Dr. Robert Malone on Aug. 19 sued the Washington Post, alleging statements in an article about him were defamatory.
The Jan. 24 article says Malone offered āmisinformationā when he said during a speech that the COVID-19 vaccines āare not workingā against the Omicron virus variant.
As proof, the paper linked to studies by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from January that found a booster shot on top of a primary series was protecting well against severe disease. The studies were published in the agencyās quasi-journal, which has a stated goal of being aligned with the agencyās messaging. The centers have repeatedly promoted COVID-19 vaccination during the pandemic.
Later in the speech, Malone said that the vaccines ādo not prevent Omicron infection, viral replication, or spread to others.ā That quote was not included in the Postās article.
āI said nothing about disease and death at that point in time,ā Malone told The Epoch Times, accusing the Post of taking a āselective misquoteā and using the CDC study to contest an assertion he never made.
The Post did not respond to a request for comment while an automatic message from the articleās author, Timothy Bella, said heās on parental leave until December. Bella provided no evidence in the article that the vaccines were protecting against Omicron infection.
An interview request from Bella to Malone before the article was written, reviewed by The Epoch Times, shows Bella telling Malone that āI have respect for you and your body of workā and that he hoped to āshadow youā during Maloneās time in Washington, where the doctor delivered the speech at a protest against COVID-19 vaccine mandates.
Ten Statements
Ten of the statements in the article were defamatory, including the statement that Maloneās claims have been ādiscredited;ā that Malone during the speech ārepeated the falsehoods that have garnered him legions of followers;ā and that Maloneās claims are ānot only wrong, but also dangerous,ā according toĀ the 19-page suit, filed in federal court in Charlottesville, Virginia.
ByĀ Zachary Stieber








