Victoria Coates denies being ‘Anonymous’ author after report that White House investigation points to her

President Trump’s former deputy national security adviser Victoria Coates could take legal action in response to new allegations that she is the “Anonymous” author behind a tell-all book.

Coates denied she wrote the book and a New York Times op-ed that were critical of Trump after RealClearInvestigations published a story last week claiming a monthslong White House investigation identified Coates as “Anonymous.” The story cited “people familiar with the internal probe.”

Coates declined to comment on the record for the story, but she issued a denial Sunday.

“The allegations published in Real Clear Investigations are utterly false. I am not Anonymous, and I do not know who Anonymous is,” Coates said in a statement.

Cleta Mitchell, Coates’s lawyer, claimed the news outlet “peddled false statements citing only anonymous sources, despite on-the-record denials from Javelin LLC (the literary agent for Anonymous), the White House, and three well-respected members of the Trump Administration — and now Dr. Coates as well.”

“We are continuing to explore all available legal options,” Mitchell said in a statement.

Coates was reassigned to the Energy Department in February, at which time a senior administration official told Axios: “The White House leadership rejects rumors that have circulated recently and does not put any stock in the suggestion that Victoria Coates is the author of A Warning or the related op-ed in the New York Times.”

The White House said Coates’s move to another role in the administration had nothing to do with the speculation that she was the author.

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