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U.S. accuses author of Melania Trump tell-all book of breaking nondisclosure pact


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U.S. accuses author of Melania Trump tell-all book of breaking nondisclosure pact

By Steve Holland

 

2020-10-13T194813Z_1_LYNXMPEG9C1TF_RTROPTP_4_USA-TRUMP-MELANIA.JPG

FILE PHOTO: First lady Melania Trump hosts a roundtable discussion on Sickle Cell Disease inside the State Dining Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., September 14 2020. REUTERS/Tom Brenner

 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department on Tuesday accused Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, author of a tell-all book about first lady Melania Trump, of breaking their nondisclosure agreement and asked a court to set aside profits from the book in a government trust.

 

In a complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, Justice Department lawyers said Winston Wolkoff, a former aide who fell out with the first lady, failed to submit to government review a draft of her book, "Melania and Me: The Rise and Fall of My Friendship with the First Lady," which offers an unflattering portrayal of President Donald Trump's wife.

 

Lawyers for Winston Wolkoff were not immediately available to respond to a request for comment.

 

The complaint said the Justice Department has jurisdiction in the case because of the first lady's traditional public role dating back to Martha Washington, wife of the first U.S. president, George Washington.

 

The government asked that any profits Winston Wolkoff might realize from the book and subsequent movie deal or documentaries be set aside into a "constructive trust," with the monies ultimately going to the Treasury Department.

 

Published six weeks ago, the book was for a time on the New York Times best seller list. It sells for $16.80 on amazon.com.

 

"The United States seeks to hold Ms. Wolkoff to her contractual and fiduciary obligations and to ensure that she is not unjustly enriched by her breach of the duties she freely assumed when she served as an adviser to the first lady," said a copy of the complaint seen by Reuters.

 

It says Winston Wolkoff and Mrs. Trump in August 2017 sealed a "Gratuitous Services Agreement" related to “nonpublic, privileged and/or confidential information” that she might obtain during her service under the agreement.

 

"This was a contract with the United States and therefore enforceable by the United States," said Justice Department spokeswoman Kerri Kupec.

 

The government action was similar to Justice Department attempts to stop publication of a book published in June by former Trump national security adviser John Bolton.

 

Bolton was accused of divulging national security secrets, a charge he denied. Publication went ahead any way and a court battle continues over his book, "The Room Where It Happened."

 

Winston Wolkoff's tenure at the White House ended in early 2018 after it was disclosed that her company had received $26 million to help plan Trump's inauguration in January 2017.

 

(Reporting by Steve Holland; additional reporting by Sarah Lynch; Editing by Howard Goller)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-10-14
 
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2 minutes ago, Sujo said:

Why is the justice dept involved n this, she holds no office.

I guess the contract signed by the "employee" is with the Office of the President(or some such entity) not she Melania) herself.

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There's always something involving going to court to keep people from talking with this bunch. 

It's not clear if The Royal Consort herself is involved in the charge.  It would clash with the IDCDU agenda.

 

 

 

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2 hours ago, Walker88 said:

Most folks who join DoJ think they're going to go after organized crime, drug traffickers, terrorists, traitors, etc. Few or none think they will have to put actual crime and threats aside, and instead do the personal bidding of the POTUS, who never wants the truth to get in the way of the myth. Thus, EVERYTHING is apparently under eternal NDAs.

Even his covid doctors are silenced under nda.

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The profits from the book are going to the coffers of the USA and not Melania Trump so she isn't making a cent from this case but merely enforcing a non disclosure agreement by ensuring that the breaker of it can't profit from the breach. 

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24 minutes ago, JusticeGB said:

The profits from the book are going to the coffers of the USA and not Melania Trump so she isn't making a cent from this case but merely enforcing a non disclosure agreement by ensuring that the breaker of it can't profit from the breach. 

Anyway, 

How much does Melania Trump think her Trump brand as 1st lady is worth?

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-02-07/melania-trump-says-article-deprived-her-of-a-chance-to-cash-in

 

How much for "emotional distress"

"the article "impugned her fitness to perform her duties as First Lady of the United States" and caused her "significant humiliation in the community and emotional distress."

https://www.townandcountrymag.com/society/money-and-power/news/a9514/melania-trump-lawsuit/

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48 minutes ago, Proboscis said:

Majority of comment snipped. The entire comment is HERE [TVF permalink].

:

So, using the Bolton case as a parallel gets the Melania book nowhere. Even if the book demonstrably damages Melania, the case brought by the Feds cannot appeal to that. They have to show actual damage to the country. A significant reach, to say the least.

Maybe it will wend it's way to the SCOTUS where, by then, the court may be 'fully-packed' and it will certainly not stand a chance. WDYT?

 

 

Edited by MaxYakov
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51 minutes ago, wwest5829 said:

Only so far as the principle that no one can sign away their Constitutional Right of free speech.

Well, actually they can in the case of an NDA. If the NDA is valid. But they're not valid for government workers so the Justice Dept has no business trying to enforce an NDA between 2 private citizens.

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1 hour ago, wwest5829 said:

Only so far as the principle that no one can sign away their Constitutional Right of free speech.

 

Sure they can.  Doctors do it.  Lawyers do it.  Priests do it.  Everyone with security clearance does it.  Even the guys who mix up the secret batter for KFC do it.

 

Edit:  The existence and legality of NDA's isn't the issue.  It's why the Justice Department is standing in to represent a private citizen to enforce an NDA with another private citizen.

 

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27 minutes ago, impulse said:

 

Sure they can.  Doctors do it.  Lawyers do it.  Priests do it.  Everyone with security clearance does it.  Even the guys who mix up the secret batter for KFC do it.

 

Edit:  The existence and legality of NDA's isn't the issue.  It's why the Justice Department is standing in to represent a private citizen to enforce an NDA with another private citizen.

 

Sorry, but as a principle of US law, push comes to shove it has be found that they cannot.

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9 minutes ago, wwest5829 said:

Sorry, but as a principle of US law, push comes to shove it has be found that they cannot.

 

Tell that to Anthony Levandowski.

 

Oh, and Julian Assange.

 

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7 hours ago, placeholder said:

If Melania wants to sue  Wollkoff for  breach of an NDA agreements fine. But she should not be using the resources of the US government to do so.

Perhaps it is by way of "Legal Aid"? In the UK if you cannot afford legal assistance you can apply for the government to pay for a lawyer. This may be the same idea? After all, the Trumps are apparently pretty broke - only liable to pay $700 or so in tax...

????

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5 hours ago, MaxYakov said:

Maybe it will wend it's way to the SCOTUS where, by then, the court may be 'fully-packed' and it will certainly not stand a chance. WDYT?

 

 

Only those cases that bring in an original question about the interpretation of law and the constitution ever get to SCOTUS - and SCOTUS turns down most appeals to them. Besides, by the time such a case got to SCOTUS, we might all be dead or at least have forgotten about it.

 

But in keeping with my claim that the cases both against Bolton and the author of the Melania book are vexatious is in keeping with the Attorney General/DoJ hiding the fact that they were unable to bring any charges regarding the "unmasking scandal" - that was the claim that officials in the Obama administration, specifically Susa Rice, used requests to unmask redacted names in raw intelligence reports to get at certain Republicans, specifically against Michael Flynn. The allegations looked at also included whether Obama administration officials provided stories to reporters using this method. Unfortunately for Attorney General Barr and the DoJ, their investigation unearthed absolutedly nothing. But instead of announcing this, they decided not to release the result of their investigation publicly.

 

Yet another vexatious case initiated by the Trump White House/DoJ

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