- Carroll will receive $18.3m in compensatory damages and $65m in punitive retribution.
- Trump is paying Carroll compensatory damages of $18.3m – $11m to fund a reputational repair campaign.
- The $7.3m is for the emotional harm caused by Trump’s 2019 public statements.
- Carroll and her legal team were beaming as they left court in a black SUV. They did not answer questions immediately after court let out.
“I fully disagree with both verdicts, and will be appealing this whole Biden Directed Witch Hunt focused on me and the Republican Party,” the former president wrote.
- The Manhattan federal court decision comes less than one year after Carroll won $5m in her sexual abuse and defamation trial against the ex-president.
- This sum stems from Carroll’s rape claim against the president in a June 2019 New York magazine article.
- The publication ran an excerpt of her then-forthcoming book, What Do We Need Men For? A Modest Proposal.
- In that excerpt, Carroll said that Trump raped her inside the dressing room of a luxe Manhattan department store around early 1996.
- The tenor of Trump’s denials – saying, for example, that she lied and was a political operative – became the subject of her 2019 defamation suit against him.
- A novel New York state law in 2022, the Adult Survivors Act, opened a one-year window for adult accusers to file suit for incidents outside the civil statute of limitations.
- Carroll filed another lawsuit, this one over the incident and defamatory statements after Trump’s presidency ended.
- This lawsuit proceeded to trial first and the judge in both cases, Lewis Kaplan, determined jurors’ findings – that Trump sexually abused Carroll and tarnished her reputation – would be accepted as fact in this trial.
- As a result, Trump could not re-litigate her sexual abuse claim.
- The jurors were tasked only with weighing financial penalties for damaging Carroll’s reputation – and the sum required to keep Trump from making still more defamatory statements.
“I’m here because Donald Trump assaulted me, and when I wrote about it, he said it never happened,” Carroll said on the stand. “He lied, and it shattered my reputation. I expected him to deny it, but to say it was consensual, when it was not. But that’s what I expected him to say.”
She continued: “The thing that really got me about this was, from the White House, he asked if anyone had any information about me, and if they did, to please come forward as soon as possible, because he wanted the world to know what’s really going on – and that people like me should pay dearly.”
- “Mr Trump has the right to be present here.
- That right can be forfeited, and it can be forfeited if he is disruptive, which is what has been reported to me, and if he disregards court orders,” Kaplan warned.
“I would love it, I would love it,” Trump retorted with a gesture.
“I know you would, you just can’t control yourself in this circumstance, apparently,” Kaplan said.
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