Blake Lively seeks $8 million in attorney fees from Justin Baldoni
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Blake Lively has formally asked a federal judge to award her $8 million in attorneys' fees and costs, stemming from her defence against a now-dismissed $400 million defamation suit filed by actor-director Justin Baldoni. The motion, filed on Monday in Los Angeles, marks the latest chapter in one of Hollywood's most closely watched legal disputes.
Background: How the Legal Battle Unfolded
The dispute traces back to allegations Lively made against Baldoni — her co-star and director on 'It Ends With Us' — of sexual harassment on set, as well as claims that he orchestrated an online whisper campaign against her after she raised those concerns. Baldoni and his production company, Wayfarer Studios, denied the allegations and countered by filing the $400 million defamation suit against Lively and her husband, actor Ryan Reynolds, alleging they weaponised false harassment claims to seize creative control of the film.
That defamation suit was dismissed, with the presiding judge ruling that Lively's allegations were protected by litigation privilege. Lively, in turn, dropped her own lawsuit against Baldoni, Wayfarer, and others on the eve of trial in May. No money changed hands in the settlement, but the terms allowed Lively to continue pursuing her motion for attorneys' fees.
The Fee Motion: What Lively Is Claiming
In the motion filed Monday night, Lively's legal team stated that they billed her $7.5 million in fees — at rates as high as $2,187 per hour — while defending against Baldoni's defamation claim. An additional $540,000 was spent on associated legal costs, bringing the total request to approximately $8 million.
Her attorneys argued that granting the fee award would serve a broader deterrent purpose, discouraging retaliatory defamation suits against those who come forward with harassment allegations. 'This gross abuse of the legal system was not meant to win in court, its aim was to retaliate against the actress by falsely branding her a liar, intimidating witnesses and the media, and discouraging others from speaking out,' her lawyers wrote in the filing.
The Legal Basis: California's 2023 Anti-Retaliation Law
Judge Lewis Liman earlier this month ruled that Lively is entitled to attorneys' fees under a 2023 California law specifically designed to protect sexual abuse accusers from retaliatory defamation suits. Notably, the judge simultaneously denied her separate request for damages — meaning the fee motion remains the primary financial remedy still in play.
The law represents a legislative effort to close a gap that critics say allowed well-resourced defendants to weaponise the courts against accusers, even after losing on the merits.
What Comes Next
The judge has yet to rule on the $8 million fee request. The outcome could set a significant precedent for how California's 2023 anti-retaliation statute is applied in high-profile harassment cases going forward. Legal observers will be watching whether the awarded amount aligns with, falls short of, or exceeds what Lively's team has claimed.