The Columbus Dispatch

Lawyers: DOJ defense for Trump ‘dangerous’

Move to make US the defendant in lawsuit put taxpayers on the hook

- Jennifer Peltz

The U.S. Justice Department made a “wrong and dangerous” argument in seeking to defend former President Donald Trump against a former advice columnist’s claim that he defamed her when he denied her allegation of rape, her lawyers have told a court.

During Trump’s presidency, the Justice Department sought to make the United States, not him personally, the defendant in E. Jean Carroll’s lawsuit – a move that would put U.S. taxpayers on the hook if she got a payout in the case.

The Justice Department has argued that the statements he made about Carroll, including that she was “totally lying” to sell a memoir and that “she’s not my type,” fell within the scope of his job as president. The federal lawyers said he had to respond to her claims because they essentiall­y questioned his fitness to hold public office.

In court papers filed late Friday, Carroll’s lawyers said Trump’s comments were “personal, not presidenti­al” – and that accepting the Justice Department’s view would essentiall­y create a rule allowing federal officials to slur their detractors at will.

“That rule is both wrong and dangerous,” Carroll’s lawyers, led by Roberta Kaplan, wrote in asking a federal appeals court to reject the Justice Department’s argument. “It reflects a disturbing belief that federal officials should have free rein to destroy the reputation­s and livelihood­s of any perceived critic – no matter how unrelated to the business of governance.”

Justice Department attorneys declined to comment on the case. Messages seeking comment were left with the law firm that has represente­d Trump personally in the suit.

Carroll alleged in 2019 that Trump raped her in a New York luxury department store dressing room in the mid-1990s after they bumped into each other and started joking around about buying lingerie. She has been trying to get a DNA sample from him to test against male genetic material on a dress she says she was wearing during the encounter.

Carroll’s lawsuit said his comments sullied her character and damaged her career. She was a longtime Elle magazine columnist until late 2019.

This past October, a federal judge in Manhattan turned down the government’s bid to make the U.S. the defendant. In the final days of Trump’s presidency, the Justice Department appealed.

Government lawyers wrote that Trump was expected to respond to questions from the media – such as queries about Carroll’s allegation­s – and acted within the parameters of the presidency when “he seeks to defuse personal issues that threaten to impair his ability to achieve his agenda.”

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