Select Page

E Jean Carroll faces off with Trump as $10m defamation trial begins

Journalist E. Jean Carroll arrives at Federal court for her second Civil Defamation Trial against former president Donald J. Trump in New YorkImage source, EPA-EFE

Image caption,

Both Donald Trump and E Jean Carroll, who is pictured above, are attending the jury selection

By Kayla Epstein in court, Nadine Yousif and Sam Cabral

BBC News

Donald Trump and E Jean Carroll, a writer who accuses him of rape, are both in court as her $10m (£7.9m) defamation trial kicks off.

A New York jury will decide the damages the former president must pay Ms Carroll over comments he made about her and her allegations.

Last year, a New York jury found Mr Trump had sexually assaulted and defamed Ms Carroll, awarding her $5m.

This latest trial relates to Mr Trump’s denials in 2019, when he was president.

In a New York magazine piece at the time, Ms Carroll alleged the former real estate mogul had forced himself on her in a Manhattan department store in the 1990s.

Mr Trump called her story “totally false”. The 77-year-old has also repeatedly claimed he has never met Ms Carroll and that she had invented the story to sell her memoir.

On Tuesday, the morning after his resounding victory in the Iowa caucus – the first Republican contest for the presidential nomination – Mr Trump attended jury selection in the civil trial at a Manhattan federal court.

The Republican frontrunner sat between his lawyers and appeared to stare intently at Ms Carroll, who sat three rows in front of him with her back turned.

Ms Carroll, 80, briefly turned in her seat as Mr Trump’s lawyers haggled with the judge but she did not make eye contact with him.

In his chair at the defence table, Mr Trump turned to get a look at jurors as they each responded to questions from the judge.

His presence led to some unusual questions as lawyers sought to determine impartiality, such as whether the potential jurors had voted in the 2016 and 2020 elections; whether they believed in the QAnon conspiracy theory; and, whether they supported the MeToo movement.

From the moment of his arrival, the official account on Mr Trump’s Truth Social platform sent out more than two dozen posts, calling the case “PURE FICTION”.

He also cast doubt on Ms Carroll’s credibility and pointed out her legal bills have been covered in part by a major Democratic donor through a non-profit group.

An advisor for the donor has said they had no prior knowledge the funding would go to that specific case, and a lawyer for Ms Carroll has said the funding was “irrelevant” to her claims.

This case is separate from their first civil trial in May, where a different New York jury found Mr Trump liable for sexually abusing and defaming Ms Carroll, but not for raping her.

That trial, which Mr Trump did not attend at all, revolved around his 2022 claim that her case was “a hoax and a lie”.

Mr Trump is appealing the verdict.

In September, Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled that this second trial will be limited to determining damages.

Ms Carroll is seeking at least $10m – twice what she was awarded in the first trial – because she argues the comments by then-President Trump did harm to her reputation.

Mr Trump has said he wants to testify this time.

Amid a dispute between both legal teams over what the former president can say on the stand, Judge Kaplan last week issued a stern warning.

“Mr Trump is precluded from offering any testimony, evidence or argument suggesting or implying that he did not sexually assault Ms Carroll, that she fabricated her account of the assault or that she had any motive to do so,” he wrote in a court opinion.

Ms Carroll’s lawyer, Roberta Kaplan (who is not related to Judge Kaplan), has said that Mr Trump will attempt to “sow chaos” with his testimony.

“There are any number of reasons why Mr Trump might perceive a personal or political benefit from intentionally turning this trial into a circus,” she wrote in a memo to Judge Kaplan.

Citing Mr Trump’s outburst at his separate New York civil fraud trial last week, the attorney asked that he state under oath that he understands the limits of what he can say.

In response, Mr Trump’s lawyer Alina Habba said the former president is “well aware” of the court’s ruling and “the strict confines placed on his testimony”.

Earlier, Judge Kaplan rejected Mr Trump’s request to postpone the trial by a week so he could attend the funeral of his mother-in-law, Amalija Knavs, on Thursday.

But the judge ruled that the ex-president could be allowed to testify next Monday.

As Mr Trump turns his attention to New Hampshire and the rest of the Republican primary, he is also facing 91 criminal felony charges across four state and federal cases.

Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-67964678?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=KARANGA