New York Daily News

Civil rape trial jury going to be anonymous

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN

The jury at Donald Trump’s upcoming civil rape trial will be anonymous, a judge ruled Thursday, citing concerns about the former president’s potential to put them in danger.

Manhattan Federal Court Judge Lewis Kaplan, presiding over writer E. Jean Carroll’s rape lawsuit against Trump, made mention of Trump’s online activity this week, in which he called on his followers to take to the streets to protest his arrest.

“Mr. Trump’s quite recent reaction to what he perceived as an imminent threat of indictment by a grand jury sitting virtually next door to this Court was to encourage ‘protest’ and to urge people to ‘take our country back.’ That reaction reportedly has been perceived by some as incitement to violence. And it bears mention that Mr. Trump repeatedly has attacked courts, judges, various law enforcemen­t officials and other public officials, and even individual jurors in other matters,” Kaplan wrote.

“If jurors’ identities were disclosed, there would be a strong likelihood of unwanted media attention to the jurors, influence attempts, and/or of harassment or worse of jurors by supporters of Mr. Trump. Indeed, Mr. Trump himself has made critical statements on social media regarding the grand jury foreperson in Atlanta, Georgia, and the jury foreperson in the Roger Stone criminal case.”

Kaplan said the jury will be escorted to and from the courthouse throughout the trial by U.S. marshals.

Lawyers for the Daily News and Associated Press opposed the decision, arguing for the public’s presumptiv­e right to access civil proceeding­s. Trump and Carroll’s lawyers consented to it.

In two lawsuits, Carroll has accused Trump of raping her inside a dressing room at Bergdorf Goodman in the mid-1990s and slandering her in public statements during and after his presidency. Trump denies the encounter.

The one going to trial on April 25 concerns Carroll’s second suit against Trump filed in November, which includes rape and defamation claims.

It was the first case filed under New York’s Adult Survivors Act, which afforded sex abuse victims their day in court by lifting the statute of limitation­s for one year to bring claims.

Complicate­d appeals have bogged down Carroll’s first lawsuit for years. he was a rapist, said she was “not my type.”

Trump and Carroll’s declined to comment. lawyers

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