Former President Donald Trump is asking permission to defend himself in a Laramie civil court case that challenges his fitness to appear on the stateâs election ballot.Â
Trump on Tuesday filed a motion to intervene in retired Laramie attorney Tim Newcombâs Nov. 1 challenge in Albany County District Court, where Newcomb is asking a judge to block Secretary of State Chuck Gray from ever allowing Trump or U.S. Sen. Cynthia Lummis on the stateâs ballots again. Â
Other than a 2018 action where Trump was named as a defendant in a manâs wrongful termination lawsuit against the Army, this appears to be the former presidentâs only direct involvement in a Wyoming state case. Â
âA Frivolous Claimâ
He pulled no punches Tuesday in his proposed motion to dismiss Newcombâs lawsuit.Â
Trump called the lawsuit to get him off the ballot âa frivolous claim based on a hodgepodge of irrelevant âfacts,ââ and an âincoherent, sprawling morassâ containing âhundreds of alleged factoids, quotes and sentence fragments that range across a wide expanse of irrelevant topics with little or no narrative thread to show how they relate to anything, let alone Plaintiffâs purposed claim.âÂ
Heâs asking Albany County District Court Judge Misha Westby to deem Newcombâs lawsuit frivolous. Â
Trumpâs motion also claims that Newcombâs complaint is too early, or ânot ripe,â that the amendment to the U.S. Constitution that Newcomb invokes is not a matter for state courts, and that the criteria to serve as president are a âpoliticalâ rather than a judicial question. Â
Trump filed his proposed motion to dismiss the case, and his motion to intervene in it, through Cheyenne attorney Caleb Wilkins of Coal Creek Law. Â
Having heard from Wilkins, Newcomb informed the court in a Monday filing that he doesnât oppose Trumpâs intervention. Â
Newcomb wrote that the Wyoming Republican Party is planning to intervene as well, and he wonât oppose that either. Â
Bantering With Chuck GrayÂ
Secretary of State Chuck Gray answered Newcombâs lawsuit in a Dec. 7 motion to dismiss the case, arguing that Newcomb lacks standing to lodge a complaint and failed to state an injustice that Westby is able to correct. Â
Newcomb replied to Grayâs motion Monday. Â
He countered Grayâs arguments, saying the remedy he seeks is for Westby to declare that âthe U.S. and Wyoming constitutions bar, from ever again holding office, those who swore an oath to the Constitution, only to adhere to its enemies.â Â
Newcomb in his original complaint accused Trump of inciting an insurrection Jan. 6, 2021, and Lummis of comforting the nationâs enemies by refusing to count Pennsylvaniaâs electoral vote due to concerns over the integrity of the 2020 election. Â
âI Am GrootâÂ
Both Trump and Gray in their separate filings criticized Newcombâs unique complaint structure, which features numerous exterior links, including one to a video featuring Marvel superhero Grootâs powers, accompanied by the quote âI am Groot.âÂ
âThis disjointed litany is reflective of much of the complaint, which combines unsupported, conclusory statements loosely relating to President Trump with bizarre, largely incoherent non-sequiturs (sic),â wrote Wilkins, on Trumpâs behalf. Â
Newcomb told Cowboy State Daily in November that he sees the Constitutionâs 14th Amendment as Groot, since the hero rescued everyone from disaster by surrounding them with his protective limbs. Â
In response to Grayâs critique, Newcomb asked Westby âto reserve judgement until a meaningful opportunity to be heard might allow (Newcomb) to demonstrate both relevance and admissibilityâ of the exterior links. Â
Newcomb also claimed in his filing that Grayâs motion to dismiss demonstrates âanimosity to the 14th Amendment being applied in Wyoming.â He rebuked Gray for advocating for Wyomingâs ban on nearly all abortions, and he questioned whether the Wyoming Attorney General can uphold her integrity after advocating for Gray in court. Â
âThe court should deny Defendant Grayâs motion to dismiss,â Newcombâs response concludes.Â
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InterventionÂ
As for whether Westby will allow Trump to intervene in the case, Trump argues in his filing that justice and the law demand it. Â
âPresident Trumpâs rights and actions are the core issues in this case,â reads the filing. âIf this court were to deny President Trumpâs application to intervene, it would impede his ability to protect his interests.âÂ
A person must satisfy four factors to have a right to intervene in a case: that he has a significant interest in the case; the lawsuitâs outcome will have some impact on his interest; the existing parties in the lawsuit wonât represent his interests adequately; and his motion to join the case should be timely. Â
If the judge determines that Trump doesnât have a right to join the case, he could still join it via âpermissive intervention,â meaning the judge could let him into the case on her discretion. Thatâs appropriate when the application is timely, the intervenorâs claims have something to do with the legal question of the case, and his joining wouldnât prejudice anyone or delay the case. Â
Also, Gray
Gray told Cowboy State Daily he will "continue to fight to keep President Trump on the ballot."
He called the lawsuit a weaponization of the 14th Amendment "by the radical left" and said it undermines the state's election process.
"We also acknowledged in our filing that President Trump and Senator Lummis should be allowed to intervene as well," Gray added.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




