‘Both reasonable and proportionate’: Trump ordered to pay $800,000 in legal fees over failed Steele dossier lawsuit

Donald Trump, on the left; Christopher Steele, on the right.

Left: President Donald Trump speaks to reporters before signing an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Monday, March 31, 2025 (Pool via AP). Right: File photo dated 7/3/2017 of Christopher Steele, the former MI6 officer who wrote a report on Trump’s alleged links to Russia (Press Association via AP Images).

A British judge sitting in London on Thursday ordered President Donald Trump to pay some $800,000 to a private intelligence company owned by former MI6 spy Christopher Steele over a data protection lawsuit which was dismissed by a different judge last year.

On Feb. 1, 2024, High Court of Justice King’s Bench Judge Karen Steyn ruled the 45th and 47th president “has no reasonable grounds for bringing a claim for compensation or damages” and entered judgment in the intelligence company’s favor — largely on procedural grounds.

Two separate accountings followed.

On March 7, 2024, Steyn ordered Trump to pay initial legal fees of 290,000 pounds sterling — roughly equivalent to just north of $384,000, according to the exchange rates at the time. But, the judge warned, Trump would be responsible for the cost “of the entire claim.”

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