Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Trump must cough up $83.3 million in E. Jean Carroll case by Monday after judge shoots down delay effort

- By Molly Crane-newman New York Daily News

NEW YORK — Donald Trump’s Hail Mary pass seeking more time to secure $83.3 million owed to E. Jean Carroll failed Thursday, giving the former president less than four days to come up with the colossal judgment — weeks out from a deadline to find half a billion dollars more in his historic fraud case.

In a one-page decision, Manhattan Federal Court Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected the former president’s request to halt collection of the damages a jury awarded Carroll in January as compensati­on for his defaming her while in office.

“Mr. Trump’s current situation is a result of his own dilatory actions. He has had since January 26 to organize his finances with the knowledge that he might need to bond this judgment, yet he waited until 25 days after the jury verdict,” Judge Kaplan wrote.

“Nor has Mr. Trump made any showing of what expenses he might incur if required to post a bond or other security, on what terms (if any) he could obtain a convention­al bond, or post cash or other assets to secure payment of the judgment, or any other circumstan­ces relevant to the situation.”

Trump lawyer Alina Habba on Wednesday asked Kaplan to temporaril­y delay the deadline until three business days after he rules on Trump’s posttrial motions to give him time to finalize bond arrangemen­ts, saying requiring him to come up with the total “threatens to impose irreparabl­e injury.” Habba did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on whether and how Trump was prepared to pay on time.

Once secured, the money Trump owes Carroll will remain in an account under the court’s purview until he’s exhausted his appeals. The damages come on top of $5 million a different jury awarded the former Elle columnist last year in the other of her two lawsuits against Trump after finding he sexually assaulted her in a Bergdorf Goodman changing room in 1996 and defamed her on Truth Social after his presidency.

The debt to Carroll pales in comparison to the more than $454 million Trump owes in a judgment secured by the New York attorney general, which he has to secure by March 25. The presumed Republican presidenti­al nominee has similarly tried to delay or reduce the growing sum Judge Arthur Engoron ordered him pay in a

Feb. 16 ruling finding him and his top Trump Organizati­on executives liable for rampant fraud and barring them from doing business in New York for three years.

The mammoth judgment in the fraud case is due the same day Trump’s 2016 election interferen­ce trial starts in Manhattan.

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