News

Carroll v. Trump: Battery and defamation case comes to trial

Former President Donald Trump’s legal problems could deepen this week with the scheduled opening of a New York trial on allegations he sexually assaulted journalist E. Jean Carroll in a dressing room some 30 years ago.

The case involves civil charges, unlike the historic criminal indictment of Mr. Trump earlier this month. The former president has emphatically denied the alleged assault and suggested Ms. Carroll invented it to increase sales of a 2019 book.

Why We Wrote This

A civil lawsuit against Donald Trump, starting tomorrow, could renew focus on his alleged pattern of sexual misbehavior. And it piles atop other legal challenges facing the former president.

But with trials and pending trials beginning to multiply, Mr. Trump and his lawyers face the prospect of lurching from one courtroom to the next, defending against an array of cases of varying levels of seriousness.

The lawsuit brought by Ms. Carroll is the second she’s filed against the former president. Both suits charge Mr. Trump with defamation, and the second adds in a battery claim. The first lawsuit has remained stuck while courts wrangle over whether Mr. Trump was acting within the scope of his duties as president when he spoke to the press in 2019 and denigrated Ms. Carroll. The second suit – the one set to start tomorrow – focuses on statements Mr. Trump made after he left office in January 2021.

Former President Donald Trump’s legal problems could deepen this week with the scheduled opening of a New York trial on allegations he sexually assaulted journalist E. Jean Carroll in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room some 30 years ago.

The case involves civil charges, unlike the historic criminal indictment of Mr. Trump earlier this month by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. Civil trials adjudicate disputes between people or organizations and don’t result in time in prison or on parole. In the vast majority of cases judgments against defendants result in money changing hands.

The former president has emphatically denied the alleged assault and suggested Ms. Carroll invented it to increase sales of a 2019 book in which she described the incident.

Why We Wrote This

A civil lawsuit against Donald Trump, starting tomorrow, could renew focus on his alleged pattern of sexual misbehavior. And it piles atop other legal challenges facing the former president.

But with trials and pending trials beginning to multiply, Mr. Trump and his lawyers face the prospect of lurching from one courtroom to the next, defending against an array of cases of varying levels of seriousness. Mr. Trump may soon be indicted in Georgia on charges related to his efforts to overturn the 2020 vote in that state. Federal special counsel Jack Smith looms in the background, investigating Mr. Trump’s alleged role in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol, and his possible illegal retention of classified documents following his term in office.

The Carroll case, set to go to trial on April 25, may also return to the headlines Mr. Trump’s past crude statements about women, plus multiple allegations of groping and sexual misbehavior. U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled in March that Ms. Carroll can present as evidence the infamous “Access Hollywood” tape, in which Mr. Trump boasted he could “grab” women, and the testimony of two other women, Natasha Stoynoff and Jessica Leeds, who have claimed he assaulted them.

Timothy A. Clary/AP

Former President Donald Trump, shown here at his arraignment on April 4, 2023, in New York, denies the allegations made by journalist E. Jean Carroll in a separate case.

The allegations

Ms. Carroll is a New York-based journalist and a longtime former advice columnist for Elle magazine. In the mid-1990s she was host and producer of the “Ask E. Jean” show on NBC’s America’s Talking cable network, the predecessor to MSNBC.

Previous ArticleNext Article