A U.S. District Court judge has dismissed a defamation lawsuit brought by Ray Epps, the man who encouraged protestors to storm the Capitol on January 6 and admitted to having “orchestrated” the violence that day, against Fox News. In the lawsuit, first filed in July of 2023, Epps claims that the corporate news network spun a “fantastical story” about him acting as an undercover agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) tasked with fomenting violence among the protestors at the Capitol. Epps names former Fox host Tucker Carlson and several others as having specifically defamed him.
Languishing in a Delaware U.S. District Court for over a year, Epps’s defamation lawsuit was dismissed late Wednesday with minimal explanation from Jennifer L. Hall. According to Hall, Epps’s complaint was dismissed due to “failure to state a claim.” However, the filing by the January 6 attendee and suspected provocateur claims the allegations that he acted as an agent of federal law enforcement are “lies [that] have destroyed Ray’s and Robyn’s lives.”
The National Pulse previously reported this past January that Epps was sentenced to just one year of probation and a $500 fine despite numerous cellular phone videos and other documentation exposing him as being a key instigator in the riots, which saw protestors enter the U.S. Capitol building. Others arrested and charged for similar actions received lengthy prison sentences, with President Joe Biden’s Department of Justice (DOJ) using a financial crimes statute to enhance the penalties. This legal maneuver was later struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Prior to the events of January 6, Epps was filmed saying, “We need to go into the Capitol,” and later texted his nephew, confessing that he had “orchestrated it,” referring to the riots.