Donald Trump has launched a high‑stakes legal battle against media mogul Rupert Murdoch and Dow Jones & Company, seeking ten billion dollars in damages over an alleged lewd letter tied to Jeffrey Epstein. The lawsuit centers on a Wall Street Journal front‑page exposé claiming Mr. Trump had written a body‑sketch birthday greeting to Epstein, included in a published collection of letters from friends. Trump has vehemently denied the authenticity of the letter, calling it “fake news,” and swiftly responded by suing Murdoch’s media empire.
Sources report that the Journal has since doubled down, publishing follow‑ups revealing that former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi had alerted Trump months earlier that his name appeared in Epstein’s sealed files—though not explicitly linked to wrongdoing. The rapid media escalation prompted Trump to demand the deposition of Rupert Murdoch—citing the media owner’s advanced age and listing health issues—to ensure testimony while he is still alive and “coherent.”
Trump has repeatedly denied any involvement in the letter, quipping, “I don’t do drawings of women.” Though the Journal has described the image as a black‑pen outline of a naked woman surrounding a typed message signed in Sharpie, the letter itself has not been made publicly available or independently verified. The lack of evidence has fueled speculation that the Journal may have relied on leaks from unreleased Justice Department materials.
Murdoch’s media network remains vast: including the Wall Street Journal and New York Post, Fox Broadcasting, Fox News, numerous tabloids such as The Sun and The Times, and publisher HarperCollins. Despite relinquishing several entertainment assets to Disney in recent years, Murdoch continues to wield control over the core conservative media outlets that helped elevate Trump politically.
Historically, Murdoch and Trump have maintained an ambivalent relationship. News Corp’s newspapers and Fox News shifted from skepticism in 2016 to endorsement, reversed again post-2020 election, and backed Trump once more in 2024. Insiders describe their partnership as pragmatic and transactional, rather than ideologically unified.
Legal experts suggest Trump’s lawsuit may be aimed less at winning in court than at shifting the public narrative and painting the Journal as an enemy of the people. By aligning himself with the provocateur posture he often adopts against mainstream media, Trump positions the suit as a symbolic victory for his base—even if the case stretches beyond usual libel norms.
The litigation comes in the shadow of another media–Trump clash: the Dominion Voting Systems lawsuit settled by Fox News in 2023 for nearly eight hundred million dollars. That settlement highlighted the legal risk Trump-connected media brands face when pushing unverified claims. Trump appears to be betting this time on symbolic effect rather than precedent.
As preparations begin, all eyes are on whether Murdoch will appear for deposition—a move stirring speculation about how far this confrontation could go. Insiders affirm Murdoch has the legal experience and stamina, but caution that the high-profile clash carries major reputational risk.
With both sides entrenched and no sign of compromise, a courtroom showdown between Trump and Murdoch looks increasingly inevitable—and potentially explosive.