A former Trump supporter who got caught up in a January 6 conspiracy theory sues Faux Noise, lol

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A former Trump supporter who got caught up in a January 6 conspiracy theory sues Fox News

Associated Press, author

by Associated Press for Daily Kos
Thursday, July 13, 2023 at 5:11:24p PDT
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/20...ry-6-conspiracy-theory-sues-Fox-News#comments

The Fox News logo is displayed outside Fox News Headquarters in New York, April 12, 2023. A former Donald Trump supporter who became the center of a conspiracy theory about Jan. 6, 2021, filed a defamation lawsuit against Fox News on Wednesday, July 12, saying the network made him a scapegoat for the Capitol insurrection. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File)
A former Donald Trump supporter who became the center of a conspiracy theory about Jan. 6, 2021, filed a defamation lawsuit against Fox News, saying the network made him a scapegoat for the U.S. Capitol insurrection.
Raymond Epps, a former Marine who said he was forced from his Arizona home because of threats, is asking for unspecified damages and a jury trial.

Ahhh, I didn't realize this guy was being represented by a Dominion lawyer-you remember DOMINION, DON"T you, Republi-KUNTS? The guy who BUTT fucked Faux to the tune of more than 3/4 of billion bucks???? Suddenly, I like this guy's chance a LOT more, lol.

“Get the checkbook out”: Trump voter hires Dominion lawyer to sue Fox News for “destroying” his life​

816
Igor Derysh
Thu, July 13, 2023 at 6:01 AM PDT


Ray EppsKent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Ray EppsKent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
A Trump supporter at the heart of a Jan. 6 conspiracy theory pushed by MAGA allies filed a defamation lawsuit accusing Fox News of a years-long smear campaign.
Ray Epps, who attended pro-Trump rallies in D.C. on Jan. 5 and 6 and was seen on a video encouraging people to enter the Capitol but was not initially charged with entering the building himself, sued the network after former Fox News host Tucker Carlson suggested that he was a government informant — which the FBI and Epps have denied, according to The Washington Post.
Epps claims in the suit that the Justice Department informed him in May it "would seek to charge him criminally," which he attributed to "the relentless attacks by Fox and Mr. Carlson and the resulting political pressure."
"Fox, and particularly Mr. Carlson, commenced a years-long campaign spreading falsehoods about Epps," the lawsuit alleges, claiming that the falsehoods "destroyed" the lives of Epps and his wife, forcing them from their home.
Related
Legal scholar: Report suggests DOJ about to indict Trump's "whole criminal gang" for conspiracy
The lawsuit, which was filed in Delaware, alleges that Fox and Carlson knew Epps was almost definitely not a federal agent but chose to disregard that information.
"Fox engaged in purposeful avoidance of the truth, intentionally ignoring information and evidence that directly contradicted Fox's outlandish lies about Epps," the complaint says. "Fox refused to retract, correct, or apologize for its demonstrably false and defamatory accusations against Epps well after Fox knew definitively that they were false, providing yet additional circumstantial evidence of actual malice. Fox thus broadcast its lies about Epps with a high degree of awareness of probable falsity."
Michael Teter, an attorney for Epps, sent a letter to the network in March demanding it retract its claims but did not receive a response.
