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Tag: e. jean carroll

  • Trump trial in E. Jean Carroll defamation case delayed because of sick juror

    Trump trial in E. Jean Carroll defamation case delayed because of sick juror

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    The trial in the defamation case brought by the writer E. Jean Carroll against former President Donald Trump was delayed on Monday because of a sick juror, pushing back the proceedings until after Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary.

    Judge Lewis Kaplan said the juror was not feeling well en route to court Monday morning. Alina Habba, an attorney for Trump, said she too was feeling ill and had a fever. She said she had dinner with her parents three days ago, and they have since been diagnosed with COVID-19. She says Michael Madaio, another Trump attorney, had been exposed as well. 

    Habba said both she and Madaio tested negative for COVID-19 on Monday morning.

    Trump was in the courtroom on Monday, sitting between Habba and Madaio. He had planned to testify, just one day before New Hampshire voters go to the polls

    The judge indicated that the court may reconvene on Tuesday, but the court said later in the day that the trial would be adjourned until Wednesday morning. 

    Carroll alleges Trump sexually assaulted her in a department store in the 1990s. She has sued Trump twice for defamation over statements he made denying the assault and saying he never met her. 

    Former President Donald Trump leaves Trump Tower in Manhattan for federal court on Jan. 22, 2024.
    Former President Donald Trump leaves Trump Tower in Manhattan for federal court on Jan. 22, 2024.

    CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images


    Carroll, who testified last week, said Trump attacked her in the dressing room of a high-end New York department store called Bergdorf Goodman in the mid-1990s. When she first came forward with her story in New York magazine in 2019, Trump called her a liar and said he had “never met this person in my life.”

    Carroll filed her first defamation suit later that year, which is now at trial. She sued a second time over comments Trump made in 2022. The jury in that case awarded her $5 million in May 2023, finding him liable for defamation and sexual abuse. 

    The judge in the current case has already determined Trump’s 2019 comments were defamatory, and the jury will now determine what damages Trump must pay.

    Trump has continuously and frequently denied the allegations. His ongoing denials are an issue in the trial, where he has denounced the case within earshot of the jury, and where Carroll’s attorneys have said they want an award that will “make him stop.”

    One expert called to testify by Carroll’s attorneys said it could cost up to $12.1 million to repair the harm Trump caused to Carroll’s reputation with his denials after she came forward.

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  • Stephen Colbert Says Trump Should Be In Prison For Raping E. Jean Carroll

    Stephen Colbert Says Trump Should Be In Prison For Raping E. Jean Carroll

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    Stephen Colbert said Trump should be in prison for being found to have raped E. Jean Carroll during his monologue on The Late Show.

    Colbert said:

    Of course, Trump loves that all the reports are about this fighting in court. Because it distracts people from what this case is actually about. As Mitt Romney said, “I think a lot of people in this country are out of touch with reality and will accept anything Donald Trump tells them. You had a jury that said that Donald Trump raped a woman. And that doesn’t seem to be moving the needle.”

    Well said but to be fair, the jury said it was sexual assault. The judge later clarified the assault would be commonly considered rape. This is the kind of thing that should end with Trump in prison or best case, living alone in a motel by the race track. But every time he gets worse, his poll numbers get better. Which explains his new 2024 slogan “Welcome to hell.”

    Now, trump doesn’t believe he should be held accountable for anything. At 2:00 A.M., he scream-posted “A President Of The United States must have full immunity, without which it would be impossible for him/her to properly function.” No, trump doesn’t believe in any accountability. He believes the presidency should be like the movie “The Purge,” which is why he’s always wearing that weird leather pig mask. But it’s nice. It is nice to see him being inclusive. “I believe the president, whether it be him or her, hispanic or her-spanic, should have a private kill squad to take out all those who dare speak against him. Kill-baya, my lord, kill-baya.”

    Video of Colbert:

    Trump belongs in prison for potentially a lot of reasons, but the fact that he was found guilty of what Judge Kaplan said would be considered rape should not only disqualify Trump from ever being president, but he should be in jail.

    The fact that Trump is a rapist might not move the needle with his base in the Republican  Party, but it definitely moves the needle for the men and women who are followers of Donald Trump. The E. Jean Carroll rape/assault was able to be proven in civil court, but there are dozens of other allegations that have been made against Trump.

    Stephen Colbert is right. Trump should be in jail, and there is no way that he should ever be considered to be the next president.

