Stormy Daniels says Michael Avenatti filed Trump defamation suit against her wishes
Pornographic film actress Stephanie Clifford moved Wednesday to distance herself from lawyer Michael Avenatti, saying he had filed a defamation suit against President Donald Trump against her wishes and sometimes spoke on her behalf without her consent.
In a statement provided to The Daily Beast, Clifford, who is known professionally as Stormy Daniels, alleged that Avenatti had also repeatedly ignored her requests for accounting information about a legal defense and safety fund that has drawn support from donors; in the meantime, she said, Avenatti launched another crowdfunding campaign without her knowledge, attributing words to her that she never wrote or said.
“I haven’t decided yet what to do about legal representation moving forward,” Clifford said in her statement to The Daily Beast. “Michael has been a great advocate in many ways. I’m tremendously grateful to him for aggressively representing me in my fight to regain my voice. But in other ways Michael has not treated me with the respect and deference an attorney should show to a client.”
“I don’t want to hurt Michael, but it’s time to set the record straight,” her statement continued. “The truth has always been my greatest ally.”
In his own statement responding to Clifford’s new allegations, Avenatti said Wednesday: “I am and have always been Stormy’s biggest champion.”
“I have personally sacrificed an enormous amount of money, time and energy toward assisting her because I believe in her,” the statement said. “I have always been an open book with Stormy as to all aspects of her cases and she knows that. You need only look back at her numerous prior interviews where she states we talk and communicate multiple times every day about her cases.”
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“The retention agreement Stormy signed back in February provided that she would pay me $100 and that any and all other monies raised via a legal fund would go toward my legal fees and costs,” the statement continued. “Instead, the vast majority of the money raised has gone toward her security expenses and similar other expenses. The most recent campaign was simply a refresh of the prior campaign, designed to help defray some of Stormy’s expenses.”
In a tweet Tuesday morning, Avenatti linked to a crowdfunding site, while noting that “a key hearing” in one of Clifford’s cases against Trump was coming up. The campaign appeared to have been taken down tonight, however.
Clifford’s criticism came during a turbulent time for Avenatti, who was arrested in Los Angeles this month on suspicion of domestic violence. In a statement provided to New York magazine and others in the hours after the arrest, Clifford asked people to “reserve judgment” but made clear she would find another lawyer if the allegations proved to be true.
Then, in court documents filed days later, more details about the alleged episode became public. As part of a request for a temporary restraining order against Avenatti, which a Los Angeles Superior Court judge granted, the 24-year-old woman who filed the domestic violence complaint that led to Avenatti’s arrest alleged that he had cursed at her and dragged her out of bed and across the floor after a dispute about money.
Avenatti has strongly denied the allegations. Last week, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office announced that the matter, which was initially being investigated as an alleged felony, had been referred to the city attorney’s office for “misdemeanor filing consideration.” A spokesman for the city attorney’s office said Wednesday that the case “is currently under review.”
Avenatti has positioned himself as a crusading critic of Trump and a fierce advocate of women’s rights. He has also toyed with a run for president, using Twitter to broadcast his voice and challenge politicians and news personalities to debates.
He has filed three suits against the president and his former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, this year, including the one that Clifford said Wednesday had been filed against her wishes. That defamation lawsuit was dismissed last month by a federal judge who ordered Clifford to pay Trump’s legal fees. Avenatti has since filed an appeal.
A second lawsuit seeks to void a 2016 nondisclosure agreement that prevented Clifford from discussing what she said was an affair she had with Trump in 2006. The third suit — which Avenatti appeared to reference in his crowdfunding tweet Tuesday — claims that Clifford’s previous lawyer, Keith Davidson, conspired with Cohen and Trump to keep Clifford quiet.
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