Politics

Humbled Trump Admits Defeat in $100m Legal Vendetta Against Niece

CRYING UNCLE

The president had accused her of being part of an “insidious plot” against him.

Donald Trump, Mary Trump
Getty Images

Donald Trump has dropped his $100 million lawsuit against his niece for allegedly handing confidential records to reporters probing his tax affairs.

The 80-year-old president had sued Mary Trump, 61, along with the New York Times and several of the newspaper’s reporters in September 2021, accusing them of an “insidious plot” to pry loose his private financial records that was motivated by “a personal vendetta and their desire to gain fame.”

President Trump is now backing off in the case against his niece, with both sides saying in a joint letter to the court that they are “pleased to report they have reached a settlement,” according to NOTUS. A status hearing is due Tuesday.

U.S. President Donald Trump  receives a tour of Chateau de Versailles from President of France Emmanuel Macron ahead of a dinner in Versailles, France, June 17, 2026.
Trump had sued his niece over her role in an expose on his tax filings. Anna Moneymaker/via REUTERS

Both sides asked the judge to toss the case with prejudice, a step that would bar the president from ever reviving the claim. Neither side has disclosed the financial terms, with a formal dismissal expected in the coming weeks.

The climbdown comes after Trump already lost his case against the Times and its reporters. A New York judge, Justice Robert Reed, in 2023 threw out the case—in which Trump alleged the journalists had “relentlessly sought out” his niece to make her “smuggle” the records to the paper.

Reed ruled their pursuit of the niece sat “at the very core of protected First Amendment activity.” Reed also ordered Trump to pick up the defendants’ legal bills. The journalists behind the story had already claimed a Pulitzer in 2019 for their dig into the family’s finances.

The deal caps a run of Trump strikes at those who exposed his tax dealings. In January, he hit the IRS and the Treasury Department with a $10 billion suit, then dropped it in favor of a contested $1.776 billion “anti-weaponization” fund.

Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche speaks during a press conference at the Justice Department, in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 11, 2026.
The president tried to use the wider case to have his attorney general, Todd Blanche, set up a slush fund at the Justice Department for his political allies. Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

Clinton appointee Leonie Brinkema, a federal judge in Virginia, moved on Friday to freeze that fund indefinitely.

The Daily Beast has contacted the White House for comment.

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