Jury awards E. Jean Carroll $83.3 million from Trump for 2019 defamatory statements

Jury finds Trump must pay $83.3 million to E. Jean Carroll

By Lauren del Valle, Jeremy Herb, Kara Scannell, Dan Berman and Elise Hammond, CNN

Updated 9:45 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024
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5:06 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024

Jury awards E. Jean Carroll $83.3 million from Trump for 2019 defamatory statements

From CNN’s Lauren del Valle and Kara Scannell 

E. Jean Carroll enters a car as she leaves the courthouse on Friday.
E. Jean Carroll enters a car as she leaves the courthouse on Friday. Brendan McDermid/Reuters

Former President Donald Trump should pay $83.3 million to writer E. Jean Carroll for public statements he made in 2019 disparaging Carroll and denying her rape allegations, a Manhattan federal jury determined Friday. 

The jury found Trump should pay Carroll compensatory damages of $18.3 million — $11 million to fund a reputational repair campaign and $7.3 million for the emotional harm caused by Trump’s 2019 public statements.

Trump should also pay $65 million in punitive damages for acting maliciously in making the statements about Carroll, the jury found.

The total is more than eight times what Carroll asked for in her initial lawsuit.

Last May, a separate Manhattan federal jury awarded Carroll a total of $5 million in damages — including nearly $3 million for defamation — after they found that Trump sexually abused Carroll and then defamed her in 2022 for public statements he made disparaging her and denying the allegations. 

4:46 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024

Judge's advice jurors: "Never disclose that you were on this jury"

From CNN's Lauren del Valle and Dan Berman

Judge Lewis Kaplan thanked the jury for their service after the verdict was read.

Kaplan told the jurors they can speak publicly about serving on the jury but cannot reveal the identity of any other juror.

“My advice to you is that you never disclose that you were on this jury, and I won’t say anything more about it," he added.
4:32 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024

Jury reaches decision in E. Jean Carroll civil defamation trial against Trump. Verdict will be read soon 

From CNN's Lauren del Valle and Kara Scannell

A jury in Manhattan federal court has reached a verdict in the civil defamation trial to determine how much in damages Donald Trump should pay E. Jean Carroll — if any — for defamatory public statements he made about the writer in 2019, according to a court official.

The panel of seven men and two women deliberated for approximately 2 hours 45 minutes today.

During her closing argument, Carroll’s attorney said the writer deserves at least $24 million in damages. 

 The verdict will be read in court shortly. 

Trump will not be in the courtroom as he departed the courthouse in his motorcade around 4 p.m. He is not required to be present in court. 

 The post has been updated with more details on the jury and the timeline. 

4:12 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024

Trump leaves courthouse as jury continues to deliberate

From CNN's Dan Berman

Former President Donald Trump departed the Manhattan federal courthouse around 4 p.m. ET with his motorcade.

The jury in the civil defamation case continues to deliberate the damages that Trump would owe E. Jean Carroll. Trump did not have to be present during the trial, but has attended most days of arguments.

3:31 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024

Scenes from the courtroom as closing arguments got underway in the defamation case

From CNN's Jeff Winter

Donald Trump looks on as his attorney Alina Habba delivers closing arguments on January 26, in this courtroom sketch.
Donald Trump looks on as his attorney Alina Habba delivers closing arguments on January 26, in this courtroom sketch. Jane Rosenberg/Reuters

E. Jean Carroll sat two rows in front of Donald Trump, with a monitor in between them on Friday morning as closing arguments got underway.

Three jurors wore masks. A blonde woman seated in the second row of the box was on the edge of her seat through most of the closing arguments by Roberta Kaplan, Carroll's attorney, and by Trump's attorney Alina Habba. The juror to her right was chewing gum and was turned away from the podium. During the 3 1/2 hours he was in the courtroom, Trump mostly sat up in his chair with his elbows on the table.

The former president didn’t sit back until the judge was reading the instructions to the jury. After a 10-minute break, Trump returned to the defense table for Habba’s closing.

Habba was heated during her arguments – so close to the mic, and so loud that her voice was crackling through the sound system. Trump would glance over at her with an appreciative smirk. 

When Habba spoke about Carroll hanging her pants over her window for safety, seemingly mocking her by saying she didn’t call the cops but “she hung the pants” Trump smirked at Habba’s performance.

