'Objectively false': Alec Baldwin sues the man who accused him of parking spot rage

Baldwin wrote in the lawsuit that he "lightly pushed Cieszkowski in the chest with one hand" but did not seriously injure him.
Alec Baldwin (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)
Alec Baldwin (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

NEW YORK (AP): Alec Baldwin filed a defamation lawsuit Friday against the man who says Baldwin hit him in the face during an argument over a New York City parking space.

Baldwin wrote in his lawsuit that contractor Wojciech Cieszkowski's claim that he was violently assaulted by the actor is "objectively false."

"When two New Yorkers get into an argument over a parking space, typically what happens is they exchange a few sharp words and then move on with their lives," Baldwin wrote in the suit filed in Manhattan state Supreme Court. "But that is not what happened here."

The lawsuit says Cieszkowski made up a false story about the skirmish in an effort to extort money from Baldwin.

"Hospital records and video surveillance footage prove that it was a lie," the complaint says. "But Cieszkowski told it to the police and medical professionals anyway."

Police arrested Baldwin after the Nov. 2, 2018, scuffle over a parking spot in front of Baldwin's Manhattan apartment building. The actor pleaded guilty to harassment in January and agreed to take an anger-management class.

Cieszkowski sued Baldwin claiming that Baldwin's assault was "physically painful and psychologically traumatic."

The Pearl River, New York resident referenced Baldwin's recurring Saturday Night Live role as President Donald Trump in his lawsuit filed in March and amended May 17.

"When you're a star, they let you do it — hit 'em right in the face," the lawsuit said.

"Like the man he plays on television, Alec Baldwin is an entitled celebrity with a long history of verbally and physically mistreating others he sees as beneath him."

Baldwin wrote in the lawsuit that he "lightly pushed Cieszkowski in the chest with one hand" but did not seriously injure him.

"In fact, Cieszkowski's supposed 'injuries' were so minor, or nonexistent, that his discharge instructions were to take a single dose of Tylenol," the former 30 Rock" star wrote.

Douglas Lieb, a lawyer for Cieszkowski, called Baldwin's lawsuit "a desperate tactic designed to silence Mr. Cieszkowski."

"Mr. Cieszkowski won't be deterred from holding Mr. Baldwin accountable for his bullying," Lieb said Tuesday.

"Mr. Cieszkowski looks forward to his day in court before a jury of ordinary people like him."

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