WASHINGTON — Former U.S. ambassador to the European Union, Gordon Sondland, filed a lawsuit Monday in federal court against former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the U.S. government, seeking $1.8 million in legal fees he accumulated during the first House impeachment investigation against then-President Donald Trump.

The suit says that Pompeo failed to follow through on a “legally binding promise” in which the federal government would reimburse Sondland for the legal fees he incurred during the 2019 House impeachment investigation against Trump.

Sondland was denied legal counsel from the government, the complaint filed in the federal court for the District of Columbia says, and he therefore had to put together his own team to prepare him for “highly charged testimony.” The ambassador was “forced to retain private counsel and he used the services of private counsel in reliance on Pompeo’s promise of reimbursement.”

“Pompeo assured Ambassador Sondland that the State Department would reimburse him for all of his legal costs; and through the fall of 2019, Pompeo and his staff continued to reaffirm his promise,” the lawsuit says.

Sondland incurred nearly $1.8 million in attorney’s fees and costs, says the complaint, which demands that either the U.S. government or Pompeo himself repays him. His lawyers say that the State Department told Sondland he would only be reimbursed just over $86,000 even though they say Sondland “had been promised by Pompeo that he would receive full reimbursement from the Government.”

Once Pompeo learned of Sondland’s testimony, which the former ambassador’s lawyers described as “entirely candid and truthful” about Trump’s quid pro quo with the Ukrainian leader, “Pompeo reneged on his promise.” The suit notes that Sondland was fired from the Trump administration a few months after his testimony and a few days after the former president was acquitted by the Senate.

“As a result, the Government has withheld reimbursement of Ambassador Sondland’s attorneys’ fees and costs in willful breach of the October 2019 agreement between Pompeo, the Government and Ambassador Sondland,” the suit says.

The complaint says that Sondland “demands a jury trial” on the issues outlined in the suit.

There was no immediate response Monday from Pompeo after NBC News reached out to his representative for comment.

Sondland testified before the House Intelligence Committee in November 2019 that he and other Trump administration officials followed Trump’s orders to coordinate U.S. policy regarding Ukraine with Rudy Giuliani, who was Trump’s personal lawyer at the time. Sondland testified that he had “no reason to doubt” that during the infamous July phone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, Trump discussed having Ukraine launch investigations into the Bidens and the 2016 presidential election.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

You May Also Like

Nielsen Asks to Take a Break From Key Media-Industry Seal of Approval

Nielsen Holdings PLC has asked the Media Rating Council, the media industry’s…

Four years after Hurricane Maria, coffee trees planted in its aftermath sprout hope

Verónica Noriega is not a big coffee drinker, but that didn’t stop…

U.S. Jobless Claims Fall Sharply to New Pandemic Low

Filings for jobless benefits last week fell and reached a fresh pandemic…

Body camera video shows arrest of suspect in Tupac Shakur killing

A man charged in the killing of rapper Tupac Shakur was calm…