Donald Trump goes to trial, accused of rape
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Donald Trump goes to trial on Tuesday, where the writer E. Jean Carroll is accusing the former U.S. president in a civil lawsuit of raping her in a department store dressing room in the mid-1990s.
Jury selection is expected to begin in Manhattan federal court, where the former Elle magazine advice columnist is also accusing Trump of defamation.
Trump, 76, has denied raping Carroll, 79, He called her claim a "hoax" and "complete Scam" in a October 2022 post on his Truth Social platform. He has said she made up the encounter to promote her memoir and declared that she was "not my type!"
Trump is not required to attend the trial. His lawyers have said he may not appear, citing the likelihood of security concerns and traffic delays. Carroll's lawyers have said they do not plan to call Trump as a witness.
If Trump testified, he would likely face an aggressive cross-examination. Trump has repeatedly attacked Carroll and in personal terms since she first publicly accused him of rape in 2019. He has claimed she is mentally ill.
U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan, who oversees the case, is keeping jurors anonymous from the public, including the lawyers, to shield them from potential harassment by Trump supporters.
The trial could last one to two weeks.
Trump, the Republican front-runner for the 2024 presidential election, faces a slew of lawsuits and investigations.
These include Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's criminal charges over hush money payments to an adult film star.
Trump pleaded not guilty to those charges on April 4 at a New York state courthouse, a three-minute walk from Tuesday's trial.
The former president also faces civil fraud charges by New York Attorney General Letitia James into his namesake company.
Trump also faces criminal probes into interference in Georgia's 2020 presidential race and into classified government documents recovered at his Mar-a-Lago residence, plus inquiries into his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.
In all of these cases, Trump has denied wrongdoing.
OTHER ACCUSERS MAY TESTIFYCarroll said her encounter with Trump at the Bergdorf Goodman store occurred in late 1995 or early 1996.
She said Trump recognized her, calling her "that advice lady," and asked for help in buying a gift for another woman.
Carroll said Trump "maneuvered" her into a dressing room where he shut the door, forced her against a wall, pulled down her tights and penetrated her. She said she broke free after two to three minutes.
Trump's lawyers may try to undermine Carroll's credibility by noting that she did not call the police, and remained publicly silent for more than two decades.
They may also challenge her inability to remember the date or even the month of the alleged attack.
Carroll has said the #MeToo movement inspired her to come forward.
Two women in whom she said she confided after the attack, author Lisa Birnbach and former news anchor Carol Martin, are expected to testify.
Carroll's witness list also includes two other women who have accused Trump of sexual misconduct, which Trump denies.
Lawyers for Carroll could use their testimony to establish a pattern of Trump's alleged mistreatment of women.
They are also expected to play for jurors a 2005 "Access Hollywood" tape where Trump made graphic, vulgar comments about women.
Carroll is also suing Trump for defamation after he first denied her rape claim in June 2019, when he was still president. That case remains pending before Kaplan.
© ReutersTrump's lawyers are getting 'totally outmaneuvered' in civil rape trial: expert
Lawyers for Donald Trump are trying to block a woman who accused him of forcibly kissing her from testifying in his upcoming rape and defamation civil trial brought by writer E. Jean Carroll.
Trump lawyer Joe Tacopina asked the judge to reconsider whether Trump's alleged forced kissing of Natasha Stoynoff after pushing her against a wall should be brought up during trial.
"You will recall that Ms Stoynoff testified in her deposition that Defendant escorted her into a room, and then grabbed her shoulders and pushed her against a wall and started kissing her. Then someone allegedly came into the room and the incident ceased. Defendant's motion in limine sought to exclude this testimony under Federal Rule of Evidence 413(d). Your Honor denied our Motion; however, we request clarification with a proposed solution," Tacopina wrote in the motion.
Trump has repeatedly denied Carroll's allegation that he sexually assaulted her in the dressing room of Bergdorf Goodman in the mid-1990s. Carroll sued Trump for defamation in 2019 and later added a charge of battery after New York's laws on statutes of limitations regarding civil lawsuits were updated.
Speaking to Salon, former U.S. attorney and current law professor at the University of Michigan, Barb McQuade, said these kinds of motions "are fairly typical just before trial starts."
Former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman tweeted that the upcoming trial will be one to watch.
"Trump's lawyer in E Jean Carroll case, Joe Tacopina, is getting totally outmaneuvered," tweeted Litman. "He is trying to get judge to revisit ruling about one of the women who will testify that Trump assaulted them. It's too late for that though. And the evidence will be brutal."
https://twitter.com/harrylitman/status/1650347180287459329Tucker Carlson's ouster shows MAGA’s waning influence: columnist
Some of the top MAGA figures were quick to assail Fox News over its surprising decision to cut ties with right-wing opinion host Tucker Carlson.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) tweeted: “Cable news is about to be taught a powerful lesson after Fox News caved to the woke mob and fired Tucker Carlson.”
It’s not yet known exactly what it was that compelled Fox News to dismiss the network’s top-rated host.
Texts and emails revealed during discovery in the Dominion case that resulted in a $787.5 million settlement show the network was fearful enough of MAGA viewers abandoning Fox News for rival right-wing outlets Newsmax and OANN that it coddled its election denying audience.
But the decision to let Carlson go at least in part reflects the waning influence of the MAGA movement, Washington Post columnist Greg Sargent writes.
Sargent asserts that Carlson’s dismissal shows that a movement that helped propel Donald Trump to the White House is in decline.
Sargent notes that Ray Epps, a figure at the center of Jan. 6 false flag conspiracy theories promoted by Carlson, among others , who on Sunday night was the subject of a “60 Minutes” segment, to be among the most recent examples of MAGA’s waning influence.
Epps has been depicted as an FBI plant who helped inspire the breach of the Capitol. Conspirators have pointed to a video that shows Epps whispering to a man before a crowd pushed past a barrier, knocking a female police officer to the ground.
Sargent writes that the news show “debunks this with additional video of Epps just after he whispered to the man. It shows Epps repeatedly urging the rioters to calm down and refrain from violence. ‘They’re not the enemy', Epps told the rioters, speaking about the police.”
Epps remains an election denier despite receiving death threats over the conspiracy theories, and he singled out Carlson in particular during his appearance on “60 Minutes.”
“He’s obsessed with me,” Epps said.
Sargent writes that the “toll of this obsession was severe,” noting it led to death threats and prompted Epps to sell his Arizona ranch.
“In the end, the Epps saga exposes the insurrectionist wing of the MAGA movement for what it is: violent, destructive and lawless, with tentacles reaching into the highest ranks of the GOP, and Carlson as its willing accomplice,” Sargent writes.
“At the same time, this saga is part of a largely positive story about our institutions and their performance in the face of extraordinary strains exerted by the largest outbreak of political violence in recent U.S. history.”
Read More Here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/04/24/ray-epps-60-minutes-tucker-carlson-jan-6/?itid=ap_gregsargent