods” by people chasing “undeserved attention and money.” She has repeatedly and emphatically denied any association with Epstein, insisting the “lies” must end and urging Congress to let victims testify under oath. While Wolff claims his words were opinion and taken out of context, the message from the bench was unmistakable: courtroom theatrics will not decide this reputational war.

In the dismissed case, journalist Michael Wolff tried to turn Melania Trump’s legal threats against him into a preemptive strike, suing her first after she demanded he retract comments tying her to Jeffrey Epstein and calling the Trump marriage a “sham” and “trophy” union. Federal Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil refused to play along, condemning the maneuver as a “contorted” use of the courts and sending the dispute back to be handled like any other state case.

Melania Trump, through her lawyer and spokesperson, framed the clash as a stand against “malicious and defamatory falsehoods” by people chasing “undeserved attention and money.” She has repeatedly and emphatically denied any association with Epstein, insisting the “lies” must end and urging Congress to let victims testify under oath. While Wolff claims his words were opinion and taken out of context, the message from the bench was unmistakable: courtroom theatrics will not decide this reputational war.

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