The lawsuit no one saw coming just landed in the middle of the White House — and this time, it’s not aimed at President Trump. It’s his wife, First Lady Melania Trump, who now finds herself at the center of an unfolding legal and media storm tied to one of the most controversial names in modern memory: Jeffrey Epstein.
On Tuesday, author Michael Wolff filed a lawsuit against Melania in New York State court, claiming she attempted to shut down his speech and block public inquiry into the Trump family’s ties to Epstein. But it’s not just the lawsuit grabbing attention. It’s what Wolff says the suit will unlock — subpoena power, testimony under oath, and what he calls a chance to pull back a “dark curtain” on connections that have so far remained untouched by courts or Congress.
This could be the first time a First Lady has ever been pulled directly into a civil court fight like this. And the timing, the players, and the stakes are all pushing this beyond gossip or tabloid fuel. The questions raised are legally explosive and politically loaded. Especially as Trump, now in his second term as president, has tried to distance himself from Epstein ever since the financier’s death behind bars in 2019.
Wolff says his team will push to depose not just Melania, but Donald Trump himself. He also hinted that others, including Epstein’s longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell, could be called to testify. The core of Wolff’s claim is that Melania and her legal team tried to silence him after he made comments linking her to Epstein and accusing her of hiding details about her early relationship with Donald Trump — details that Wolff says were connected to Epstein’s infamous private jet, the “Lolita Express.”
Melania responded by threatening a billion-dollar lawsuit, calling Wolff’s statements “false,” “defamatory,” and “lewd.” Her attorney sent a letter demanding immediate retractions, saying the accusations had spread globally and damaged her reputation. That’s when Wolff fired back — not with an apology, but with a countersuit.
🚨HOLY SHIT: Biographer Michael Wolff says Melania threatened to sue him for a BILLION dollars over claims about her and Epstein…
But he HIT BACK!
He has filed for declaratory judgment – which allows him to ask her and Trump about Epstein UNDER OATH!!pic.twitter.com/xIOxiEgorr
— CALL TO ACTIVISM (@CalltoActivism) October 23, 2025
What Wolff’s really after, according to his statements, is access. Access to records. Access to witnesses. And access to what he calls the hidden story behind the Trump-Epstein relationship. On his podcast Inside Trump’s Head, Wolff told his co-host that the lawsuit could become a legal back door into the Epstein files that many — including critics of both political parties — have long tried and failed to access.
He claims to have interviewed Epstein years ago while researching one of his earlier books and says their conversations included details about the depth of Epstein and Trump’s friendship. According to Wolff, Epstein described it as close, even intimate, touching every part of their lives — personal, social, and business.
Wolff says this lawsuit is his way of holding powerful people accountable. He’s using New York’s anti-SLAPP law — legislation designed to prevent the rich and influential from using lawsuits to silence journalists and critics. His legal argument is that Melania’s threats were designed to scare him, block future reporting, and suppress free speech about topics the public has a right to know.
The legal team representing Melania claims that Wolff’s statements are baseless and malicious, and they pushed The Daily Beast — which initially published Wolff’s claims — to retract a headline and podcast segment referencing the First Lady. The media outlet did so, issuing a public apology and referencing Melania’s own memoir as her definitive life story.
The background of Melania and Donald Trump’s relationship, as she tells it, is a chance meeting during 1998 Fashion Week at the Kit Kat Klub in New York. They married in 2005. That story — polished, public, and widely repeated — now stands in sharp contrast to the one Wolff is attempting to uncover through the courts.
This case is still in its early stages, but already, it’s testing the boundaries of what’s fair game when it comes to a sitting First Lady. It’s also opening the door to legal moves that could bring the Epstein scandal back into the headlines, this time with the full force of court orders and sworn depositions behind it.
The White House has not yet issued a detailed statement. But according to Wolff, someone inside already admitted, “No one saw this coming.”
With both sides digging in and the legal process just beginning, the bigger question now is what might come next — and who else could get pulled in. Because if subpoenas start flying and depositions begin, this could stretch far beyond Melania, raising questions about a past the Trump administration would likely prefer remain in the shadows.


