San Diego Union-Tribune

TRUMP RAPE TRIAL GOES TO THE JURY

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After a two-week trial examining accusation­s that former President Donald Trump raped a woman decades ago, a jury in Manhattan federal court on Tuesday will begin deciding whether he is liable for battery and defamation.

E. Jean Carroll, a 79-yearold former columnist for Elle magazine, accused Trump of raping her in a dressing room at Bergdorf Goodman in the mid-1990s. If found liable, Trump could be made to pay monetary damages and retract statements he made casting aspersions on Carroll and her case.

Both sides delivered closing arguments Monday. Roberta Kaplan, a lawyer for Carroll, reminded the jury that no one, not even a former president, is above the law.

Trump’s lawyers, who called no witnesses, portrayed the accusation­s as improbable, because the store was a public place and Trump was already famous.

“Amazing, odd, inconceiva­ble, unbelievab­le,” said Joseph Tacopina, Trump’s lawyer. “Everything in this case is one of these things.”

Trump has denied all wrongdoing and has called the allegation­s a “hoax.”

The jury consists of six men and three women, all of whom were poker-faced, rarely showing their feelings about the testimony.

The trial has forced participan­ts to relive events of decades ago, and it comes amid a flurry of legal actions aimed at Trump, 76. Among the case’s notable moments:

• Carroll gave a visceral account of an event that she says marked the end of her romantic life.

• Trump in a videotaped deposition reiterated his earlier claim that he would not have raped Carroll because he did not find her appealing and declined to repudiate vulgar comments he made in 2005 about being entitled as a celebrity to kiss women and grab them by their genitals.

• Trump made a campaign appearance as testimony continued in which he mocked many of his legal opponents — but not Carroll.

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