The Guardian reporter Ben Jacobs's attorneys have sent a cease and desist letter to Rep. Greg Gianforte Gregory Richard GianfortePence seeks to boost Daines in critical Montana Senate race On The Trail: How Nancy Pelosi could improbably become president Supreme Court denies push to add Green Party candidates to Montana ballot MORE (R-Mont.) and members of his campaign team, demanding that they stop making "false and defamatory statements" about the incident.

"On behalf of this firm's client Benjamin Jacobs, I write to demand that Rep. Gianforte, his spokesman, Mr. Hall, and all other persons working for or affiliated with Rep. Gianforte or his campaign immediately cease and desist from making any further false and defamatory statements about Mr. Jacobs," the letter said, according to a CNN reporter.

New: @Bencjacobs sends cease & desist to Rep. Gianforte and his spox after recent statements denying that Gianforte initially misled police regarding what he later pleaded guilty to (assault) pic.twitter.com/FtDX9JnSiU — Hadas Gold (@Hadas_Gold) November 27, 2017

Earlier this year, Gianforte knocked Jacobs to the ground after Jacobs asked the then-candidate a question about health care.

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The altercation broke out a day before Montana's special House election to fill the seat vacated by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke Ryan Keith ZinkeTrump extends Florida offshore drilling pause, expands it to Georgia, South Carolina Conspicuous by their absence from the Republican Convention Trump flails as audience dwindles and ratings plummet MORE. Gianforte won the race despite the criminal charges.

He eventually pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault and received a sentence of community service, anger management classes and a $385 fine.

Gianforte reportedly told police that Jacobs made physical contact with him first. The account contradicted eyewitness accounts.

In a letter of apology sent to Jacobs in June, Gianforte acknowledged the reporter didn't initiate contact with him.

The cease and desist letter says that a statement made by Gianforte's spokesman, Travis Hall, in which he said "[n]o one was misled, anyone who says otherwise is mistaken," is "false and defamatory."

"It denotes that the accurate accounts of Mr. Jacobs and numerous eyewitnesses about Rep. Gianforte's unprovoked May 24, 2017 assault were somehow 'mistaken," the letter said.

The letter says Hall's statement directly contradicts Gianforte's June letter to Jacobs, in which Gianforte said: "[n]otwithstanding anyone's statements to the contrary, [Mr. Jacobs] did not initiate any physical contact with me."

"Thus, as the June 7 letter concedes, Rep. Gianforte and his campaign did mislead law enforcement and the public — repeatedly — about Mr. Jacobs actions in the moments before Rep. Gianforte assaulted him," the letter says.

The letter calls it "unacceptable" for Gianforte or members of his campaign to make "false or defamatory statements" about the assault.

"Please advise Rep. Gianforte, Mr. Hall, and the Gianforte campaign of the need to cease and desist from making defamatory statements, made after the date of the pertinent General Release, about him or the May 24 assault."