LIV Golf's Patrick Reed demands public apology from CNN's Jake Tapper and Bob Costas, threatens $450M lawsuit

Reed's attorney's reportedly gave CNN five days to issue a public apology and retract the broadcast

Nine-time PGA Tour winner Patrick Reed has threatened CNN with a $450 million lawsuit over defamatory comments made on air by anchor Jake Tapper and veteran sportscaster Bob Costas which Reed’s lawyers alleged were "designed to incite ridicule, hatred and violence" against Reed and other LIV Golf players. 

A letter from Reed’s attorneys, Klayman’s Law Group, obtained on Tuesday by Golf Monthly, demands a public apology within five days over comments made by Tapper and Costas during a segment last week about LIV Golf.  

Patrick Reed, left, and Rory McIlroy talk during practice at the Tour Championship tournament on Sept. 1, 2021, at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

"Late last week, CNN and Jake Tapper, along with CNN’s sports reporter Bob Costas, aired a highly defamatory piece titled ‘The Court Fight Between PGA Tour and LIV Golf Escalates as the Saudi-backed LIV Tries to Avoid Handing Over Information,’" the letter read. 

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"This widely viewed broadcast in Florida, the nation and internationally, was not only defamatory but also designed to incite ridicule, hatred and violence against LIV Golf players, such as my client Patrick Reed, a world champion professional golfer, by publishing that he takes ‘blood money’ from the Saudi Public Investment Fund, in the wake of the 9/11 tragedy twenty-two (22) years ago."

Reed and several other top PGA Tour members made the switch to LIV Golf this summer despite The Tour’s threats to suspend players who did so. Reed joined in early June and competed alongside some former members, including Bryson DeChambeau and Dustin Johnson at the Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club for the first LIV Golf Invitational in Portland. 

Dustin Johnson celebrates making his putt to win during the team championship round of the LIV Golf Invitational - Miami on Oct. 30, 2022, in Doral, Florida. (Charles Laberge/LIV Golf via Getty Images)

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Reed finished in third place and walked away with $1.275 million in prize money. 

"Mr. Reed is not a taker of "blood money," as he simply plays on a golf tour financed by the Saudi Public Investment Fund, which also owns large shares in a myriad of American companies such as Disney, Boeing, J.P. Morgan Chase, Amazon, Blackrock Inc., Microsoft and many others," the letter continued. 

"Indeed, many sponsors of the PGA Tour benefit from this investment fund, and PGA Tour players have recently been granted releases by the PGA Tour to play in the Saudi International Golf Tournament in Jeddah, on February 2-5, 2023, also financed by the Saudi Public Investment Fund. Aramco, the oil company owned by the government of Saudi Arabia, also sponsors and finances a number of LPGA events. Are you accusing female professional golfers of also taking ‘blood money?’"

Patrick Reed looks for a potential shot during the President's Cup golf tournament at Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Melbourne on Dec. 12, 2019. (AP Photo/Andy Brownbill)

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"This is a frivolous lawsuit, whose aim is to chill free speech and intimidate journalists from covering important stories about the Saudi government and the Saudi-backed LIV Golf tournament," CNN said in a statement to Fox News Digital. "CNN will aggressively defend its reporting, which did not even mention the plaintiff in its coverage."

Reed previously filed a $750 million defamation lawsuit against Golf Channel and longtime commentator Brandel Chamblee, claiming that both parties "conspired" with the PGA Tour and commissioner Jay Monahan

He later filed an $820 million amended lawsuit, according to a separate report from Golf Monthly.

Fox News' Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report.

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