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  • Ex-Trump Attorney Spots ‘Embarrassing’ Courtroom Moment For Trump Legal Team

    Ex-Trump Attorney Spots ‘Embarrassing’ Courtroom Moment For Trump Legal Team

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    Ty Cobb said Trump’s attorneys “did some shocking things” in court.

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  • Trump Looks Embalmed As He Melts Down And Attacks E. Jean Carroll Judge

    Trump Looks Embalmed As He Melts Down And Attacks E. Jean Carroll Judge

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    Trump delivered remarks to reporters and attacked the judge in the E. Jean Carroll defamation trial while looking embalmed.

    Trump said:

    So, as you know, the first lady’s mother passed away. The funeral is tomorrow. We would have assumed that for a trial like this it’s not an emergency in terms of timing, the judge would have been nice and let me go. I want to be there at every trial day because I saw what happened in the first one where I was asked not to go by the lawyers. It was demeaning. There was no evidence. There was no anything. I didn’t go. I understood what he meant when we said it was demeaning and you shouldn’t go. I decided on this one, same judge, a radical Trump hater. I said, I will go to all the days. What happened very terribly is we asked to just delay the trial for one day so I could go to the funeral tomorrow and we could start Friday or Monday or any time they want. He said, absolutely not. The trial will go on just as it is. You can go to the funeral or trial. You can’t do both.

    I thought it was terrible. I thought it was terrible. He would rather have me miss the funeral or go to the funeral and miss the trial. That’s a nasty man. He’s a nasty judge. He’s a Trump-hating guy. It’s obvious to everybody in the court. It’s a disgrace, frankly, what’s happening. It’s a disgrace. Happens to be a Clinton appointee. I’m sure that has nothing to do with it. Second order of business, I’m leaving now for New Hampshire. We’re making a big speech in New Hampshire.

    Video:

    Trump is not required to be at the civil trial. Trump wants to be there because he is using these court appearances as campaign events.

    Donald Trump’s mother-in-law’s funeral is so important that he is going to New Hampshire to campaign instead of being with his family.

    His mother-in-law’s funeral was important enough to ask for a delay in the trial, but not important enough for Trump to stop campaigning for a day.

    Part of the reason for Trump’s odd appearance was the lighting situation where he was speaking, but Donald Trump did not look good in that appearance. Wednesday was the second time in the last few days that Trump has looked rough in public.

    This is the guy that a majority of Republicans think is fit for the presidency. More importantly, they believe that Donald Trump will make it through a presidential campaign.

    The E. Jean Carroll trial round two is not well for Trump, and he is definitely showing the strain of being mired in legal problems while running for president.

    A Special Message From PoliticusUSA

    If you are in a position to donate purely to help us keep the doors open on PoliticusUSA during what is a critical election year, please do so here. 

    We have been honored to be able to put your interests first for 14 years as we only answer to our readers and we will not compromise on that fundamental, core PoliticusUSA value.

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  • “You just can’t control yourself”: Judge threatens to kick “disruptive” Trump out of court

    “You just can’t control yourself”: Judge threatens to kick “disruptive” Trump out of court

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    A federal judge threatened to eject Donald Trump from a Manhattan courtroom on Wednesday for mouthing off during writer E. Jean Carroll’s defamation trial testimony, per CNN.

    Carroll brought the case against Trump, who has already been found liable of sexually abusing and defaming her, after he continued to tout falsehoods about her and claimed that she lied about him assaulting her in a New York department store dressing room in the 90s. One of Carroll’s lawyers, Shawn Crowley, had already called out the former president earlier during the trial on Wednesday for muttering so “loudly” that the plaintiff table could hear, alleging that Trump was shaking his head as if refuting Carroll’s testimony and saying she “suddenly gotten her memory back,” according to Politico’s Erica Orden.

    “I’m just going to ask that Mr. Trump take special care to keep his voice down when he’s conferring with counsel so that the jury does not overhear it,” Kaplan told Trump’s team.

    Crowley then complained for a second time to Judge Lewis Kaplan after Trump allegedly did not let up in the afternoon. According to CNN, Crowley also heard Trump call the trial a “witch-hunt” and a “con job.” ABC reported that Crowley also noted that when a video of Trump disparaging E. Jean Carroll was played for the court to view, Trump said “It’s true.”

