Trump must pay ex-aide legal fees

Arbitrator’s $1.3M order is latest chapter in book battle

An arbitrator this week ordered former President Donald Trump's presidential campaign to pay Omarosa Manigault Newman $1.3 million in legal fees over the Trump campaign's unsuccessful lawsuit against her after she wrote a book about her time as a White House adviser.

Trump accused Manigault Newman, who rose to fame on "The Apprentice," a show starring Trump, and eventually became one of his most vocal critics, of violating a nondisclosure agreement for writing her 2018 book, "Unhinged: An Insider Account of the Trump White House," a tell-all of her experience with the Trump administration. Even after arbitrator T. Andrew Brown decided the language in the NDA was too vague to enforce, the two sides continued in their years-long battle to determine who should pay for the legal fees.

The arbitrator with the American Arbitration Association in New York denied the arguments from Trump's lawyers on Tuesday that the former aide was acting in bad faith during and after the lawsuit.

"Respondent was defending herself in a claim which was extensively litigated for more than three years, against an opponent who undoubtedly commanded far greater resources than did Respondent," Brown wrote in the ruling. "This award is in full settlement of all remaining claims not already disposed of in this Arbitration."

John Phillips, Manigault Newman's attorney, claimed in a statement to The Washington Post that the order is "the largest known attorney fee award against a Political Campaign or President we can find." Phillips said he hoped the order would "send a message that weaponized litigation will not be tolerated and empower other lawyers to stand up and fight for the whistleblower and vocal critic against the oppressive machine."

"We look forward to receiving a check and will donate a portion of the proceeds to groups who stand up to the suppression of speech," he said.

A Trump spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment early Thursday.

Manigault Newman signed a nondisclosure agreement when she joined Trump's campaign in 2016. She joined the White House as a senior staffer, but was fired in December 2017 by then-White House Chief of Staff John Kelly.

The next year, Manigault Newman released "Unhinged," which depicted Trump as unqualified, narcissistic and racist. Several anecdotes made national news, including one instance in which Manigault Newman says she walked in on Trump eating a piece of paper in the Oval Office. She also alleged that there are tapes showing Trump using racial slurs, but Manigault Newman has not provided evidence.

Trump's campaign soon filed an arbitration action, arguing that Manigault Newman violated an agreement not to disclose "confidential information." But last year, Brown rejected Trump's argument because "confidential" was too broad a term -- one defined to mean "all information ... that Mr. Trump insists remain private."

On Tuesday, Brown instructed the Trump campaign to pay Manigault Newman more than $1.3 million in legal fees and other expenses. Manigault Newman had initially asked to be awarded more than $3.4 million, but Brown's order of $1.3 million was based on her attorney's billable hours, according to the filing.

"However, the $1.3 million pales in comparison to the $3 to $4 million the Trump Campaign paid its own lawyers in order to suppress speech," Phillips said in a statement. "That's a lot of donations which went to lawyers in the name of politics. It's truly shameful."

Manigault Newman has yet to publicly comment on the case, but took to Twitter on Wednesday to describe the legal battle between her, a first-year law student at Southern University Law Center, and Trump's legal team as "David vs. Goliath."

"Now pardon me as I get back to studying for my Contract Law final exam," she tweeted.

Information for this article was contributed by Donna Cassata and Felicia Sonmez of The Washington Post.

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