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Federal Judge Drops Huge Ruling In Melania Trump Case – She’s Been Told She Must… (see more)

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Judge Tosses Wolff Suit, Clearing Path For $1B Melania Claim – NEWS TODAY
A major legal battle involving First Lady Melania Trump and journalist-author Michael Wolff has taken a decisive turn after a federal judge dismissed Wolff’s preemptive lawsuit. The ruling, which effectively ends Wolff’s attempt to block a potential defamation case, has been widely interpreted as clearing the procedural path for Melania Trump’s reported $1 billion legal claim to proceed under normal court channels.

The decision adds another layer to an already intense and highly publicized legal conflict involving allegations, free speech arguments, and accusations tied to one of the most controversial figures in modern American political journalism.

At the center of the dispute are Wolff’s public statements referencing Melania Trump in connection with financier Jeffrey Epstein, which her legal team has strongly condemned as false, defamatory, and damaging to her reputation.

The judge’s ruling did not determine the truth of any allegations. Instead, it focused strictly on legal procedure—specifically whether Wolff was allowed to preemptively sue to block a case that had not yet been formally filed.

The answer, according to the court, was no.

The Court’s Decision: “That Is Not How Federal Courts Work”
The case was dismissed by U.S. District Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil, who ruled that Wolff’s lawsuit was improperly structured and legally premature.

Wolff had attempted to use a legal strategy known as a “preemptive declaratory judgment,” asking the court to declare in advance that any potential defamation suit brought by Melania Trump would fail.

But the judge rejected that approach outright.

In her ruling, she described the case as “contorted” and emphasized that federal courts do not exist to resolve hypothetical disputes before they are formally filed.

As summarized in the decision, the court stated that Wolff’s filing was essentially asking the judiciary to rule on a lawsuit that had not yet been properly initiated.

“That is not how the federal courts work,” the judge wrote in substance, making clear that Wolff’s attempt to secure early legal protection could not stand.

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