Donald Trump gets more bad news from judge in sex assault and defamation lawsuit
New York, New York - Former President Donald Trump will have to head to trial in New York City to face writer E. Jean Carroll's lawsuit alleging he raped her and then defamed her by saying she was lying about the sexual assault.
Manhattan Federal Court Judge Lewis Kaplan set an April 25 trial date, hours after Trump's lawyers asked him to push the case back to June.
Kaplan said he is yet to resolve whether the trial will consolidate the two suits Carroll has against Trump.
Carroll filed the first lawsuit against Trump, which includes defamation claims, in Manhattan Supreme Court in 2019 when he called her a liar after she accused him of rape. It ended up getting bogged down after it was kicked over to federal court when Trump argued he couldn't be sued because he was the president.
The second lawsuit – the one headed to trial in 11 weeks – was filed in November after New York's Adult Survivors Act went into effect. It includes sexual battery claims and accuses him of defaming her a second time when he doubled down on his comments, calling her a liar when he was no longer president.
Central to both lawsuits is Carroll's claims that Trump raped her inside Bergdorf Goodman on Fifth Avenue between the fall of 1995 and the spring of 1996. Carroll says she still has the dress she wore during the encounter, which she never washed. She believes it has traces of Trump's DNA.
Trump has vehemently denied all of Carroll's allegations.
Trump rails against accuser
In deposition papers Judge Kaplan unsealed last month, a combative Trump disparaged Carroll as a "wack job." He repeated his remarks describing her as sexually undesirable.
"When I say she's not my type, I say she is not a woman I would ever be attracted to. There is no reason for me to be attracted to her," Trump said in his October deposition.
During the same sit-down, the ex-president mistook Carroll for his second wife, Marla Maples, when shown a photo.
"You're saying Marla is in this photo?" Carroll's lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, asked Trump during the deposition.
"That's Marla, yeah. That's my wife," Trump responded wrongly.
Cover photo: Collage: REUTERS