Donald Trump is already the first former American president to face criminal charges. Jurors are expected to soon decide in an unrelated civil case whether he lied about committing rape.
A trial is scheduled to begin on April 25 in one of former Elle magazine advice columnist E Jean Carroll’s two lawsuits against Trump over his denials that he raped her in the mid-1990s.
Trump may owe damages if Carroll convinces a Manhattan federal jury it was more likely than not that he defamed her in an October 2022 post on his Truth Social platform.
There, he called Carroll’s rape claim a “Hoax and a lie” for promoting her memoir, and maintained that she was “not my type!” Carroll is also suing for battery under a new state law in New York that gives adults a one-year window to sue their alleged abusers even if legal deadlines to sue, known as statutes of limitations, have long since passed.
Now 79, Carroll has said Trump raped her at the Bergdorf Goodman department store in midtown Manhattan in late 1995 or early 1996.
She said that after Trump asked for help in buying a gift for another woman, he “manoeuvred” her into a dressing room, where he closed the door and penetrated her before she escaped.
Carroll first sued Trump for defamation in November 2019, five months after he first denied her rape claim.
She has long accused Trump of stalling, and US District Judge Lewis Kaplan in Manhattan has rejected multiple efforts by Trump to delay Carroll’s case.
“Trump has a strong incentive to settle the case to avoid the airing of that evidence, whether it is true or not,” said Barbara McQuade, a University of Michigan law professor and former US Attorney in Detroit.
“Carroll may decide that she cares more about airing her story publicly than any monetary settlement can buy,” she added.
Trump is not required to defend himself in person, and will decide during the trial whether to attend, his lawyer Joe Tacopina said in a letter yesterday. Carroll plans to attend every day.
Roberta Kaplan, a lawyer for Carroll, declined to comment for this article. She is unrelated to the judge. Trump’s lawyers were not available for comment.
It was not immediately clear whether Trump, 76, who has bragged that “I don’t settle cases” although he sometimes does, would settle with Carroll.
Her case is one of several criminal and civil inquiries Trump faces. None has disturbed his status as the Republican front-runner in the 2024 presidential race.
Last year, Trump refused to let his Trump Organisation concede wrongdoing in a New York criminal tax fraud case, which ended in a conviction that is being appealed.
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