Judge throws out Trump's defamation case against Wall Street Journal

President Donald Trump arrives at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Sunday. A judge on Monday dismissed Trump's defamation case against the Wall Street Journal.

President Donald Trump arrives at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Sunday. A judge on Monday dismissed Trump's defamation case against the Wall Street Journal. (Annabelle Gordon, Reuters)


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Estimated read time: 2-3 minutes

KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • A judge dismissed President Donald Trump's defamation suit against the Wall Street Journal.
  • The judge said Trump failed to meet the 'actual malice' standard required for public figures.
  • Trump can re-file by April 27; he sought $10 billion in damages.

NEW YORK — A judge dismissed President Donald Trump's defamation lawsuit against the Wall ​Street Journal over an article asserting his name was on a 2003 birthday greeting for the late financier and sex offender Jeffrey ‌Epstein, but said Trump could re-file the case.

Miami-based U.S. District Judge Darrin Gayles on Monday said Trump did not ⁠meet the "actual malice" standard that public figures ​must clear in defamation. That means ⁠they must prove not only that a public statement about them was false but ‌also that the media ‌outlet or person who made the statement knew or should have ⁠known that it was false.

"This complaint comes nowhere ⁠close to this standard," Gayles wrote. "Quite the opposite."

The judge wrote that the Journal's reporters reached out to Trump for comment beforehand and printed his denial. That allowed readers to decide for themselves what to conclude, cutting against Trump's assertion that the newspaper acted with actual malice, the judge said.

Gayles said Trump ‌could file an amended version of the lawsuit by ​April 27.

Neither Trump's lawyers in the case nor the White House immediately responded to requests for comment.

In his lawsuit, Trump called the alleged birthday greeting "fake" and sought $10 billion for what he called damage to his reputation. News Corp's Dow Jones, the Journal's parent, defended the accuracy of its July 17, 2025, article.

The lawsuit was one of several Trump has filed during his ​presidency against major media outlets over reporting he has characterized as unfair or false. That ‌has led to ‌concern among ⁠Democrats and press freedom advocates that he is seeking to use defamation cases to quell critical coverage.

In asking Gayles to dismiss the case in September, lawyers for the Journal and its billionaire owner Rupert Murdoch wrote that the lawsuit threatened to ‌chill the speech of those ​who publish content that Trump does not ‌like.

Neither News Corp nor Dow ⁠Jones immediately responded ​to requests for comment.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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