© Reuters. Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald Trump gestures as he takes the stage during his New Hampshire presidential primary election night watch party, in Nashua, New Hampshire, U.S., January 23, 2024. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Pho
By Jonathan Stempel and Luc Cohen
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Donald Trump may go face-to-face with the writer E. Jean Carroll in open court on Thursday, to convince jurors he shouldn’t pay her any damages despite being liable for having defamed and sexually abused her.
Lawyers for Carroll are expected to wrap up their case in federal court in Manhattan, and Trump could testify in his own defense after they finish.
Carroll, 80, is suing over Trump’s June 2019 denials that he raped her in the mid-1990s in a Bergdorf Goodman department store dressing room in Manhattan. The former Elle magazine advice columnist is seeking at least $10 million.
Trump, 77, has consistently denied wrongdoing, claiming he had known Carroll despite photos showing them together, and accusing her of making up the rape to boost sales of her memoir.
The trial has become an element of Trump’s third White House run, with the Republican frontrunner shuttling between the courtroom and campaign stops, while criticizing Carroll, the judge and the judicial process online and at press conferences.
Jurors last heard testimony a week ago, before the trial was delayed because of COVID-19 concerns relating to a juror and one of Trump’s lawyers.
Last May, another jury ordered Trump to pay Carroll $5 million after he denied her rape claim in October 2022.
U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan, who has presided at both trials, has ruled that the first trial established that Trump defamed and sexually abused Carroll.
The only issues for the nine jurors in the current trial is how much money Trump should pay Carroll, if any, for damaging her reputation – and how much, if any, he should pay as punishment and to dissuade him from defaming her again.
A damages expert testified on Carroll’s behalf that the damage to her reputation could be as high as $12.1 million.
Trump’s legal team has said damages should be nominal or zero, and that Carroll has gained more than whatever she might have lost by pursuing and gaining her newfound game.
Kaplan last week warned Trump not to use the courtroom to air political grievances, after one of Carroll’s lawyers complained that jurors might have overheard Trump calling the case a “witch hunt” and “con job.”
The judge has spent 29 years on the federal bench. He is known for his no-nonsense approach, and for expressing impatience with lawyers and witnesses who don’t follow his instructions.
Kaplan could interrupt or shut down Trump’s testimony, or throw him out of the courtroom, if Trump persisted in speaking out of turn, or digressed from the issues the jury will consider.
On Jan. 11, when another judge asked Trump if he could stick to the facts if allowed to give a closing statement in the New York attorney general’s civil fraud case against him, Trump responded by attacking the judge and proclaiming the case a politically inspired sham.
Carroll’s lawyers have warned that Trump might try to “sow chaos” if he testified, because his defiance might aid him politically.
This story originally appeared on Investing