Trump sexually abused writer E. Jean Carroll, must pay her $5 million,
jury says
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[May 10, 2023]
By Jack Queen and Luc Cohen
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Donald Trump must pay $5 million in damages for
sexually abusing magazine writer E. Jean Carroll in the 1990s and then
defaming her by branding her a liar, a jury decided on Tuesday.
"Today, the world finally knows the truth," Carroll said in a statement.
"This victory is not just for me but for every woman who has suffered
because she was not believed."
The former U.S. president, campaigning to retake the White House in
2024, will appeal, his lawyer Joseph Tacopina told reporters outside the
Manhattan federal courthouse.
Carroll, 79, testified during the civil trial that Trump, 76, raped her
in a Bergdorf Goodman department store dressing room in Manhattan in
either 1995 or 1996, then harmed her reputation by writing in an October
2022 post on his Truth Social platform that her claims were a "complete
con job," "a hoax" and "a lie."
Trump was absent throughout the trial which began on April 25. In a post
on his Truth Social platform, Trump called the verdict a "disgrace" and
said, "I have absolutely no idea who this woman is."
Because it was a civil case, Trump faces no criminal consequences and,
as such, there was never a threat of prison.
The jury, required to reach a unanimous verdict, deliberated for just
under three hours. Its six men and three women awarded Carroll $5
million in compensatory and punitive damages, but Trump will not have to
pay so long as the case is on appeal.
In April, Trump gave election regulators only the rough estimates of his
wealth that are required in financial disclosures, listing over a dozen
properties as worth "over $50 million" each.
'CORE PRO-TRUMP VOTERS ARE NOT GOING TO CHANGE'
President from 2017 to 2021, Trump is the front-runner in opinion polls
for the Republican presidential nomination and has shown an uncanny
ability to weather controversies that might sink other politicians.
It seems unlikely in America's polarized political climate that the
civil verdict will have an impact on Trump's core supporters, who view
his legal woes as part of a concerted effort by opponents to undermine
him.
"The folks that are anti-Trump are going to remain that way, the core
pro-Trump voters are not going to change, and the ambivalent ones I just
don’t think are going to be moved by this type of thing," said Charlie
Gerow, a Republican strategist in Pennsylvania.
Any negative impact is likely to be small and limited to suburban women
and moderate Republicans, Gerow said.
Trump has cited the Carroll trial in campaign fundraising emails as
evidence of what he portrays as a Democratic plot. He has said Carroll,
a former Elle magazine columnist and a registered Democrat, made up the
allegations to try to increase sales of her 2019 memoir and to hurt him
politically.
His poll numbers improved after he was charged last month with
falsifying business records over a hush money payment to a porn star
before his victory in the 2016 presidential election.
The first U.S. president past or present to be criminally charged, Trump
has pleaded not guilty and said the charges are politically motivated.
Lis Smith, a Democratic strategist, said it remained to be seen whether
the verdict in Carroll's case would make Trump "unpalatable" to
Republican voters beyond his base, prompting them to coalesce around
another candidate.
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E. Jean Carroll departs from the
Manhattan Federal Court following the verdict in the civil rape
accusation case against former U.S. President Donald Trump, in New
York City, U.S., May 9, 2023. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
The trial featured testimony from former People magazine reporter
Natasha Stoynoff, who told jurors that Trump cornered her at his
Mar-a-Lago club in Florida in 2005 and forcibly kissed her for a
"few minutes." Another woman, Jessica Leeds, testified that Trump
kissed her, groped her and put his hand up her skirt on a flight in
1979.
Jurors also heard excerpts from a 2005 "Access Hollywood" video in
which Trump says women let him "grab 'em by the pussy."
"Historically, that's true, with stars ... if you look over the last
million years," Trump said in an October 2022 video deposition
played in court. He has repeatedly denied allegations of sexual
misconduct.
TRUMP MISTAKES CARROLL FOR EX-WIFE
Carroll testified that she bumped into Trump at Bergdorf's and
agreed to help him pick out a gift for another woman. The two looked
at lingerie before he coaxed her into a dressing room, slammed her
head into a wall, pulled down her tights and penetrated her, she
testified. Carroll said she could not remember the precise date or
year the alleged rape occurred.
Jurors were tasked with deciding whether Trump raped, sexually
abused or forcibly touched Carroll, and were separately asked if
Trump defamed Carroll. The jurors found Trump sexually abused her
but not that he raped her.
Before the jurors began deliberating, Judge Lewis Kaplan defined
rape for them as non-consensual "sexual intercourse" through
"forcible compulsion." He described sexual abuse as non-consensual
"sexual contact" through forcible compulsion.
Jurors awarded Carroll $2 million in compensatory damages and
$20,000 in punitive damages for her battery claim, and $2.7 million
in compensatory and $280,000 in punitive damages for her defamation
claim.
Trump's legal team attacked the plausibility of Carroll's account
including why she had never reported the matter to police or
screamed during the alleged incident.
Two of Carroll's friends said that she told them about the alleged
rape at the time but swore them to secrecy because she feared that
Trump would use his fame and wealth to retaliate if she came
forward.
Carroll told jurors she decided to break her silence in 2017 after
rape allegations against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein
prompted scores of women to come forward with accounts of sexual
violence by powerful men. She went public with her account while
Trump was president.
She said Trump's public denials wrecked her career and instigated a
campaign of vicious online harassment by his supporters.
While Trump did not testify at the trial, a video clip from the
October 2022 deposition showed him mistaking Carroll for one of his
former wives in a black-and-white photo among several people at an
event.
"It's Marla," Trump said in the deposition, referring to his second
wife Marla Maples. Previously Trump had said he could not have raped
Carroll because she was "not my type."
(Reporting by Jack Queen and Luc Cohen in New York; Additional
reporting by Jonathan Stempel, Nathan Layne, Jarrett Renshaw, Jasper
Ward, Eric Beech and Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Will Dunham, Noeleen
Walder and Howard Goller)
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