The Capital

Trump jury awards Carroll $83.3M

Verdict issued on 1st day of deliberati­ons in defamation case

- By Jake Offenhartz, Larry Neumeister and Jennifer Peltz

NEW YORK — A jury has awarded $83.3 million in additional damages to advice columnist E. Jean Carroll, who says former President Donald Trump damaged her reputation by calling her a liar after she accused him of sexual assault.

The verdict, which included $65 million in punitive damages, was delivered Friday by a seven-man, two-woman jury in a trial regularly attended by Trump, who abruptly left the courtroom during closing arguments by Carroll’s lawyer, only to later return.

Carroll smiled as the verdict was read. By then, Trump had left the building in his motorcade.

“Absolutely ridiculous!” he said in a statement shortly after the verdict was announced. He vowed an appeal. “Our Legal System is out of control, and being used as a Political Weapon.”

It was the second time in nine months that a jury returned a verdict related to Carroll’s claim that a flirtatiou­s, chance encounter with

Trump in 1996 at a Bergdorf Goodman store in Manhattan ended violently. She said Trump slammed her against a dressing room wall, pulled down her tights and forced himself on her.

In May, a different jury awarded Carroll $5 million. It found Trump not liable for rape, but responsibl­e for sexually abusing Carroll and then defaming her by claiming she made it up. He is appealing that award.

Trump skipped the first trial. He later expressed regret for not attending and insisted on testifying in the second trial, though the judge limited what he could say, ruling he had missed his chance to argue that he was innocent.

He spent only a few minutes on the witness stand Thursday, during which he denied attacking Carroll.

This new jury was only asked how much Trump, 77, should pay Carroll, 80, for two statements he made as president when he answered reporters’ questions after excerpts of Carroll’s memoir were published in a magazine — damages that couldn’t be decided earlier because of legal appeals. Jurors were not asked to re-decide the issue of whether the sex attack actually happened.

Carroll’s attorneys had requested $24 million in compensato­ry damages. The jury awarded $18.3 million in compensato­ry damages and another $65 million in punitive damages.

Her lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, urged jurors in her closing argument Friday to punish Trump enough that he would stop a steady stream of public statements smearing Carroll as a liar and a “whack job.”

Trump shook his head as Kaplan spoke, then stood and walked out, taking Secret Service agents with him. His exit came minutes after the judge, without the jury present, threatened to send Trump attorney Alina Habba to jail for continuing to talk when he told her she was finished.

“You are on the verge of spending some time in the lockup. Now sit down,” the judge told Habba, who immediatel­y complied.

The trial reached its conclusion as Trump marches toward winning the Republican presidenti­al nomination a third consecutiv­e time. He has sought to turn his trials and legal vulnerabil­ities into an advantage, portraying them as evidence of a weaponized political system.

Though there’s no evidence that President Joe Biden or anyone in the White House has influenced any of the legal cases against him, Trump’s line of argument has resonated with his most loyal supporters who view the proceeding­s with skepticism. Carroll testified early in the trial that Trump’s public statements had led to death threats. “He shattered my reputation,” she said. “I am here to get my reputation back and to stop him from telling lies about me.”

She said she’d had an electronic fence installed around the cabin in upstate New York where she lives and bought bullets for a gun she keeps by her bed.

“Previously, I was known as simply as a journalist and had a column, and now I’m known as the liar, the fraud and the whack job,” Carroll testified.

Trump’s lawyer, Habba, told jurors that Carroll had been enriched by her accusation­s against Trump and achieved fame she had craved. She said no damages were warranted.

To support Carroll’s request for millions in damages, Northweste­rn University sociologis­t Ashlee Humphreys told the jury that Trump’s 2019 statements had caused $7.2 million to $12.1 million in harm to Carroll’s reputation.

When Trump finally testified, Kaplan gave him little room to maneuver, because Trump could not be permitted to try to revive issues settled in the first trial.

“It is a very well-establishe­d legal principle in this country that prevents do-overs by disappoint­ed litigants,” Kaplan said.

“And the jury will be instructed that, regardless of what he says in court here today, he did it, as far as they’re concerned. That is the law,” Kaplan said shortly before Trump testified.

After he swore to tell the truth, Trump was asked if he stood by a deposition in which he called Carroll a “liar” and a “whack job.”

He answered: “100 percent. Yes.”

Asked if he denied the allegation because Carroll made an accusation, he responded: “That’s exactly right. She said something, I consider it a false accusation.”

Asked if he ever instructed anyone to hurt Carroll, he said: “No. I just wanted to defend myself, my family, and frankly, the presidency.”

The judge ordered the jury to disregard the “false accusation” comment and everything Trump said after “No” to the last question.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/GETTY ?? E. Jean Carroll arrives at the federal courthouse before closing arguments Friday in New York City.
SPENCER PLATT/GETTY E. Jean Carroll arrives at the federal courthouse before closing arguments Friday in New York City.

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