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    Home » Donald Trump Mary Trump Settlement , The $100 Million Family Lawsuit That Quietly Ended — and What We Still Don’t Know
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    Donald Trump Mary Trump Settlement , The $100 Million Family Lawsuit That Quietly Ended — and What We Still Don’t Know

    Sierra FosterBy Sierra FosterJune 18, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    A regular status check in a five-year-old lawsuit that most watchers had long assumed would go on forever was set for Tuesday in a Manhattan state court. Rather, Donald and Mary Trump’s attorneys sent a single joint letter informing the judge that they had reached a settlement. Not a word. No press conference. Neither side made a statement. The president’s personal attorneys were asked questions by the White House, but they remained silent. Likewise, Mary Trump’s team was silent. And with that, a $100 million lawsuit brought by a sitting president against his own niece—one of the most blatantly personal court battles of the Trump era—was resolved.

    The Donald Trump Mary Trump settlement brings an end to a litigation that started in 2021, just after Trump resigned from office after losing to Joe Biden. At its core was an 18-month-long New York Times investigation in 2018 that showed Trump had earned at least $413 million from his father Fred Trump’s real estate firm. The Times said that the money arrived through questionable tax tactics. Russell Buettner, David Barstow, and Susanne Craig, the three journalists who produced it, were awarded the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting.

    Donald Trump Mary Trump Settlement
    Donald Trump Mary Trump Settlement

    The research was one of the most significant pieces of financial journalism on any political figure in modern memory because Trump had concealed his tax returns for years. He refuted the inheritance’s description. Legally speaking, however, what mattered was the source of the documents, which turned out to be Mary Trump herself, who subsequently identified herself in her best-selling memoir from 2020, “Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man.”

    In his case, Trump claimed that his niece had broken a secrecy clause in a 2001 settlement pertaining to the estate of Fred Trump Sr., who passed away in 1999. Through that estate process, Mary obtained access to family financial records.

    According to Trump’s complaint, she “smuggled” documents from her lawyer’s office and gave them to the Times, driven by “a personal vendetta” and an attempt to profit from the leak through her book. In addition to Mary, he sued the Times, Craig, Barstow, Buettner, and eventually ABC News. The judge handling the lawsuit dismissed the allegations against the Times and its reporters in 2023 and ordered Trump to reimburse the Times’ attorneys for about $392,639 in legal fees. Mary Trump’s lawsuit was still pending.

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    A 2024 state appeals court decision that found a “substantial” basis for the secrecy claim kept the case alive despite its stormy past, even if it hinted that Trump might only be entitled to minor damages if he ultimately won. That decision was significant because it prevented the lawsuit from being completely dismissed, but it also effectively informed both parties that a $100 million settlement was never feasible. Meanwhile, Mary Trump’s attorneys had been claiming that the lawsuit was a SLAPP, or Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation, in violation of a state law in New York that shields critics from lawsuits intended to silence them. Although it is still unclear which side’s position was stronger and what, if anything, truly changed hands, the conflict between those two legal realities may have forced both parties to the settlement table.

    The terms are still confidential. That is the settlement’s most intriguing feature given the circumstances. Mary Trump now has a permanent legal closure that she did not have yesterday thanks to a dismissal with prejudice, which prevents Trump from suing her on this issue in the future. It’s completely unclear if she made a payment, consented to any continuing limitations, or just left. It’s possible that the settlement was only a mutual agreement to put an end to an expensive and complicated legal process with no real exchange. There might have been terms with actual meaning. The point is probably that neither reading can be proven from the outside.

    Since the release of her book, Mary Trump has been one of her uncle’s most outspoken detractors. She has maintained a podcast, a Substack newsletter, and a consistent public presence with the specific goal of damaging his political credibility. None of that was halted by the lawsuit. From the initial filing in 2021 to the Times dismissal, the appeals decision, the unsuccessful deposition attempt, and now this quiet joint letter in June 2026, it seems that the lawsuit has always been more important as a declaration of intent than as a legal procedure. Trump sends a statement by filing a lawsuit. Another one was despatched when Mary Trump refused to back down. The deal puts an end to the case. Clearly, nothing between them is resolved by it.

    author Donald Trump Mary Trump Settlement political commentator (niece of Donald Trump) psychologist
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    Sierra Foster
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    Born in Kansas City, Sierra Foster writes about politics and serves as Senior Editor at kbsd6.com. She was raised paying attention to this city, not just living in it. Sierra has a strong, deep connection to Kansas City, from the neighborhoods east of Troost to the discussions that take place in the city hall halls. Sierra, who is presently enrolled at the University of Kansas to pursue a degree in Political Science, applies the rigor of academic study to her journalism. She writes about politics in Missouri and Kansas as someone who genuinely cares about what happens to the people in these communities—the policies that impact them, the leaders who represent them, and the civic forces influencing their futures—rather than as an outsider watching from a distance. Her editorial coverage encompasses state-level policy, local government, and the national political currents that permeate bi-state regional life. Whether it's a city council vote or a Senate race, she has a special gift for turning complex policy language into writing that feels urgent, relatable, and worthwhile. Sierra seldom sits still off the page. She claims that playing soccer on a regular basis has sharpened her instincts for political reporting because of the sport's teamwork, strategy, and requirement to read a changing game in real time. She's probably somewhere in Kansas City with her friends when she's not writing or on the pitch, discovering new reasons to adore a city she already knows so well.

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