After Being Dropped by His Lawyers, Milo Yiannopoulos Has Decided to Represent Himself in Court

After Being Dropped by His Lawyers, Milo Yiannopoulos Has Decided to Represent Himself in Court

Be first to like this.

After a fail-tastic 2017, Milo Yiannopoulos’ new year is already off to an embarrassing start. The toxic alt-right douchebag was just dropped by his legal counsel who were representing him in his $10 million dollar lawsuit against the publishing company Simon and Schuster. Now that the Milo Yiannopoulos lawyers have moved on, the misogynist troll will represent himself in court. That should go well.

Yiannopoulos is suing Simon and Schuster for breach of contract. He claims that they withdrew their offer for his book, Dangerous, after an interview surfaced in which Yiannopoulos expressed gratitude to the priest who molested him as a 13-year-old boy. The interview got Yiannopoulos booted as a speaker from the Conservative Political Action Conference and removed as a contributor from the far-right website Breitbart, limiting his book’s potential appeal and marketability.

However, Simon and Schuster claim that they withdrew his book because it was horribly written. At the end of 2017, one web sleuth published the notes that a Simon and Schuster editor wrote onto his manuscript and the comments were hilariously revealing. Some of comments said “UGH” or “DELETE THIS.” Others said, “This is not the time or place for another black-dick joke,” and (our personal favorite), “This entire paragraph is just repeating Fake News. There was NO blood. NO semen and there was NO Satanism. Delete.”

 

What happened with the Milo Yiannopoulos lawyers (or should we say “ex-lawyers”)

Stephen Meister and Jeffrey Weingart, two lawyers with the Manhattan firm Meister Seelig & Fein, formally filed a document in the New York State Supreme Court announcing their withdrawal as Yiannopoulos’ counsel. The lawyers cited “irreconcilable differences” claiming that Yiannopoulos insisted on “pursuing actions” that created a “fundamental disagreement” over how to handle his case. They didn’t elaborate, citing client confidentiality.

Yiannopoulos however has said that the “fundamental disagreement” was over his lawyers’ refusal to challenge Simon and Schuster’s desire to keep all court documents for “attorney’s eyes only.” He now plans to represent himself so that he can see the documents and reveal “Simon and Schuster’s perfidy (deceitfulness) in court.”

It has been said that, “He who represents himself has a fool for a client.” Yiannopoulos may be that fool.

Related Stories

New York's Hottest Party, Trish, Celebrates Its One-Year Anniversary Tonight
In the Early 1950s, U.S. Feds Tried to Kill the First Gay Magazine
10 Trans YouTubers You Should Be Watching
The Next Time You Crave Chicken, Remember That Chick-fil-A Is Still Very Much Anti-Gay
Quantcast