    “Mr. Trump has the right to be present here,” Kaplan said. “That right can be forfeited and it can be forfeited if he is disruptive, which what has been reported to me consists of. And if he disregards court orders, Mr. Trump, I hope I don’t have to consider excluding you from the trial.”

    “I understand you’re probably eager for me to do that,” Kaplan said after the ex-president threw his hands in the air.

    “I would love it, I would love it,” Trump replied.

    “I know you would,” the judge said. “You just can’t control yourself in this circumstance apparently.”

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  • The second trial between Donald Trump and E. Jean Carroll is underway. Here’s what to know.

    The second trial between Donald Trump and E. Jean Carroll is underway. Here’s what to know.

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    A federal jury in New York will be convened this week to determine how much money former President Donald Trump must pay the writer E. Jean Carroll for comments he made in 2019 denying he sexually assaulted her.

    The trial, which got underway Tuesday morning with jury selection, is the second related to Carroll’s allegations and Trump’s subsequent denials. In May 2023, a jury found Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation in a separate case, awarding Carroll $5 million in damages. That case focused on comments Trump made about Carroll in 2022, when he denied the abuse and called Carroll’s claim a “con job” and “hoax.”

    The current case is centered on different comments Trump made in 2019, remarks the judge has already ruled were defamatory. The trial will be focused solely on the damages Carroll should be awarded. Her attorneys are seeking $10 million for reputational harm, as well as other unspecified punitive damages.

    The former president, fresh off his victory in the Iowa caucuses, arrived in the courtroom in lower Manhattan to attend the opening of the trial. Carroll immediately sat down and looked straight ahead after he walked in. Trump, seated in the third row of the area for attorneys, plaintiffs and defendants, sat directly behind her by two rows. He and Carroll did not appear to look at each other.

    What is Trump accused of?

    Former President Donald Trump departs Trump Tower in New York on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024.
    Former President Donald Trump departs Trump Tower in New York on Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024.

    David Dee Delgado/Bloomberg via Getty Images


    In June 2019, Carroll wrote a story for New York magazine alleging that Trump attacked her in the department store Bergdorf Goodman in New York City in the mid-1990s. After walking through the store together and engaging in playful banter, Carroll said Trump cornered her in a dressing room stall and sexually assaulted her with his fingers. She said she managed to free herself and left, telling two of her friends soon after.

    After her story was published, Trump denied the allegations on several occasions, saying they were “totally false” and claiming he had never met her. Carroll sued him for defamation in response in November 2019.

    The case stalled in court while Trump was president. The Justice Department initially defended Trump, unsuccessfully arguing he was shielded from liability by federal law since he was acting as a federal employee when he made his comments.

    Carroll filed her second defamation suit in 2022, shortly after Trump reiterated his denial. Carroll’s team also added the claim of rape under New York’s Adult Survivors Act, which briefly removed the statute of limitations for such allegations.

    The jury unanimously sided with Carroll in finding Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation, but ruled he was not liable for rape. While the case took place in federal court, it was considered under the New York penal code, which only considers an attack “rape” if a person forces his genitals into another person.

    On multiple occasions since, the judge in the case, Lewis Kaplan, has written that the abuse was rape in “common modern parlance,” if not under the strict interpretation of the state’s penal code.

    In September, Kaplan ruled that Trump was liable for defamation in the case going to trial on Tuesday. Since Carroll was able to prove she was sexually abused under state law, Trump’s statements painting Carroll as a liar were defamatory, he said.

    Just one day after the jury found him liable, Trump made additional statements about Carroll, denying the allegations and saying he didn’t know her. Soon after, she amended her original lawsuit to ask for extra damages, citing those comments.

    Last July, the Justice Department announced in a court filing that it would no longer defend Trump, since “sexual assault was obviously not job-related.”

    Will Trump testify?

    Trump is on the defense’s witness list. While he is not required to testify, Kaplan has indicated that if he intends to take the stand, he can do so next Monday, Jan. 22, the day before the New Hampshire primary.

    Testimony in a trial related to damages is typically related to issues like net worth and earnings, not the facts of the matters already established — in this case, that sexual abuse occurred and defamatory statements were made. 

    Kaplan issued an order in the case on Jan. 9 that bars Trump and his team from saying many of the things they’ve long said in their defense. They cannot deny that the sexual abuse happened or that he believed his statements were true, and he cannot comment on Carroll’s prior romantic relationships. 

