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E Jean Carroll exits the New York federal court after Donald Trump appeared in court on 6 September 2024. Photograph: Eduardo Muñoz/AP View image in fullscreen E Jean Carroll exits the New York federal court after Donald Trump appeared in court on 6 September 2024. Photograph: Eduardo Muñoz/AP E Jean Carroll asks judge to order Donald Trump to pay $5m he owes her Move follows supreme court refusal to hear Trump’s appeal of civil case verdict in sexual abuse and defamation case The New York journalist E Jean Carroll asked a judge on Tuesday to mandate that Donald Trump pay her the $5m she is owed from a jury verdict that found the US president liable for sexually abusing her in the 1990s and defaming her after she publicly described in 2019 being attacked by him in a city department store. Lawyers for Carroll filed papers in a federal court in Manhattan one day after the US supreme court refused to hear Trump’s appeal of the civil case verdict in 2023. The author and advice columnist argues in the filing that Trump is unjustly trying to delay even further releasing the funds to her, after he has made repeated challenges to the civil jury’s decision. The amount Carroll is due has grown to nearly $5.8m with interest since the verdict and her lawyers wrote that the court should require the sum to be disbursed by the Republican president. They argued that Trump has continued assailing Carroll, 82, and made further defamatory remarks while asking the supreme court to reconsider its decision, announced on Monday. Why Trump is obsessed with exacting ‘retribution’ against E Jean Carroll Read more Trump reacted to the court’s decision by writing on Truth Social : “Surprisingly, the Supreme Court declined to ‘review’ a Fake Case brought against me.” The jury reached its verdict in a trial that Trump did not attend after Carroll testified that she was sexually abused by Trump in spring 1996 in the dressing room of the midtown Manhattan luxury department store Bergdorf Goodman, after a flirtatious and friendly chance encounter between the apparent acquaintances turned violent. Carroll first talked about the attack publicly in a magazine article in 2019, while Trump was president in his first term. He repeatedly insisted that he never knew Carroll. He also accused her of trying to sell books at his expense and having political motives. Trump promised on social media on Monday to keep fighting what he called a “Weaponization and Lawfare Case”. Carroll’s lawyers said Trump’s legal team contacted them minutes after Trump responded to the supreme court’s action on Monday, asking that the payout be delayed while the court is asked to reconsider its decision. But Carroll’s lawyers, Roberta Kaplan, D Brandon Trice and Maximilian T Crema, said in their court filing on Tuesday that there was no reason to delay the payment, especially since the supreme court expressed no division among its nine justices in their decision not to hear the case. “To date, Carroll has agree
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