Tuesday, September 9, 2025 - A U.S. federal appeals court on Monday upheld a civil jury's finding that US President Donald Trump must pay $83.3 million to E. Jean Carroll for his repeated social media attacks and public statements against the longtime advice columnist after she accused him of s£xual ass@ult.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected Trump's
appeal of the defamation award, calling the jury's damages awards "fair
and reasonable.”
A three-judge panel, citing hundreds of death threats
Carroll faced, said the case record supported the trial judge's
"determination that ‘the degree of reprehensibility’ of Mr. Trump’s
conduct was remarkably high, perhaps unprecedented.”
Trump had argued the damages were unreasonably excessive,
particularly a $65 million punitive damage award, and pushed for a new trial
after the Supreme Court expanded presidential immunity.
But the appeals court roundly rejected those arguments,
writing that Trump’s “extraordinary and unprecedented” broadsides against
Carroll, 81, justified the steep award, given “the unique and egregious facts
of this case.”
Lawyers for Trump responded through a spokesperson to a
request for comment by calling for “an immediate end to the political
weaponization of our justice system and a swift dismissal of all of the Witch
Hunts, including the Democrat-funded travesty of the Carroll Hoaxes.” The case
is likely headed to the Supreme Court.
In its ruling, the 2nd Circuit said there is “ample
evidence” that Trump was recklessly indifferent to Carroll’s health and safety
after “castigating Ms. Carroll as a politically and financially motivated
liar" and “insinuating that she was too unattractive for him to have
sexually assaulted” and would “pay dearly” for speaking out.
The ruling centered on the second and far more expensive of
two defamation awards issued to Carroll over Trump’s yearslong attacks on her
character, which began after she accused Trump in her 2019 memoir of sexually
assaulting her decades earlier at a Manhattan department store.
In her memoir and again at a 2023 trial, Carroll described
how a chance encounter with Trump at Bergdorf Goodman’s Fifth Avenue in 1996
started with the two flirting as they shopped, then ended with a violent
struggle inside a dressing room.
Carroll said Trump slammed her against a wall, pulled down
her tights and forced himself on her.
At the initial trial, a jury found Trump liable for sexual
abuse, but concluded he hadn’t committed rape as defined under New York law.
Trump repeatedly denied the encounter took place and accused
Carroll of making it up to help sell her book. He also said Carroll was “not my
type.”
The 2023 jury awarded Carroll $5 million to compensate her
for both the alleged attack and statements Trump made denying after his first
presidency ended that it had happened.
After that first verdict, the court conducted a second trial
with a new jury for the sole purpose of deciding damages for statements Trump
made attacking Carroll’s character and truthfulness while he was president in
2019.
On Monday, the appeals court agreed, saying the trial judge
“did not err in any of the challenged rulings and that the jury’s duly rendered
damages awards were reasonable in light of the extraordinary and egregious
facts of this case.”
The 2nd Circuit noted that Trump continued his attacks
against Carroll for at least five years, making them “more extreme and frequent
as the trial approached.”
“He also continued these same attacks during the trial
itself,” the appeals court said. “In one such statement, issued two days into
the trial, Trump proclaimed that he would continue to defame Carroll 'a
thousand times.'”
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