    Additionally, his team cannot question Carroll about her choice of attorney, Roberta Kaplan (no relation to the judge), or the person who helped fund her legal fight, Democratic megadonor Reid Hoffman. Trump’s side also cannot bring up the lack of DNA evidence in the case, which Kaplan has stated was Trump’s responsibility to establish, not Carroll’s.

    Carroll’s attorneys have asserted that in order for Trump to testify, he should be required to state under oath that he assaulted Carroll and lied, a position his attorneys have taken issue with. 

    Trump’s attorney Alina Habba filed a response to the court’s restrictions on his testimony, saying that “President Trump cannot and should not be made to testify under oath in any particular affirmative manner.” 

    “We presume that this is not a kangaroo court of a third-world country where a party to a lawsuit is involuntarily made to say what a court and an opposing party wants them to say,” Habba wrote in a filing. 

    How long will the trial last?

    The trial in Manhattan is expected to last two to three days, with a fourth day possible if Trump decides to testify late in the proceedings. Although he is not required to, Trump is expected to attend the proceedings on at least Tuesday, despite not appearing at the previous trial in the same courtroom last May.

    Last week, Trump’s team asked the judge to delay the trial so that he could attend his mother-in-law’s funeral, scheduled for Thursday. Kaplan denied the request, stating that a “postponement would disrupt and inconvenience prospective jurors, counsel, court staff, and security arrangements.” 

    On Sunday, Kaplan offered to delay the end of the trial to allow Trump to testify on Jan. 22, the day before the New Hampshire primary.

    During the trial, Carroll’s team will show much of the same evidence, and even call some of the same witnesses, from the first trial last May. The jury will likely hear from friends whom she initially told about the assault and two other women who have claimed to be sexually assaulted by Trump in a similar manner. The defense has also said they intend to mention the infamous Access Hollywood tape and portions of Trump’s pretrial deposition.

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  • Trump Says Civil War Could Have Been ‘Negotiated’ in Bizarre Iowa Speech

    Trump Says Civil War Could Have Been ‘Negotiated’ in Bizarre Iowa Speech

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    Donald Trump continued his push on Saturday to win the Republican presidential nomination with a pair of caucus rallies in Iowa, beginning at the DMACC Conference Center in Newton and then culminating in Clinton. His speeches come on the third anniversary of Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and a little more than a week before the Republican Iowa caucus commences on Jan. 15.

    As for commemorating the solemn anniversary of Jan. 6, Trump lauded the insurrectionists, while labeling some immigrants as “terrorists” and prisoners and gang members. “And terrorists are coming in also. What they’re doing to our country is not — it’s it’s, when you talk about insurrection, what they’re doing? That’s the real deal. That the real deal — not patriotically and peacefully, peacefully and patriotically” he said, contrasting those who rioted as “peaceful” and “patriotic” against immigrants, who the four-time indicted former president continually paints as criminals.

    In his appearance in Newton, a particularly bronzed-up Trump made his usual claims that Biden is the worst president in the history of the United States, and took potshots at his Republican challengers Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis, and Chris Christie. His Biden attacks included making fun of Biden being unable to articulate or navigate stairs. Meanwhile, Trump also fondly waxed about the Civil War, which he called “fascinating.”

    “I’m so attracted to seeing it,” Trump said. “So many mistakes were made. See, there was something I think could have been negotiated to be honest with you. … I was reading something and I said, ‘This is something that could have been negotiated … that was a that was a tough one for our country… If you negotiated it, you probably wouldn’t even know who Abraham Lincoln was … but that would have been OK.”

    Elsewhere, he blasted E. Jean Carroll — though he didn’t refer to her by name — whom he was found liable in May of sexually abusing and of defamation. During his speech on Saturday as he has previously, he claimed the incident did not happen while glossing over his four indictments and civil trials against him, almost as a badge of honor (which he compared again to Al Capone and reminded the audience once again, “I’m being indicted for you.”)

    “In my case, they went after me, and they would have done it more except it’s backfired. It’s backfired,” he claimed. “And if I didn’t run, or if I was in fifth place or something, I would have had no indictments. This is all political stuff, including the women’s stuff. The Bergdorf Goodman. ‘I meet a woman outside of Bergdorf Goodman. I took her upstairs to a changing booth’ — It was all made up,” he claimed. Carroll, who accused Trump of sexual assault and rape in a dressing room at Bergdorf Goodman 30 years ago, has a second civil case against Trump that is expected to go to trial this month.

