Melania Trump Will Not Be Anymore Joking Around; Barron Is Not Autistic, 100% Normal Kid; Youtuber Going to Jail? Revealed
The Hollywood Reporter reported that Melania Trump is now threatening to file a case against the Youtuber, who theorized that his son Barron has autism.
The video was posted on Youtube showing that Barron has autism. But it is 100% false. According to TMZ, Melania got a high-powered attorney named Charles Harder to make a letter, to sue the Youtuber and hopes to delete the said video. The video got viral after Rosie O'Donnell shared the video on Twitter which she captioned, "Barron Trump Autistic?"
"It was incredibly irresponsible of me to diagnose Barron Trump using a selection of misleading videos. I falsely correlated him trying to stay awake and occasionally doing quirky things, with him suffering from autism," the Youtuber quoted.
The Youtuber apologized and confessed that the video that he posted was "false, defamatory, and malicious," and his intention was not to make fun or bully Barron Trump. Trump told the media that anyone who would make a false statement about her son will not be exempted and will be sued if anyone will cross the line.
TMZ reported that James Hunter was terrified, and he did not intent to bully Barron Trump but to raise up the subject that he saw a few indication that could relate to autism.
The video had more than 3.2 million views Monday alone. Melania Trump has not yet decided to sue O'Donell, since he shared the video on Twitter on November 21, but for now, she wants the person who made and posted the video to delete it and apologize.
According to Melania Trump's attorney, "The video regarding Barron Trump has been removed, and the person who posted it has retracted it and apologized for it, on the same YouTube page." The YouTuber's apology was extremely genuine and heartfelt as he posted a video apologizing to the first family.
Melania is positive that Barron is a normal 10-year-old boy and is not autistic. When Donald Trump delivered the speech of his success last November 9, 2016, around 3 a.m, Barron behaved the same as other kids his age would, heavy-eyed and tired.