Former President Donald Trump is attending arguments in a federal appeals court in New York on Friday as he seeks to erase a $5 million judgment finding him liable for sexually abusing and defaming the writer E. Jean Carroll.
Trump is attending the hearing, expected to last all of 20 minutes, after foregoing a crucial hearing Thursday in his Washington, D.C., criminal case. Trump’s decision to attend brings a spotlight to the case in which a jury concluded he likely committed sexual abuse, just as his presidential campaign enters the final sprint to the election.
The case is one of two in which unanimous federal juries awarded Carroll a total of more than $88 million.
In the May 2023 trial, jurors heard evidence related Carroll’s allegation that in the mid-1990s, Trump sexually abused her in a department store dressing room and defamed her after she went public with the story in 2019. Trump didn’t attend any of that trial, and later faulted his lawyers for advising him to stay away.
He attended and briefly testified at the second trial, which ended in an $83 million judgment in January of this year. Those proceedings revolved around additional accusations of defamation.
In his appeal of the first judgment, which Trump’s attorneys are arguing Friday, they claimed the judge issued “flawed and prejudicial evidentiary rulings.” They said two of Carroll’s friends should not have been allowed to testify. The friends said Carroll confided in them in the 1990s, shortly after the alleged attack. Trump has denied all wrongdoing.
Trump’s lawyers also said two other women should not have been allowed on the stand. Carroll’s attorneys called Jessica Leeds and Natasha Stoynoff, who testified about alleged abuse by Trump that bore similarities to Carroll’s accusations.
Carroll’s attorneys called Trump’s appeal a demand for “a do-over” with “drive-by assertions of error and sweeping complaints of unfairness.”
Lawyers for Trump, the Republican nominee for president, will have 10 minutes to argue their case before a U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit panel of three judges appointed by former Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, both Democrats.
Carroll’s attorney will also have 10 minutes.