When it came time to read the instructions to the jury, Judge Lewis Kaplan had the courtroom locked. No one from the jury wanted to take a break. The instructions were the only time Trump sat back in his chair for an extended period. He stretched his back for a second. He took out some Tic Tacs and downed some.

 

1:49 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024

The case is in the hands of the jury

From CNN’s Lauren del Valle and Kara Scannell

The jury of nine now has the case after the judge overseeing Trump’s civil defamation trial has finished charging the jury with instructions.

Judge Lewis Kaplan told the jury that the jury system is the bedrock of our justice system. Reading from the US Constitution he started "we the people..."

"You, ladies and gentlemen, stand in for all of the people, " Kaplan said.

He then told the jury they are playing a vital role in our constitutional system. "And that role dates back to the earliest days of our nation."

The judge said that if the jury doesn't have a verdict by 4:30 p.m., it must send a note to indicate they want to stay later.

2:45 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024

Carroll attorney: Trump "is not the victim"

From CNN’s Lauren del Valle, Kara Scannell and Jeremy Herb

Attorney Shawn Crowley speaks in court on January 26,  in this courtroom sketch.
Attorney Shawn Crowley speaks in court on January 26, in this courtroom sketch. Elizabeth Williams/AP

Former President Donald Trump remained in the courtroom during E. Jean Carroll's attorney Shawn Crowley’s rebuttal, a change in behavior after he left in the middle of Carroll’s attorney Roberta Kaplan’s closing argument earlier Friday.

Crowley concluded her rebuttal by saying essentially that Trump believes he is above the law.

Trump believes that “He gets to lie. He gets to threaten. He gets to ignore a jury verdict. He gets to defy the law and the rules of this courtroom," Crowley said. "You saw how he behaved through this trial. Rules don’t apply to Donald Trump."

“Ladies and gentleman, this isn’t a campaign rally. It’s not a press event. It’s a court of law and Miss Carroll’s life,” Crowley said. “Donald Trump sexually assaulted her. He defamed her. He is not the victim.”

Judge Lewis Kaplan is now giving instructions to the jury.

12:37 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024

Carroll attorney says Trump's statements are "dripping with malice"

From CNN's Lauren del Valle, Kara Scannell and Jeremy Herb

E. Jean Carroll attorney Shawn Crowley acknowledged that more people know Carroll now than they did in 2019 before she made the sexual assault allegations against then-President Donald Trump.

“When you make an allegation against a sitting president, and he uses his massive megaphone to go after you, more people are going to know who you are,” Crowley said.

She also has received support from many people, including “some celebrities,” Crowley said. That support does not overshadow the negative reputation she now has, her lawyer argued.

"Of course, she’d rather be known as a writer than a liar and a fraud,” Crowley said. 

Trump’s statements about Carroll to this day are “dripping with malice, with hate,” Crowley said.

“When the president speaks, the world listens,” she said. “The hate mail, the threats that she’s gotten — they parrot Donald Trump’s words.” 

Crowley also pushed back on Trump's defense argument that Carroll is happy and enjoys the attention she's gotten.

“Those moments of joy do not mean that her life has been easy since June 2019. Far from it," Crowley said.

12:30 p.m. ET, January 26, 2024

Attorney says Carroll brought lawsuit against Trump "to try to get him to stop"

From CNN's Lauren del Valle, Kara Scannell and Jeremy Herb

E. Jean Carroll attorney Shawn Crowley began her rebuttal telling the jury they needed a reset because Donald Trump's attorney Alina Habba said so many untrue things during her closing.

"I'm going to follow the rules of the courtroom, a thing Mr. Trump and his lawyers do not seem to be able to do," Crowley said, jabbing at Habba.

Crowley, in her rebuttal, said Trump's defense is that Carroll knew what she was doing and she asked for it.

"Have we really not moved past that dated idea?” asked Crowley. “Ms. Carroll did not ask to be called a liar. She did not ask to be called ugly. She didn’t ask for death threats. She didn’t ask to be accused of lying.”

Crowley said Carroll came forward because “she thought it was finally time to speak publicly about what he” — extending her arm and pointing directly at Trump – “had done to her."

“She gave interviews on TV because she had to defend herself when he came after her,” Crowley said. “She brought this lawsuit to try to get him to stop."

“The law protects her from being defamed for telling the truth,” Crowley said. “And he’s still breaking the law literally to this day.”