"This lawsuit marks another moment of accountability for Fox News," Teter said in a statement. "For years, Fox News and Mr. Carlson created and amplified conspiracy theories about Ray that lacked any foundation in fact. Their lies exposed Ray and his wife, Robyn, to harassment, intimidation, and abuse – voicemails warning Ray to sleep with one eye open, bullet casings found on their property, death threats sent to their home."
Related
Armed Jan. 6 rioter arrested near Obama home on same day Trump posted alleged address: prosecutors
Epps gained attention in right-wing circles after videos recorded on Jan. 5 showed him urging Trump supporters to "go into the Capitol."
Epps in the lawsuit claimed that he believed parts of the Capitol would be open to the public and that Trump supporters could legally enter them. Epps' photo briefly appeared on the FBI website seeking information about various protesters but was removed after he was interviewed by agents in July 2021.
The disappearance of the photo and lack of charges prompted a series of right-wing conspiracy theories alleging he was planted by federal agents to provoke otherwise peaceful Trump supporters into violence.
Carlson in January 2022 described Epps as a person who "helped stage-manage the insurrection."
During another show earlier this year, Carlson focused on the fact that Epps hadn't been charged.
"Why is that? Well, let's just stop lying," Carlson said. "At this point, it's pretty obvious why that is."
During a July 2022 episode, Carlson guest Darren Beattie, a former White House speechwriter, called Epps "the smoking gun of the entire fed-surrection" without any pushback.
Fox News host Laura Ingraham also discussed Epps in an October 2021 segment that featured a graphic asking "Were Federal Assets Involved in Capitol Riot?"
Related
Convicted Oathkeeper leader warns Trump: "You're going to be found guilty if you try to go to trial"
Some Republican members of Congress have also embraced the conspiracy theory.
"I think somebody that worked that hard to get people to go in the Capitol, why aren't they rotting away in the D.C. jail?" Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., said during a live stream last summer.
Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Texas, during a hearing with FBI Director Chris Wray on Wednesday, brought up Epps and accused the FBI of "protecting this guy."
Wray refuted Republican claims that the FBI was involved in the attack on the Capitol.
"This notion that somehow the violence at the Capitol on Jan. 6 was part of some operation by FBI sources and agents is ludicrous and is a disservice to our brave, hard-working, dedicated men and women," he said.
Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.
The lawsuit says that Epps and his wife were "loyal Fox viewers and fans of Tucker Carlson and other Fox personalities," and "were persuaded by the lies broadcast by Fox" that the election had been stolen. After Carlson's segments, the lawsuit says, he and his wife were deluged with threats and harassing messages, forcing them to flee from Arizona, selling the property at a low price.
"After destroying Epps's reputation and livelihood, Fox will move on to its next story, while Ray and Robyn live in a 350-square foot RV and face harassment and fear true harm," the complaint says.
The lawsuit comes on the heels of a nearly $800 million settlement between Fox News and Dominion Voting Systems over false claims the network aired about the election. Media Matters' Matthew Gertz flagged that Brian Farnan, the lead Delaware counsel for Dominion, is listed as one of Epps' lawyers in the lawsuit.

