A federal judge on Thursday imposed nearly $1 million in sanctions on former President Donald Trump and his lawyer for filing a since-dismissed “frivolous” lawsuit against Hillary Clinton and plenty of others, which had claimed they tried to rig the 2016 presidential election in her favor by smearing Trump.
“We’re confronted with a lawsuit that ought to never have been filed, which was completely frivolous, each factually and legally, and which was brought in bad faith for an improper purpose,” wrote Judge John Middlebrooks in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in his order sanctioning Trump and his attorney Alina Habba.
Trump’s suit, which sought $70 million in damages, accused Clinton and 30 other defendants of conspiring to “weave a false narrative” through the 2016 election that Trump and his campaign were colluding with Russia of their efforts to win the race.
Middlebrooks in his order Thursday noted that “Mr. Trump is a prolific and complex litigant who’s repeatedly using the courts to hunt revenge on political adversaries.”
“He’s the mastermind of strategic abuse of the judicial process, and he can’t be seen as a litigant blindly following the recommendation of a lawyer,” Middlebrooks wrote.
“He knew full well the impact of his actions … As such, I find that sanctions must be imposed upon Mr. Trump and his lead counsel, Ms. Habba.”
Under the order, the Republican Trump and Habba, are jointly and severally chargeable for the full amount of sanctions the judge imposed to cover the defendants’ legal fees and costs : $937,989.39. That quantity is about $120,000 lower than what the defendants jointly requested for sanctions.
Clinton was awarded $171,631 in sanctions to be paid by Trump and Habba, with most of that cash earmarked for Clinton’s attorneys’ fee.
That was the second largest amount awarded in Middlebrooks’ order, which gave the Democratic National Committee, its former chairwoman Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, and a related corporation $179,685.
“The quantity of fees awarded on this case, while reasonable, is substantial,” Middlebrooks noted.
The judge in November had sanctioned Habba and other Trump lawyers $50,000 in favor of one other defendant within the lawsuit, Charles Dolan.
He called the legal pleadings filed within the case by Habba “abusive litigation tactics,” and said the unique lawsuit and a later, 186-page amended grievance “were drafted to advance political narrative; not to deal with legal harm attributable to any Defendant.”
“The Amended Criticism is a hodgepodge of disconnected, often immaterial events, followed by an implausible conclusion,” Middlebrooks wrote.
“This can be a deliberate try to harass; to inform a story without regard to facts.”
Habba didn’t immediately reply to requests for comment on the order.
Trump, who’s searching for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination, filed his suit in March against Clinton, who was the 2016 Democratic presidential nominee.
The opposite defendants included the DNC, Wasserman Schultz, Clinton campaign chief John Podesta, the law firm Perkins Coie, the research firm Fusion GPS, the previous FBI officials James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, in addition to Christopher Steele, the ex-British intelligence agent who authored the notorious “Trump-Russia dossier” opposition research report before the election.
The suit claimed that Clinton and other defendants falsified evidence, deceived law-enforcement agencies and engaged in other skulduggery that made “even the events of Watergate pale compared.”
Middlebrooks earlier dismissed the lawsuit against Clinton and all other defendants “with prejudice,” which bars Trump from refiling the grievance.
Middlebrooks’ order is the newest in a series of embarrassing legal setbacks for Trump, which have included the criminal conviction last month in Latest York state court of his Manhattan-based real estate company, The Trump Organization, for a years-long tax avoidance scheme.
Trump and his company also face a significant civil lawsuit by Latest York’s attorney general for an alleged scheme to misstate the valuation of real estate assets for financial gain, and Trump is also being sued by the author E. Jean Carroll, who accuses him of raping her within the mid-Nineteen Nineties in Latest York.
A state grand jury in Georgia recently accomplished gathering evidence and hearing testimony as a part of an ongoing criminal probe into whether Trump illegally tried to overturn the outcomes of the state’s 2020 election, which he lost.
And federal prosecutors are investigating Trump for his bid to reverse his loss within the national election to President Joe Biden, and his taking government documents to his Florida residence when he left office.