KEY POINTS
  • Twitter's policy carve-out for world leaders is facing another test with President Donald Trump's latest tweets resurrecting baseless claims about MSNBC host Joe Scarborough.
  • Trump's tweets revived a baseless theory that Scarborough, a former Republican congressman from Florida, was allegedly involved in the death of his former staffer. A medical examiner had found no evidence of foul play.
  • The staffer's widower wrote to Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey asking him to remove Trump's tweets on the matter, testing the company's policies that create exceptions to its rules for world leaders.

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Twitter's policy carve-out for world leaders is facing another test with President Donald Trump's latest tweets resurrecting baseless claims that MSNBC host Joe Scarborough should be investigated for the death of his former staffer.

Earlier this month, Trump tweeted questions about when an investigation would be opened into the "Cold Case" of "Psycho Joe Scarborough." The unfounded accusation refers to the death in 2001 of Lori Klausutis, who was working for Scarborough when he was a Republican congressman for Florida. At the time, the medical examiner concluded Klausutis, 28, had fainted due to an undiagnosed heart condition and hit her head on the way down, finding no evidence of foul play. Scarborough was in Washington, D.C., when Klausutis died in his district office in Fort Walton Beach, Florida.

In this article