DOJ drops lawsuit against Stephanie Winston Wolkoff
Former first woman Melania Trump’s ex-best buddy Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, who wrote a scathing memoir about their relationship and its bitter dissolution, is off the hook now {that a} Trump-era civil lawsuit against her has been dropped by the Biden administration.
The Department of Justice has dropped the breach-of-contract lawsuit against Wolkoff, based on courtroom paperwork filed this week. The authorities’s submitting was adopted by U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly’s order dismissing the case.
The Trump administration filed the lawsuit against Wolkoff in October, accusing her of breaking an official nondisclosure settlement in publishing her e-book, “Melania and Me: The Rise and Fall of My Friendship with the First Lady,” which got here out in September.
In the e-book, Wolkoff described her practically two-decade friendship with Melania Trump, how she helped plan the inauguration of Donald Trump and labored as a volunteer to arrange the primary woman’s workplace, employees and agenda.
She describes how she felt betrayed by being blamed by her former buddy for value overruns, disorganization and possible corruption in the Trump inaugural celebration. Wolkoff says she has cooperated with investigators wanting into the latter declare.
But attorneys within the Trump Justice Department’s civil division claimed Wolkoff violated her contract with the government by not sending a draft of her e-book to the White House for overview and by not acquiring permission to write down it, amongst different alleged misdeeds.
According to the complaint, “Ms. Wolkoff promised to maintain strict confidentiality over ‘nonpublic, privileged and/or confidential information’ that she might obtain during her service.” The complaint alleged Wolkoff had “indirect access to deliberative information, to which the First Lady was privy, related to the President’s official duties on behalf of the country.”
On Thursday, Wolkoff said that her story involves “ethical resilience within the face of adversity, intimidation and emotional duress.”
“To be attacked legally by the Trumps who used the power of the presidency and the government to do their dirty work (and specifically the DOJ as their personal bulldog) was pretty scary,” she told USA TODAY in a statement. “They spent years abusing their power and making threats, trying, however possible, to discredit me and damage my reputation.
“As my lawyer previously has observed, this lawsuit was entirely meritless and represented an effort by the Trumps to enlist the DOJ to pursue entirely personal goals and interests,” her statement said. “Writing and speaking the truth is a fundamental American principle. The fact that the DOJ dropped this frivolous, bullying, anti-American case makes me feel like we are living in America again and not in some lawless dictatorship.”
Wolkoff’s lawyer, Lorin Reisner, instructed USA TODAY in an announcement that he and his consumer are “very pleased” the case was dropped and dismissed.
“This case never should have been brought,” his assertion stated. “The NDA at issue is facially unconstitutional and the dismissal is a resounding victory for the First Amendment and the interests of justice.”
In November, Trump lost his bid for reelection to Democrat Joe Biden. Now that his administration is in charge, the case against Wolkoff is over.
The Justice Department has not given a reason for dropping the matter, though it’s not unusual for cases brought by one administration to be dropped by a succeeding government.
Wolkoff used the decision to drop the suit to continue her criticism of how she says the Trumps have treated her since she joined his 2016 campaign for the presidency. Her Twitter account has featured similar tweets since her book was published.
“After 4 years of Trump’s tyranny against me with lies, defamation, emotional torment, fixed lawsuits, subpoenas, and thousands and thousands of {dollars} in bills, I’ve confirmed Melania’s personal ruthless actions and heartless phrases uncovered the TRUTH (over falsehood) and JUSTICE prevailed,” she posted on Feb. 9.
“Melania opened Pandora’s field involving the DOJ,” she added in another tweet, featuring a picture of the judge’s order dismissing the case. “The monumental trove of communications & documentations I possess and shared inform the true story about ‘why’ and ‘how’ the contracts had been ‘created’ and ‘terminated’ and who was concerned. TRUTH PREVAILS.”
The Trumps have since moved to their resort estate Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach County, Florida.

Several books were published about Melania Trump during the Trump administration but Wolkoff’s book was particularly galling to the first lady judging from statements she issued via her spokeswoman, Stephanie Grisham.
“This book is not only wildly self-aggrandizing, it’s just not truthful,” Grisham told USA TODAY in an email. “It is an exercise in bizarre twisting of the truth and misguided blame for the sake of self-pity. It’s unfortunate and concerning that she’s overstated their friendship and her very brief role in the White House to this degree.”
After Wolkoff launched her promotional campaign for the book, she released secret audio tapes she fabricated from her conversations with the primary woman, after they had been nonetheless speaking to one another. In them, Trump is heard expressing unfavorable views of her job and her media protection.
Trump responded with a scorching statement of her own, posted on the White House web site, that attacked Wolkoff and the media for overlaying Wolkoff’s “salacious claims.”
“An individual who stated she ‘made me’ although she hardly knew me, and somebody who clung to me after my husband gained the Presidency,” Trump wrote. “This is a lady who secretly recorded our telephone calls, releasing parts from me that had been out of context, then wrote a e-book of idle gossip attempting to distort my character.”