US Judiciary: Pleas closed: jury in civil trial against Trump to move

US Justice
Pleas closed: jury’s turn in civil trial against Trump

Author Jean Carroll leaves the courthouse in Manhattan. photo

©John Minchillo/AP

What happened in a New York luxury department store in the mid-1990s? As of today, a jury will deliberate on the rape allegations against Donald Trump. No matter how she decides, there is no threat of imprisonment.

After the pleas in the civil lawsuit for rape against former US President Donald Trump, the twelve jurors will now advise on a verdict.

During the closing speeches, Jean Carroll’s lawyer repeated the accusation that Trump raped her in a New York luxury department store in the mid-1990s: “He knows what he did.” Trump’s lawyer rejected this again. The allegations are “unimaginable” and “unbelievable”. Trump was already prominent as a real estate entrepreneur at this point, so such an act would not have gone unnoticed.

Carroll is demanding compensation from Trump for assault and defamation. The 79-year-old had testified that she was no longer able to have romantic relationships after the incident. The criminal allegations are statute-barred, but under civil law Carroll was free to file a lawsuit. Trump, who wants to become president again in 2024 and is applying for the Republican nomination, did not personally travel to the trial.

An old audio recording from 2005 also played a role in the arguments of Carroll’s lawyers, in which Trump made lewd and derogatory statements about women – and about the fact that as a star you could also touch women on their genitals if you wanted to. This was not – as portrayed by Trump – talk among men, but a confession, the way he behaved. He did the same with Carroll.

Judge Lewis Kaplan is scheduled to send the jurors to their deliberations today. Then they have to make a unanimous decision to come to a verdict.

dpa

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