Jury says Trump must pay E. Jean Carroll  million for sexual abuse and defamation
Jury says Trump must pay E. Jean Carroll  million for sexual abuse and defamation


Former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump rides a golf cart at Trump International Golf Links course, in Doonbeg, Ireland May 4, 2023.

Damien Storan | Reuters

A New York federal jury found former President Donald Trump liable on Tuesday for sexually abusing and forcibly touching the writer E. Jean Carroll at a department store in the 1990s, and for defaming her last fall when he denied her claim.

The jury of six men and three women awarded Carroll $5 million in compensatory and punitive damages.

The verdict in the civil trial came after less than three hours of deliberations in U.S. District Court in lower Manhattan. The jury did not find Trump liable for rape, as Carroll had also alleged.

“I have absolutely no idea who this woman is. This verdict is a disgrace,” Trump wrote in a post on his social media site Truth Social.

Carroll’s lawyer Roberta Kaplan said, “We are very happy,” as she left the courthouse with her client, who did not speak to reporters.

E. Jean Carroll, former U.S. President Donald Trump rape accuser, arrives at Manhattan Federal Court for the continuation of the civil case, in New York City, May 9, 2023.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Carroll, 79, claimed in her lawsuit that Trump raped her in a dressing room of the Bergdorf Goodman store in the mid-1990s.

Trump cannot be prosecuted for the alleged rape because the statute of limitations for such a crime has long since passed.

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But Carroll sued him with a civil claim of battery under a New York state law enacted in late 2022 that opened a one-year window for lawsuits alleging sexual assaults would otherwise be barred by the statute of limitations.

Carroll also claimed that Trump defamed her last fall when he said she had made up her account of being raped.

Trump, 76, called the allegations “a complete con job,” and said that she was not his “type.”

Despite that claim, Trump mistook Carroll for his second wife Marla Maples in a photo showing him and Carroll together in the 1980s.

Former Elle magazine advice columnist E. Jean Carroll watches as a former U.S. president Donald Trump’s video deposition is played in court during a civil trial where Carroll accuses the former U.S. president in a civil lawsuit of raping her in a department store dressing room in the mid-1990s, and of defamation, in New York, U.S., May 4, 2023 in this courtroom sketch. 

Jane Rosenberg | Reuters

Trump, who leads early polls for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, did not testify during the trial.

But portions of a video of his deposition taken last fall by Carroll’s lawyer were played for jurors during the trial, and during closing arguments on Monday.

That deposition included Trump being asked about his comments in 2005 during a taping for the entertainment television show “Access Hollywood,” in which he boasted: “I’m automatically attracted to beautiful women — I just start kissing them, it’s like a magnet.”

“Just kiss. I don’t even wait,” Trump said on that tape. “And when you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything,” he said, including “grab ’em by the p—-.”

Trump told Carroll’s lawyer during the deposition that those comments were “locker room talk.”

But he also said it has been “historically … true with stars” that they could grab women without their permission.

“If you look over the last million years, I guess that’s been largely true,” Trump testified in his deposition. “Not always, but largely true. Unfortunately or fortunately.”

Carroll took the witness stand. So did two women who testified she had told them right after the alleged incident that Trump had raped her.

Two other women testified that Trump had kissed and groped them without their consent in incidents that occurred years apart.

Read: Trump jury verdict form

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By Admin