Alina Habba
Alina Habba | |
---|---|
Born | Alina Saad Habba March 25, 1984 Summit, New Jersey, U.S. |
Education | Lehigh University (BA) Widener University (JD) |
Occupation | Lawyer |
Political party | Republican |
Spouses | Matthew Eyet
(m. 2011; div. 2019)Gregg Reuben (m. 2020) |
Children | 3 |
Alina Saad Habba (born March 25, 1984) is an American lawyer and managing partner of Habba, Madaio & Associates, a law firm based in Bedminster, New Jersey, with an office in New York City.[1][2] Since 2021, Habba has been a legal spokesperson for former U.S. president Donald Trump, and a senior advisor for MAGA, Inc., Trump's Super PAC.[3][4]
In 2024, she was tipped as Trump's frontrunner for White House Press Secretary.[5]
Early life and education
Habba and her two siblings were born in Summit, New Jersey. Their parents were Chaldean Catholics who emigrated from Iraq to the United States in the early 1980s to escape persecution in their home country.[6][7] Her father, Saad F. Habba, is a gastroenterologist.[8] Habba graduated from Kent Place School in 2002. She attended Lehigh University, graduating in 2005 with a bachelor's degree in political science.[8][9]
Between 2005 and 2007, Habba worked in the fashion industry in accessories production and marketing with executives at Marc Jacobs. According to her, though she enjoyed the fashion industry, she decided to attend law school for financial reasons.[8] She obtained a Juris Doctor from the Widener University Commonwealth Law School in 2010.[10][11]
Law career
After finishing law school, Habba was a law clerk to Eugene J. Codey Jr., then Presiding Judge of the Civil Superior Court in Essex County, New Jersey, from 2010 to 2011.[12][13] Habba began private practice in September 2011, when she joined as an associate at Tompkins, McGuire, Wachenfeld & Barry, LLP, where she worked from September 2011 to February 2013. From February 2013 to March 2020, she was an equity partner and the Managing Partner of Sandelands Eyet LLP, a seven-attorney firm formed by her then-husband in 2013.[14][15][16] In March 2020, Habba left to start her own firm. The firm, Habba, Madaio and Associates LLP, employs five people.[8] Along with the firm's Bedminster, New Jersey office, Habba has an office in Manhattan.[17][18]
Habba is licensed to practice law in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut.[12][19] She has served as lead counsel for three cases, including a federal class action suit against a New Jersey nursing home accused of various negligent acts and consumer fraud violations.[17] Habba has also held the position of general counsel for her second husband's parking garage company.[20] She has represented clients in various legal cases including a man suing a nursing home in New Jersey,[21] and a student seeking a refund for college tuition after University of Bridgeport moved classes to an online format.[22][23]
In July 2021, Habba represented Siggy Flicker, a former member of The Real Housewives of New Jersey who alleged that Facebook had disabled her account for wishing Melania Trump a happy birthday.[20][24][25] Habba wrote a letter to Facebook, which Facebook appeared to ignore.[26] Also in July 2021, Habba represented Caesar DePaço, a vitamin supplement entrepreneur, in a federal court case where she filed a lawsuit against Portuguese journalists for revealing his close connections to the far-right Chega party in Portugal.[27][28]
Work as Trump's attorney
2021
In 2019, Habba joined the Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in New Jersey, an eight-minute drive from her law firm.[8][27][29] There, she and Donald Trump became acquainted.[8][29]
In a lawsuit filed in December 2023 aimed at referring Habba to the New Jersey Office of Attorney Ethics, a Trump National Golf Club Bedminster employee alleged that in the second half of 2021, Habba induced the employee into entering an illegal non-disclosure agreement when the employee intended to accuse a club manager of workplace sexual misconduct (New Jersey banned non-disclosure agreements for workplace harassment).[30] The employee alleged that Habba tried to befriend her, encouraged the firing of the employee's lawyer, provided the non-disclosure agreement with penalties for disclosure, and warned the employee not to publicize the workplace sexual misconduct accusation; Habba responded in 2023: "I always conduct myself ethically and acted no differently in this circumstance."[30] The club settled the lawsuit in March 2024, with the settlement agreement including a line stating that both "parties agree that Alina Habba is not a party to this release".[31] Habba settled the lawsuit in August 2024.[32][33]
Habba had never done legal work for Trump when, in September 2021, he hired her as part of his legal team, replacing several well-established lawyers who had worked for Trump for many years but had withdrawn their services, including: Marc Kasowitz, Charles Harder, Joanna Hendon, Marc Saroff Mukasey, Jay Sekulow, and Lawrence S. Rosen.[20][27][17][22][34] Quickly after her hiring, Habba filed a $100 million lawsuit on Trump's behalf against The New York Times, three Times reporters, and Trump's niece, Mary L. Trump.[17] Her lawsuit was dismissed by the judge for "fail[ing] as a matter of constitutional law".[35] Habba also worked on Trump's behalf when he was sued for defamation by Summer Zervos. Trump had called Zervos a "liar" in 2017, after she accused him of kissing her and groping her, without her consent, when she was a contestant on Trump's reality TV show, The Apprentice. In October 2021, Habba filed a Trump countersuit against Zervos, claiming she was trying to stifle Trump's right to free speech. Shortly thereafter, in November 2021, Zervos discontinued the lawsuit.[36]
Since 2022
Habba represented Trump in a legal case where he was being investigated for falsely representing the value of his assets on various Statements of Net Worth that banks required him to file annually to ensure that Trump had sufficient funds to repay their loans.[37] She unsuccessfully appealed a court order requiring Trump and his children to give sworn testimony about the valuations they signed for when filing those returns. New York's Attorney General, Letitia James, personally questioned Trump on August 10, 2022. Habba was present during the deposition and led the defense. Trump refused to answer any questions during the four-hour deposition, pleading the United States Constitution's Fifth Amendment over 450 times.[38][39]
