Trump’s long-stalled suit against Bob Woodward dismissed 
Share and Follow


A federal judge on Friday dismissed President Trump’s lawsuit against famed Watergate journalist Bob Woodward for publishing audio tapes of interviews he conducted with Trump for a 2020 book. 

U.S. District Judge Paul Gardephe’s ruling comes a year and a half after Woodward and his publisher asked the judge to dismiss the suit. Trump’s attorneys had long complained about the lack of progress, repeatedly urging Gardephe to rule. 

An appointee of former President George W. Bush, Gardephe rejected Trump’s arguments that he is a joint author of the tapes and ruled that even if he wasn’t, the interview responses are protected copyright. 

“There is almost no support in the case law for the notion that an interviewee has a copyright interest in his responses to interview questions, and such a conclusion would run counter to animating principles of the Copyright Act,” the judge pushed back. 

The judge also dismissed Trump’s state law claims, ruling those were preempted by federal copyright law. 

“In another biased action by a New York Court, this wrongful decision was issued without even affording President Trump the basic due process of a hearing. We will continue to ensure that those who commit wrongdoing against President Trump and all Americans are held accountable,” a spokesman for Trump’s legal team said in a statement. 

Trump sued Woodward in January 2023 after giving him 19 interviews for his book, “Rage.”  

The lawsuit conceded Trump gave the interviews and permitted Woodward to record them, but the complaint claimed the journalist and his publisher were not authorized to sell the audio recordings themselves.   

The $49 million lawsuit named Woodward, Simon & Schuster and its then-parent company, Paramount Global, as defendants. Paramount later sold the publishing giant to a private investment firm. 

The Hill has reached out to Paramount for comment. 

“We’re very pleased the Court agreed with us and dismissed the case,” Simon & Schuster said in a statement.

Trump’s attorney had repeatedly expressed frustration with the judge for mulling the dismissal motion for months without taking action. 

Following Trump’s election, his attorneys kept pressing the judge to move ahead, but in December, the judge said he was “at work” on it and declined to expedite it further. 

Updated at 8:54 p.m. EDT

Share and Follow
You May Also Like

Trump Hints at Release of 10 Additional Hamas Hostages During Friday Night Dinner at White House

Trump made the comment during a dinner with lawmakers at the White…

Dad named Andy Byron bombarded with cruel messages after being mistaken for tech CEO at centre of Coldplay kiss cam saga

A MAN with the same name as “cheating” CEO Andy Byron had…

Homeowner thrown in jail after run-in with HOA over breaking rules with condition of grass and using her own driveway

A HOMEOWNER has spoken out after she was jailed without bond over…

From wife’s telling move to MERCH, everything you need to know about CEO ‘affair’ scandal that’s broken the internet

IT was a seemingly light-hearted moment at a Coldplay concert that resulted…

Tech CEO Andy Byron caught in ‘cheating scandal’ was ‘toxic boss’ and ‘colleagues are laughing their a** off’

CAMERA-SHY Andy Byron was a toxic boss, an ex-colleague of the Astronomer…

North Korea’s new ‘Benidorm’ resort mysteriously BANS foreign tourists days after opening – following years of delays

NORTH Korea has mysteriously banned foreign tourists from its shiny new seaside…

Painful footage shows Chris Martin’s cringing reaction at CEO caught cuddling HR chief at Coldplay gig

PAINFUL footage has emerged showing Chris Martin cringing at the sight of…

Moment fire tears through primary school as pupils are evacuated across playing field on last day of term

THIS is the horrifying moment a fire tore through a primary school…