University of Utah Law Prof. RonNell Andersen Jones told the Post that Epps can show that he was harmed by the false claims but "the key question here is whether he was defamed, and that is going to require some careful situating of his facts within the framework that the law recognizes."
Though Carlson never directly said Epps was a federal agent, "when the whole story added together leads to a defamatory meaning, it can be found to be defamatory," Andersen Jones said. "This will almost certainly be the underlying theory of some of Epps's case."
MSNBC host Joe Scarborough on Thursday said Epps was one of numerous "ordinary people" whose lives had been ruined by Trump's election lies, also citing Georgia poll workers attacked by TrumpWorld and predicting the network would be found liable for defamation.
"Let me say that again, not a public figure, not used to this," he said. "The death threats, the security problems they had, I'm telling you, if I'm representing Fox News, I'm saying, 'Get your checkbook out and start writing.' They're going to have to do it again, Tucker Carlson is probably going to do it again because this guy isn't a public figure. It's not going to be hard for him to prove defamation."


















He filed his lawsuit in Superior Court in Delaware on Monday, the same court where Dominion Voting Systems sued Fox for lies broadcast following the 2020 presidential election, and on Wednesday it was transferred to federal court. Shortly before a trial was to begin this spring, Fox agreed to pay Dominion $787 million to settle the charges.
Fox did not respond to texts, phone calls and emails seeking comment on Epps' lawsuit.
The suit also says the Justice Department told Epps in May that he faces criminal charges for his actions on Jan. 6, and blames that on “the relentless attacks by Fox and Mr. Carlson and the resulting political pressure."
Epps, who had traveled to Washington for the Jan. 6 demonstration, was falsely accused by Fox of being a government agent who was whipping up trouble that would be blamed on Trump supporters, the lawsuit claims.
“In the aftermath of the events of January 6th, Fox News searched for a scapegoat to blame other than Donald Trump or the Republican Party,” the lawsuit says. “Eventually, they turned on one of their own.”
Although the lawsuit mentions Fox's Laura Ingraham and Will Cain, former Fox host Tucker Carlson is cited as the leader in promoting the theory. Epps was featured in more than two dozen segments on Carlson's prime-time show, the lawsuit said. Fox News fired Carlson shortly after the Dominion settlement was announced.
Carlson “was bluntly telling his viewers that it was a fact that Epps was a government informant," the lawsuit says. "And they believed him.”
Carlson ignored evidence that contradicted his theory, including Epps' testimony before a congressional committee investigating the insurrection that he was not working for the government, and videos provided by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy that showed Epps' efforts to try to defuse the situation, the lawsuit says.
Carlson is not named as a defendant in the lawsuit. Epps' lawyer, Michael Teter, noted that Carlson “was an employee of Fox when he lied about Ray, and Fox broadcast those defamatory falsehoods."
"Fox is therefore fully liable for Mr. Carlson's statements,” Teter said.
The former Fox star did not respond to a text message seeking comment.
Also Wednesday, FBI Director Christopher Wray, in an appearance before the House Judiciary Committee, denied having any knowledge of Epps being a “secret government agent.”
“I will say this notion that somehow the violence at the Capitol on January 6 was part of some operation orchestrated by FBI sources and agents is ludicrous,” Wray told lawmakers. He refused to say, however, how many of the people who entered the Capitol and surrounding area on Jan. 6 were either FBI employees or people with whom the FBI had made contact.
Meanwhile, Epps claims in his lawsuit that, as a result of the alleged defamatory statements made by Fox, he and his wife have been the target of harassment and death threats from Trump supporters, forced to sell the Arizona ranch where they ran a successful wedding venue business, and now face financial ruin. According to the lawsuit, Epps and his wife are now living in a recreational vehicle in Utah.
The lawsuit displays threatening messages Epps says he received, including one that reads, “Epps, sleep with one eye open."
In his defamation suit, Epps claims that on Jan. 5, the day before the storming of the Capitol, he tried to defuse a tense situation between Trump supporters and police, confronting an agitator referred to in the lawsuit as “Baked Alaska.” That man, later identified as far-right social media personality Anthime Gionet, was sentenced earlier this year to 60 days in prison.
Epps says that in an effort to persuade Trump supporters that he was on their side, he told them, “I’m probably gonna go to jail for this. Tomorrow, we need to go into the Capitol. Peacefully.”
Epps claims in the lawsuit that he was “shocked and disappointed” when demonstrators started climbing the scaffolding and walls around the Capitol on Jan. 6.
“He had concerns about the election and believed it was his duty as a citizen to participate in the protest. But he did not believe violence was appropriate,” the lawsuit claims.

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A former Trump supporter who got caught up in a January 6 conspiracy theory sues Fox News

Associated Press, author

by Associated Press for Daily Kos
Thursday, July 13, 2023 at 5:11:24p PDT
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/20...ry-6-conspiracy-theory-sues-Fox-News#comments

The Fox News logo is displayed outside Fox News Headquarters in New York, April 12, 2023. A former Donald Trump supporter who became the center of a conspiracy theory about Jan. 6, 2021, filed a defamation lawsuit against Fox News on Wednesday, July 12, saying the network made him a scapegoat for the Capitol insurrection. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File)
A former Donald Trump supporter who became the center of a conspiracy theory about Jan. 6, 2021, filed a defamation lawsuit against Fox News, saying the network made him a scapegoat for the U.S. Capitol insurrection.
Raymond Epps, a former Marine who said he was forced from his Arizona home because of threats, is asking for unspecified damages and a jury trial.

Ahhh, I didn't realize this guy was being represented by a Dominion lawyer-you remember DOMINION, DON"T you, Republi-KUNTS? The guy who BUTT fucked Faux to the tune of more than 3/4 of billion bucks???? Suddenly, I like this guy's chance a LOT more, lol.

“Get the checkbook out”: Trump voter hires Dominion lawyer to sue Fox News for “destroying” his life​

