The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Trump found guilty, now suing his accuser

- By Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — Former President Donald Trump is trying to turn the tables on the advice columnist who won a $5 million jury award against him in a sexual abuse lawsuit, saying in a countersui­t that she owes him money and a retraction for continuing to insist she was raped even after a jury declined to agree.

Lawyers for the Republican presidenti­al candidate filed papers late Tuesday saying E. Jean Carroll should pay Trump unspecifie­d compensato­ry and punitive damages and retract her damaging statements.

The countersui­t comes a month after Carroll’s lawyers filed a rewritten defamation lawsuit seeking at least $10 million more from Trump over comments he made after the jury verdict in May.

The jury concluded after a two-week trial that Trump sexually abused Carroll in a luxury department store dressing room in spring 1996. It also found that he defamed her in comments he made denying the attack last October.

But the jury rejected Carroll’s claim, first made in a 2019 memoir, that Trump raped her in the Bergdorf Goodman dressing room.

At trial, Carroll testified that the rape occurred after a chance encounter with Trump at the midtown store, initially friendly and flirtatiou­s, turned into a violent assault after they teased each other to try on a piece of lingerie.

Trump has consistent­ly denied ever raping Carroll or knowing her. He said the department store encounter never happened.

In his countersui­t, Trump’s lawyers cited comments Carroll made in a CNN interview after May’s verdict, saying that when she was questioned about the jury’s finding that she was not raped, Carroll responded: “Oh yes he did, oh yes he did.”

And they said Carroll also revealed that when she spoke to Trump attorney Joe Tacopina immediatel­y after the verdict, she said she told him emphatical­ly: “He did it and you know it.”

The lawyers, Alina Habba and Michael T. Madaio, wrote that Carroll “made these statements knowing each of them were false or with reckless disregard for their truth or falsity.”

“The Interview was on television, social media and multiple internet websites, with the intention of broadcasti­ng and circulatin­g these defamatory statements among a significan­t portion of the public,” they added.

In a statement in response to Trump’s countercla­im, Carroll attorney Robbie Kaplan said that Trump “again argues, contrary to both logic and fact, that he was exonerated by a jury that found that he sexually abused E Jean Carroll by forcibly inserting his fingers into her vagina.”

She said four of five statements cited by the countercla­im were made outside of the oneyear statute of limitation­s when a claim must be made and predicted the other will be dismissed by U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan.

“Trump’s filing is thus nothing more than his latest effort to delay accountabi­lity for what a jury has already found to be his defamation of E Jean Carroll. But whether he likes it or not, that accountabi­lity is coming very soon,” Kaplan said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States