    A day prior, President Joe Biden delivered his first major election year campaign speech, where he lambasted his potential 2024 rival. In his speech, Biden addressed Trump’s refusal to accept the peaceful transfer of power in 2020. “Trump exhausted every legal avenue available to him to overturn the election,” he said. “Every one. But the legal path just took Trump back to the truth: that I had won the election and he was a loser. Well, knowing how his mind works now, he had one act left. One desperate act available to him: the violence of Jan. 6.”

    Biden also blamed the deaths from the attack on the Capitol on “Donald Trump’s lies,” adding: “As America was attacked from within, Donald Trump watched on TV in the private small dining room off the oval office. The entire nation watched in horror, the whole world watched in disbelief, and Trump did nothing … It was among the worst derelictions of duty by a president in American history. An attempt to overturn a free and fair election by force and violence.”

    That same day Biden delivered his speech, Trump was in Sioux Center, Iowa, where he told residents they should “get over” an incident on Thursday where a gunman killed a sixth grade student and wounded five others at  Perry High School northwest of Des Moines.

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  • Donald Trump’s defense in E. Jean Carroll case could be about to implode

    Donald Trump’s defense in E. Jean Carroll case could be about to implode

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    Donald Trump‘s attempts to mount a defense in his upcoming damages trial involving writer E. Jean Carroll could be in trouble, as her legal team has asked a judge to prevent him from further stating that he did not sexually assault her.

    Carroll, a longtime journalist and one-time columnist for Elle, has over the years accused Trump of sexually assaulting her in a New York City department store changing room in the mid-1990s. She recently filed multiple civil defamation lawsuits against the former president after he said her stories about him were not true.

    In May, a New York City jury ruled that Trump had sexually assaulted Carroll and was civilly liable for defamation against her to the tune of $5 million in damages, but it rejected her allegation of rape. Despite this ruling, Trump has continued to assert that he did not assault or abuse Carroll and has at times said he has no idea who she is.

    The jury’s ruling came in a suit filed in 2022, after Trump had left the White House. Carroll had also filed a civil defamation suit pertaining to statements he made in June 2019, while he was still president.

    In early September, federal Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled that Trump’s 2019 comments against Carroll were defamatory, reasoning that their “substantive content” was the same as the comments at the heart of the 2022 suit, which had already been litigated. A damages trial is now set for January.

    Donald Trump arrives on August 3 at Virginia’s Reagan National Airport following an arraignment in a Washington, D.C., court. In a separate case, the former president’s hopes of mounting a defense against writer E. Jean Carroll in a damages trial could be in jeopardy after a recent filing by her defense team.
    Getty Images/Tasos Katopodis

    On Monday, Carroll’s legal team filed a motion asking Kaplan to bar Trump’s defense team from making any claims, or submitting any evidence, in the trial that reflect his allegations that he did not abuse her, which they argue is a settled matter since the jury ruling in May. Further evidence pertaining to whether or not the abuse happened, her lawyers argue, is irrelevant to the scope of the coming trial.

    “The damages issues in this case relate to Trump’s June 2019 defamatory statements, not whether there is physical evidence that serves as further proof that Trump sexually assaulted Carroll,” the filing reads. “While it is Trump’s right to submit to questioning, he does not have the right to say whatever he pleases.”

    The briefing went on to suggest which arguments Trump and his team should be barred from making, given prior legal results. The briefing asked that they not be allowed to “claim that he did not sexually assault Carroll; argue that he was telling the truth in his statements about her; suggest that Carroll fabricated her account due to a political agenda, financial interests, or mental illness; or offer any other testimony that would be inconsistent with the Court’s collateral estoppel decision determining that Trump, with actual malice, lied about sexually assaulting Carroll.”

    Newsweek reached out to Trump’s office by email for comment.

    David Aronberg, a legal expert and state attorney in Florida, told Newsweek that it is likely Kaplan will grant Carroll’s request, which will be highly detrimental to Trump’s chances of a favorable outcome in the case.

    “I think the judge will likely grant E. Jean Carroll‘s motion to prevent Trump from re-litigating issues that were already decided in the previous trial,” Aronberg said.

    “In legal terms, it’s called ‘collateral estoppel,’ which means that Trump has already been found to have lied about sexually assaulting Carroll and that decision carries over into this next trial,” he said. “If Carroll wins her motion, as I expect she will, it means that Trump’s chances of winning at trial are reduced to slim and none.”