816
Igor Derysh
Thu, July 13, 2023 at 6:01 AM PDT


Ray EppsKent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Ray EppsKent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
A Trump supporter at the heart of a Jan. 6 conspiracy theory pushed by MAGA allies filed a defamation lawsuit accusing Fox News of a years-long smear campaign.
Ray Epps, who attended pro-Trump rallies in D.C. on Jan. 5 and 6 and was seen on a video encouraging people to enter the Capitol but was not initially charged with entering the building himself, sued the network after former Fox News host Tucker Carlson suggested that he was a government informant — which the FBI and Epps have denied, according to The Washington Post.
Epps claims in the suit that the Justice Department informed him in May it "would seek to charge him criminally," which he attributed to "the relentless attacks by Fox and Mr. Carlson and the resulting political pressure."
"Fox, and particularly Mr. Carlson, commenced a years-long campaign spreading falsehoods about Epps," the lawsuit alleges, claiming that the falsehoods "destroyed" the lives of Epps and his wife, forcing them from their home.
Related
Legal scholar: Report suggests DOJ about to indict Trump's "whole criminal gang" for conspiracy
The lawsuit, which was filed in Delaware, alleges that Fox and Carlson knew Epps was almost definitely not a federal agent but chose to disregard that information.
"Fox engaged in purposeful avoidance of the truth, intentionally ignoring information and evidence that directly contradicted Fox's outlandish lies about Epps," the complaint says. "Fox refused to retract, correct, or apologize for its demonstrably false and defamatory accusations against Epps well after Fox knew definitively that they were false, providing yet additional circumstantial evidence of actual malice. Fox thus broadcast its lies about Epps with a high degree of awareness of probable falsity."
Michael Teter, an attorney for Epps, sent a letter to the network in March demanding it retract its claims but did not receive a response.
"This lawsuit marks another moment of accountability for Fox News," Teter said in a statement. "For years, Fox News and Mr. Carlson created and amplified conspiracy theories about Ray that lacked any foundation in fact. Their lies exposed Ray and his wife, Robyn, to harassment, intimidation, and abuse – voicemails warning Ray to sleep with one eye open, bullet casings found on their property, death threats sent to their home."
Related
Armed Jan. 6 rioter arrested near Obama home on same day Trump posted alleged address: prosecutors
Epps gained attention in right-wing circles after videos recorded on Jan. 5 showed him urging Trump supporters to "go into the Capitol."
Epps in the lawsuit claimed that he believed parts of the Capitol would be open to the public and that Trump supporters could legally enter them. Epps' photo briefly appeared on the FBI website seeking information about various protesters but was removed after he was interviewed by agents in July 2021.
The disappearance of the photo and lack of charges prompted a series of right-wing conspiracy theories alleging he was planted by federal agents to provoke otherwise peaceful Trump supporters into violence.
Carlson in January 2022 described Epps as a person who "helped stage-manage the insurrection."
During another show earlier this year, Carlson focused on the fact that Epps hadn't been charged.
"Why is that? Well, let's just stop lying," Carlson said. "At this point, it's pretty obvious why that is."
During a July 2022 episode, Carlson guest Darren Beattie, a former White House speechwriter, called Epps "the smoking gun of the entire fed-surrection" without any pushback.
Fox News host Laura Ingraham also discussed Epps in an October 2021 segment that featured a graphic asking "Were Federal Assets Involved in Capitol Riot?"
Related
Convicted Oathkeeper leader warns Trump: "You're going to be found guilty if you try to go to trial"
Some Republican members of Congress have also embraced the conspiracy theory.
"I think somebody that worked that hard to get people to go in the Capitol, why aren't they rotting away in the D.C. jail?" Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., said during a live stream last summer.
Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Texas, during a hearing with FBI Director Chris Wray on Wednesday, brought up Epps and accused the FBI of "protecting this guy."
Wray refuted Republican claims that the FBI was involved in the attack on the Capitol.
"This notion that somehow the violence at the Capitol on Jan. 6 was part of some operation by FBI sources and agents is ludicrous and is a disservice to our brave, hard-working, dedicated men and women," he said.
Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.
The lawsuit says that Epps and his wife were "loyal Fox viewers and fans of Tucker Carlson and other Fox personalities," and "were persuaded by the lies broadcast by Fox" that the election had been stolen. After Carlson's segments, the lawsuit says, he and his wife were deluged with threats and harassing messages, forcing them to flee from Arizona, selling the property at a low price.
"After destroying Epps's reputation and livelihood, Fox will move on to its next story, while Ray and Robyn live in a 350-square foot RV and face harassment and fear true harm," the complaint says.
The lawsuit comes on the heels of a nearly $800 million settlement between Fox News and Dominion Voting Systems over false claims the network aired about the election. Media Matters' Matthew Gertz flagged that Brian Farnan, the lead Delaware counsel for Dominion, is listed as one of Epps' lawyers in the lawsuit.