In February 2022, Habba unsuccessfully attempted to prevent Trump from being required to give a sworn statement in an investigation led by New York Attorney General James. On July 19, 2022, Habba was sued by a former employee, Na'Syia Drayton, who claimed Habba repeatedly sang inappropriate gangster rap and hip hop music in the office while using the N word, made racist comments, and referred to New York's attorney general Letitia James as "that Black bitch".[40][41] The lawsuit was settled out of court in September 2022.[42] Habba had called James a "sick person" in January of the same year.[43] In September 2022, U.S. District Court Judge Donald M. Middlebrooks dismissed a 2022 suit brought by Habba for Trump against Hillary Clinton, John Podesta, Jake Sullivan, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and numerous other public officials, private citizens, and private entities that Trump sought damages against for alleged conduct surrounding the 2016 presidential election.[44] Dismissing all of Trump's claims, Middlebrooks concluded that Trump's complaint was not just inadequate in any respect, but in all respects, and expressly reserved the right to consider sanctions against Trump's attorneys at a later date.[44][45]
Two months after issuing that decision, Middlebrooks sanctioned the Trump lawyers, including Habba, Michael T. Madaio, Peter Ticktin, and Jamie Alan Sasson. They were assessed $50,000 penalties, plus $16,000 to cover the legal fees paid by one of the defendants.[46] Later in January 2023, Middlebrooks ordered Trump, Habba, and her firm to pay $938,000 in legal costs for 31 defendants, including the Democratic National Committee, Hillary Clinton, and former FBI director James Comey.[47][48] The judge wrote about the lawsuit brought by Habba: "No reasonable lawyer would have filed it. Intended for a political purpose, none of the counts of the amended complaint stated a cognizable legal claim."[49] In February 2023, the Order was pending appeal before the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.[50] Speaking at a December 2023 Turning Point USA conference, Habba asserted no one had heard of the case, falsely alleging the "fake news" had not reported it. She added that "me and President Trump got sanctioned a million dollars for going against Crooked Hillary" and "there were probably 50 lawyers representing all of the radical left", although the suit had named 31 defendants.[51][52]
Habba represented Trump in a federal civil lawsuit filed by his former attorney, Michael Cohen. Cohen had been released from prison into home confinement during the Coronavirus pandemic. He was re-imprisoned after promoting his book criticizing Trump and released again 16 days later after obtaining an injunction.[53][54] Cohen later sued Trump and former Justice Department employees for damages. Habba filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit with prejudice, and the lower court ruled against Cohen. In January 2024, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld the lower court's decision.[54] Habba defended Trump's private interests in the Carroll v. Trump case, when she argued before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit that the Federal Tort Claims Act applies to a former U.S. president. The Second Circuit, in a decision dated September 27, 2022, agreed that Trump was an employee of the United States at the time and that the District Court must consider the applicability of the Federal Tort Claims Act to Trump's comments in that light.[55] The Second Circuit decision did not address the merits of Trump's claim that the comments constituted executive action as the President of the United States.[55] In December 2023, the appeals court upheld the federal judge's ruling rejecting Trump's claim of presidential immunity.[56]
In 2022, Trump's Save America political action committee paid Habba's firm almost $2 million in legal fees.[57] In January 2024, Habba predicted that Associate Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, "who the president fought for, who the president went through hell to get into place", would "step up" to support Trump's case in Trump v. Anderson, which will decide whether Trump is disqualified from ballot access per the Fourteenth Amendment. Habba disclaimed meaning that justices like Kavanaugh would rule for Trump on account of being "pro-Trump", claiming instead that they would "because they're pro-law, because they’re pro-fairness".[58] Habba served as lead attorney for the E. Jean Carroll v. Donald J. Trump trial that began on January 16, 2024.[59] Over the course of three days, presiding federal judge Lewis Kaplan repeatedly reprimanded Habba for her methods of cross-examining Carroll and introducing evidence.[60] A jury awarded Carroll $83.3 million in damages against Trump on January 26, 2024.[61]
She spoke on the final night of the 2024 Republican National Convention leading up to the introduction of Trump.[62]
In August 2024, she slammed Adam Kinzinger for speaking out against Trump during the 2024 Democratic National Convention, and told him to "sit the hell down".[63]
Personal life
Habba has described herself as "very religious". She has identified as a Catholic.[8][64][65] Habba was married to Matthew Eyet from 2011 to 2019.[66] She married Gregg Reuben in 2020;[67] they live in Bernardsville, New Jersey.[8] Reuben is a businessman in the "parking lot management industry".[68] Habba has three children.[1]
See also
- Federal prosecution of Donald Trump
- Legal teams involved in the Mueller special counsel investigation
- New York investigations of the Trump Organization
References
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External links
- 1984 births
- 21st-century American lawyers
- 21st-century American women lawyers
- American people of Iraqi descent
- Catholics from New Jersey
- Donald Trump attorneys
- Kent Place School alumni
- Lehigh University alumni
- Living people
- New Jersey lawyers
- New York (state) lawyers
- People associated with the 2024 United States presidential election
- People from Bernardsville, New Jersey
- People from Summit, New Jersey
- Widener University Commonwealth Law School alumni
- Iraqi Catholics