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Search resuls for: "Jean Carroll —"


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Now, the US Supreme Court faces its greatest test so far from the former president. How Trump works the refsEven though Trump is not expected to attend Thursday’s oral arguments at the Supreme Court, the justices know what’s coming. According to a CNN poll conducted late last month, 49% of Republicans say Trump did nothing wrong following the last presidential election. “I’m not happy with the Supreme Court. “We do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges,” Roberts wrote in an extraordinary statement that did not name Trump, but clearly had him in mind.
Persons: Donald Trump, George W, Bush, Al Gore, Trump, it’s, he’s, what’s, Jean Carroll —, Trump’s, Donald Trump Jr, , , SCOTUS, John Roberts, doesn’t, Gore, – Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett –, “ I’m, ” Trump, didn’t, Roberts, Clinton, ” Roberts, CNN’s, Joan Biskupic, Biskupic Organizations: CNN, Colorado Supreme, Trump, Texas Gov, Republican, Supreme, Capitol, Democratic, Representatives Locations: New York, Washington ,, , Bush, Washington, Iowa, Colorado, Manhattan
In December, a jury ordered Rudy Giuliani to pay $148 million for defaming election workers. AdvertisementThese extraordinary judgments are the result of a combination of factors, but social media plays a major role, legal experts said. While in the past, high-profile figures may have been less willing to make defamatory statements, social media can actually provide an incentive for them to do so. Jones also stood to gain from spreading conspiracy theories about the Sandy Hook shooting, according to Mattei. Lieb added it's not that any statement made on social media will automatically carry major consequences, but that the size of the person's audience makes a huge difference.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Jean Carroll —, Trump, Rudy Giuliani, Alex Jones, Sandy Hook, We've, Chris Mattei, Jones, Mattei, Infowars, it's, Andrew Lieb, Lieb, Giuliani, Carroll, John Jones Organizations: Service, Business, Carroll, Trump, Dickinson College Locations: New York
He spoke to his lawyers, his words sometimes quite audible to the packed courtroom. He wrote instructions for his defense team that he shoved their way. He walked in late at one point, and at another, while a lawyer suing him was speaking to the jury, he stalked out. His use of the defense table as a stage also provided clues to the public, and a reminder to his own legal team, of how he might handle himself if and when any of the four criminal cases he is facing go to trial. And in recent months he sat for many days of the trial a few blocks away at 60 Centre Street, where Justice Arthur F. Engoron of State Supreme Court oversaw the fraud trial against Mr. Trump and his company.
Persons: Donald J, Jean Carroll —, New York —, Carroll, general’s, Trump, Judge Lewis A, Kaplan, Arthur F Organizations: New, Republican, Court, Mr Locations: New York, Manhattan
Former US president Donald Trump continues to deny knowing E. Jean Carroll. A Manhattan jury found Trump did — and likely sexually abused her. Trump's team released a long statement in response to the verdict, also calling the verdict a "witch-hunt of President Trump." While the jury found Trump liable for sexually abusing and defaming Carroll after two weeks of trial testimony and arguments, they did not find that Carroll met the burden of proof in showing that he raped her. Jurors, however, were shown a photo of Trump and Carroll chatting with their spouses at a gala in 1987, several years before the Bergdorf Goodman incident.
Former President Donald Trump has yet to decide if he will attend his upcoming rape defamation trial, his attorney told a federal judge Thursday. The defamation trial is scheduled to begin in U.S. District Court in Manhattan next Tuesday. In a new court filing posted Thursday afternoon, Trump's lawyer Joe Tacopina told Judge Lewis Kaplan that he could not make a commitment around attendance — yet. Trump's decision "will be made during the course of the trial," Tacopina wrote. Carroll plans to attend the entire trial and testify under oath before the jury, her lawyer noted Wednesday in a letter to Kaplan.
Trump mistook a woman who is suing him for sexual assault for his ex-wife during a deposition. When confronted with the photo during the deposition, Trump said, "That's Marla, yeah." "That's Marla, yeah. When Trump made the mix-up, his lawyer, Alina Habba, appeared to correct him and point out that the woman was Carroll. Trump in his deposition repeatedly doubled down on his stance that he would never have found Carroll attractive.
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