University of Utah Law Prof. RonNell Andersen Jones told the Post that Epps can show that he was harmed by the false claims but "the key question here is whether he was defamed, and that is going to require some careful situating of his facts within the framework that the law recognizes."
Though Carlson never directly said Epps was a federal agent, "when the whole story added together leads to a defamatory meaning, it can be found to be defamatory," Andersen Jones said. "This will almost certainly be the underlying theory of some of Epps's case."
MSNBC host Joe Scarborough on Thursday said Epps was one of numerous "ordinary people" whose lives had been ruined by Trump's election lies, also citing Georgia poll workers attacked by TrumpWorld and predicting the network would be found liable for defamation.
"Let me say that again, not a public figure, not used to this," he said. "The death threats, the security problems they had, I'm telling you, if I'm representing Fox News, I'm saying, 'Get your checkbook out and start writing.' They're going to have to do it again, Tucker Carlson is probably going to do it again because this guy isn't a public figure. It's not going to be hard for him to prove defamation."


















He filed his lawsuit in Superior Court in Delaware on Monday, the same court where Dominion Voting Systems sued Fox for lies broadcast following the 2020 presidential election, and on Wednesday it was transferred to federal court. Shortly before a trial was to begin this spring, Fox agreed to pay Dominion $787 million to settle the charges.
Fox did not respond to texts, phone calls and emails seeking comment on Epps' lawsuit.
The suit also says the Justice Department told Epps in May that he faces criminal charges for his actions on Jan. 6, and blames that on “the relentless attacks by Fox and Mr. Carlson and the resulting political pressure."
Epps, who had traveled to Washington for the Jan. 6 demonstration, was falsely accused by Fox of being a government agent who was whipping up trouble that would be blamed on Trump supporters, the lawsuit claims.
“In the aftermath of the events of January 6th, Fox News searched for a scapegoat to blame other than Donald Trump or the Republican Party,” the lawsuit says. “Eventually, they turned on one of their own.”
Although the lawsuit mentions Fox's Laura Ingraham and Will Cain, former Fox host Tucker Carlson is cited as the leader in promoting the theory. Epps was featured in more than two dozen segments on Carlson's prime-time show, the lawsuit said. Fox News fired Carlson shortly after the Dominion settlement was announced.
Carlson “was bluntly telling his viewers that it was a fact that Epps was a government informant," the lawsuit says. "And they believed him.”
Carlson ignored evidence that contradicted his theory, including Epps' testimony before a congressional committee investigating the insurrection that he was not working for the government, and videos provided by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy that showed Epps' efforts to try to defuse the situation, the lawsuit says.
Carlson is not named as a defendant in the lawsuit. Epps' lawyer, Michael Teter, noted that Carlson “was an employee of Fox when he lied about Ray, and Fox broadcast those defamatory falsehoods."
"Fox is therefore fully liable for Mr. Carlson's statements,” Teter said.
The former Fox star did not respond to a text message seeking comment.
Also Wednesday, FBI Director Christopher Wray, in an appearance before the House Judiciary Committee, denied having any knowledge of Epps being a “secret government agent.”
“I will say this notion that somehow the violence at the Capitol on January 6 was part of some operation orchestrated by FBI sources and agents is ludicrous,” Wray told lawmakers. He refused to say, however, how many of the people who entered the Capitol and surrounding area on Jan. 6 were either FBI employees or people with whom the FBI had made contact.
Meanwhile, Epps claims in his lawsuit that, as a result of the alleged defamatory statements made by Fox, he and his wife have been the target of harassment and death threats from Trump supporters, forced to sell the Arizona ranch where they ran a successful wedding venue business, and now face financial ruin. According to the lawsuit, Epps and his wife are now living in a recreational vehicle in Utah.
The lawsuit displays threatening messages Epps says he received, including one that reads, “Epps, sleep with one eye open."
In his defamation suit, Epps claims that on Jan. 5, the day before the storming of the Capitol, he tried to defuse a tense situation between Trump supporters and police, confronting an agitator referred to in the lawsuit as “Baked Alaska.” That man, later identified as far-right social media personality Anthime Gionet, was sentenced earlier this year to 60 days in prison.
Epps says that in an effort to persuade Trump supporters that he was on their side, he told them, “I’m probably gonna go to jail for this. Tomorrow, we need to go into the Capitol. Peacefully.”
Epps claims in the lawsuit that he was “shocked and disappointed” when demonstrators started climbing the scaffolding and walls around the Capitol on Jan. 6.
“He had concerns about the election and believed it was his duty as a citizen to participate in the protest. But he did not believe violence was appropriate,” the lawsuit claims.

6 TAGS


Conspiracy theory . Lol !

More like …

FED FED FED !

The only Jan 6 protestor the SHAM committee protected .

All you need to know you gullible knuckle dragger .

 

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