Jurors at rape trial hear Trump defend lewd 'Grab 'em' remarks in new
video
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[May 06, 2023]
By Luc Cohen, Jack Queen and Padraic Halpin
NEW YORK/DOONBEG, Ireland (Reuters) -Jurors in Donald Trump's civil rape
trial on Thursday saw a video deposition in which the former U.S.
president defended private comments he made in 2005 about grabbing women
sexually without asking.
Trump was asked by a lawyer for his accuser, the writer E. Jean Carroll,
about the 2005 "Access Hollywood" tape, where he said on a hot
microphone that "when you're a star, they let you do it. You can do
anything... Grab 'em by the pussy."
"Historically, that's true, with stars... if you look over the last
million years," Trump said in the video deposition taken last October
and shown to the jury on Thursday, the seventh day of the rape trial in
Manhattan federal court.
The "Access Hollywood" tape was first made public in October 2016, a
month before Trump was elected U.S. president.
Carroll, 79, has testified that Trump, 76, raped her in a Bergdorf
Goodman department store dressing room in Manhattan in the mid-1990s,
and then tarred her reputation and career by lying about it online.
A social media and marketing expert hired by Carroll told jurors on
Thursday that the cost to repair the reputational damage of Trump's
statements could range from $368,000 to $2.8 million. Carroll is seeking
unspecified damages.
Trump's lawyers rested their case on Thursday without calling any
witnesses, paving the way for closing arguments on Monday after a break
on Friday.
U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan said he would give Trump until 5 p.m.
ET (2100 GMT) on Sunday to ask to reopen his case for the sole purpose
of personally testifying.
Trump has not been in the Manhattan courtroom so far, but on Thursday he
told reporters during a trip to Ireland that he would probably attend.
Trump, the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination,
has said he could not have raped Carroll, because "she's not my type"
and has called the case politically motivated.
'IT'S MARLA,' TRUMP MISTAKENLY SAYS OF ACCUSER'S PHOTO
In an excerpt on Thursday from the October video deposition by Carroll's
lawyer Roberta Kaplan, who is not related to Judge Kaplan, Trump also
mistook Carroll for an ex-wife in a black-and-white photograph that
shows him speaking to people at an event.
"It's Marla," he said, referring to his second wife Marla Maples.
When Kaplan asked him if he was saying the picture depicted Maples,
Trump's lawyer Alina Habba said, "No, that's Carroll."
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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.
REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg
Carroll's lawyers have argued that the episode, made public in
January, undermines Trump's argument that Carroll was not his type.
In the deposition, taken last October at his Mar-a-Lago estate in
Palm Beach, Florida, Trump reiterated his denials of having raped
Carroll, whom he called "mentally sick."
"You know it's not true too," Trump said, addressing Kaplan. "You're
a political operative also. You're a disgrace."
Earlier on Thursday, during a visit to a resort he owns in
southwestern Ireland, Trump dismissed what he called untrue
allegations "against a rich guy."
"I have to go back for a woman that made a false accusation about
me, and I have a judge who is extremely hostile," Trump told
reporters while playing golf at the Doonbeg resort.
Judge Kaplan warned last week that Trump could face more legal
problems if he kept discussing the case. He did not address Trump's
latest comments before trial resumed on Thursday.
The trial is expected to extend into next week.
Carroll, a former advice columnist at Elle magazine, said during
three days of testimony and cross-examination that Trump slammed her
against the wall in either 1995 or 1996, put his fingers into her
vagina and then inserted his penis.
Two of Carroll's longtime friends have testified that Carroll told
them about the attack shortly after it occurred and said they
believed her.
Two other women have also testified in support of Carroll, saying
Trump sexually assaulted them in separate alleged incidents decades
ago.
Trump has denied those claims as well. He has accused Carroll of
making up the story to drive sales of a 2019 memoir in which she
made her claims public.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen and Jack Queen in New York and by Padraic
Halpin in Dublin; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Jonathan Oatis, Will
Dunham and Howard Goller)
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