Politics

E. Jean Carroll rests case in civil trial after jurors see video of Trump confusing her with his ex-wife

Adam Reiss and Dareh Gregorian
WATCH LIVE
Former Elle magazine advice columnist E. Jean Carroll watches as former President Donald Trump's video deposition is played in court during a civil trial in which Carroll accuses Trump of raping her in a department store dressing room in the mid-1990s and of defamation, in New York, May 4, 2023, in this courtroom sketch.
Jane Rosenberg | Reuters

Lawyers for E. Jean Carroll rested her civil case against Donald Trump on Thursday, shortly after jurors were shown a deposition video of the former president confusing the accuser with his ex-wife Marla Maples.

"It's Marla," Trump said during a deposition for the case when shown a picture of him, Carroll and Carroll's ex-husband in the 1980s.

"That's Marla, yeah. That's my wife," Trump continued before being corrected by his lawyer, Alina Habba. "No, that's Carroll," Habba said. Trump then responded the photo was "very blurry."

The end of Carroll's case potentially paves the way for the trial to move to closing arguments on Monday. Trump's lawyers said Wednesday that he will not testify and that they are not putting on any witnesses.

Trump, however, told reporters on a golf course in Ireland on Thursday that he was "going back to New York" because of the case.

Asked if he was going to the trial, he said, "I'll probably attend," according to a Sky News video of his remarks. "She's a fake," he said of Carroll. "It's a disgrace."

Asked if he had any comment on his client's remarks, Trump lawyer Joe Tacopina said, "No."

Carroll has sued Trump for battery and defamation, charging he raped her in the dressing room of a Manhattan department store in the 1990s and then falsely accused her of concocting a "hoax" after she went public with her claim in 2019.

In the excerpts played for the jury in Manhattan federal court, Trump maintained that despite the Maples mixup, Carroll was "not my type." Later, he was asked if the three women he'd married were his type. "Yeah," he answered.

Trump also acknowledged that when Carroll went public with her claims in a book she'd written, the then-president accused her of trying to boost her sales with a made-up story for financial and political reasons — even though at that point he didn't know her political affiliation, her financial situation or her publisher.

Asked what the basis for his allegations were, Trump answered, "I don't know."

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At other times in the video he was more combative, and he repeatedly insulted Carroll throughout the deposition, calling her a "whack job" and "sick," among other insults.

Trump has repeatedly denied her rape allegation, and said he'd been outspoken while defending himself publicly because he was "offended at this woman's lie."

"She is a sick person, in my opinion. Really sick. There is something wrong with her," Trump said.

In the deposition, Trump also mocked two other women who've accused him of sexual misconduct: Jessica Leeds, a retired stockbroker, and Natasha Stoynoff, a former People magazine reporter.

Both testified during the trial. Leeds claims Trump groped her on a plane flight to New York in the late 1970s, while Stoynoff says Trump accosted her when she went to interview him and his wife, Melania Trump, in 2005.

Trump called Leeds' allegations "ridiculous" and Stoynoff's claims "a phony charge."

Carol Martin, a longtime friend of Carroll's who is one of two people Carroll said she told about the attack shortly after it happened, testified live before the jury Thursday.

Martin said she had advised Carroll not to report the incident to the police. "He has lots of attorneys," Martin said she told Carroll. "He would bury her."

Martin said she now regrets giving Carroll that advice: "I'm not proud of that."

As for Carroll's claim itself, Martin said, "I believed it then, and I believe it today."

Dr. Ashlee Humphreys, a sociology professor at Northwestern University, was one of the final witnesses in the case. Humphreys estimated it would cost up to $2.7 million for Carroll to try to repair the damage done to her reputation by Trump's statements.

Carroll is also seeking unspecified money damages for battery as well as emotional harm and damage caused by the attack.