The Boston Globe

Trump accuser faces cross-examinatio­n in courtroom

Carroll denies gaining benefit from publicity

- By Jake Offenhartz and Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — With former president Donald Trump no longer in the courtroom Thursday, a columnist who accused him of sexually attacking her concluded her testimony with an emphatic denial that she had benefited from the publicity that followed the allegation­s.

A Trump attorney tried to show the jury that E. Jean Carroll has achieved the fame, if not the fortune, she desired after the publicatio­n of a memoir accusing Trump of raping her in a department store dressing room in the 1990s.

Carroll responded: “No, my status was lowered. I’m partaking in this trial to bring my own reputation and status back.”

The testimony came on the third day of a trial in Manhattan federal court that will determine what damages, if any, Trump owes for remarks he made about Carroll when he was president. A jury has already found Trump liable for sexually abusing Carroll in 1996 and defaming her in a separate round of denials he made following his presidency.

In her final day on the witness stand, Carroll said her allegation­s against Trump — first made public in a 2019 article in New York Magazine — had brought her an unexpected degree of infamy, along with death threats.

An attorney for Trump, Alina Habba, countered that Carroll’s social media followers increased “exponentia­lly” since the allegation­s, adding that she had gained profession­al opportunit­ies and social standing among left-leaning celebritie­s.

“I’ve been invited to two parties,” Carroll responded dryly, before adding: “Yes, I’m more well known and I’m hated by a lot more people.”

Trump, who had attended the first two days of the trial, was in Florida Thursday for the funeral of his mother-in-law.

During the previous day’s proceeding, he was scolded by Judge Lewis A. Kaplan and threatened with expulsion after a lawyer for Carroll complained he was grumbling about the case loudly enough that jurors could hear him.

Though he was absent from the courtroom Thursday, Trump’s presence still loomed over the proceeding­s, as lawyers for Carroll played a video of his press conference from the previous evening describing the trial as “rigged” and Carroll as “a person I never knew.”

On Thursday, Habba also showed jurors a series of mean tweets sent to Carroll in the hours after her allegation­s became public in 2019 but before Trump released his first public statements — an apparent effort to prove the vitriol directed at Carroll was unrelated to the former president’s statements.

“They follow Donald Trump. They want to emulate him,” Carroll said. “They’re standing up for the man they admire.”

The judge quickly shut down the line of questionin­g, saying it was “simply repetitiou­s.”

Carroll has testified that her life changed dramatical­ly after Trump branded her a liar, claimed he never met her and asserted that she made her claims against him to promote her book and damage him politicall­y. She said she lives in fear, sleeps with a loaded gun beside her, and wishes she could boost her security but doesn’t have enough money.

Last May, a jury in the same courtroom awarded Carroll $5 million in damages after concluding Trump sexually abused her in a Bergdorf Goodman store across the street from Trump Tower in spring 1996 and then defamed her with statements in October 2022.

In that verdict, jurors rejected Carroll’s claim that she was raped, finding Trump responsibl­e for a lesser degree of sexual abuse. The judge said the jury’s decision was based on “the narrow, technical meaning” of rape in New York penal law and that, in his analysis, the verdict did not mean that Carroll “failed to prove that Mr. Trump ‘raped’ her as many people commonly understand the word ‘rape.’”

Trump did not attend that trial and has said recently that he was advised by his attorney to stay away.

Sometime next week, the jury will be asked to determine damages. Carroll is seeking $10 million in compensato­ry damages and substantia­lly more in punitive damages.

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