Trump campaign decries lawsuit claiming
Russian link to hacked emails
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[May 19, 2018]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A lawyer for U.S.
President Donald Trump's campaign on Thursday rejected as "wild
speculation" allegations by three Americans that it conspired with
Russians to disseminate their private information from hacked emails to
deter them from supporting Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election.
A hearing in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia was the
first time Trump's campaign had defended itself in open court against
allegations it coordinated with Russians, the subject of investigation
by U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
The campaign is facing at least two lawsuits over allegations it
conspired with Russians against Democratic Party candidate Clinton,
something Trump has repeatedly denied. Moscow denies the conclusions of
U.S. intelligence agencies that it interfered in the election using
cyber attacks and disinformation.
The most prominent of the lawsuits was filed earlier this year by the
Democratic National Committee (DNC), whose emails were hacked. It also
named Russia and Wikileaks as defendants.
Thursday's hearing involved a private lawsuit against the Trump campaign
and Trump's longtime adviser Roger Stone by three Americans whose social
security numbers and other sensitive data were exposed after hacked DNC
emails were released by Wikileaks.
Judge Ellen Huvelle seemed skeptical about whether she might allow the
lawsuit to proceed. She questioned the description of the purported
conspiracy and whether the people who sued had shown they had been
harmed by the release of their private information.
"They can conspire until doomsday, but the guy has to have injuries,"
Huvelle said of one of the plaintiffs.
Two are represented by the non-profit Protect Democracy Project and were
donors to the Democratic Party, while a third worked for the DNC.
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President Donald Trump arrives to visit first lady Melania Trump at
Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where she is
recovering from kidney surgery, in Bethesda, Maryland, U.S., May 16,
2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The judge peppered the attorneys for the Protect Democracy Project
on whether the case should even be filed in Washington because none
of the plaintiffs live in the district and the campaign was based in
New York.
Trump campaign lawyer Michael Carvin told the judge that the three
Democrats in the lawsuit "can't give a single fact to support this
wild speculation." Wikileaks made the decision to reveal their
social security numbers, Carvin said.
"They don't allege a single meeting with Wikileaks anywhere. So how
in the world can they plausibly allege in a manner that survives ...
that we were responsible as part of this unnamed vendetta against
high-dollar donors to release the social security numbers? It
doesn't' make any sense," Carvin said.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; editing by Grant McCool)
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