It's so funny the way you cult members don't understand how time works.
E Jean Carroll first filed suit in 2019 for defamation. (She won that suit and was awarded $83 million.)
In May of 2022, NY passed the Adult Survivors Act. E Jean Carroll then files suit under that as well along with another defamation suit since Trump continued to defame her. She was awarded roughly $2 million for the assault and $3 million for the defamation.
The jury explicitly checked "yes" on the verdict for sexual abuse. It's funny that you think arguing that Trump only sexually abused her is somehow a win. Do you think that because you are in a cult?
The jury didn't reject rape under the common definition. They rejected rape under the legal definition of rape at the time that Trump sexually abused and attacked E Jean Carroll. That legal definition is not the common definition since it was restricted to penile penetration. Are you so deep in your cult that you don't know the difference between a legal definition and a common definition?
The second jury awarded zero dollars for rape. They awarded $83 million for the repeated defamation.
Trump was not denied the chance to testify. He refused to testify. He refused to turn over a DNA sample when asked. The jury found that Trump sexually abused E Jean Carroll. That means Trump did meet her. That means Trump did sexually abuse her. Both things Trump denied when he defamed her. Once a jury finds a fact to be true, it is considered true by the courts. Trump sexually assaulted E Jean Carroll. Under the common definition today that would be rape. Your arguments are based on you being in a cult and trying to deny reality.
No cult like the Trump cult has ever been so out of touch with reality in recorded US history.
Your response contains several clear factual errors, omissions, and mischaracterizations that undermine its credibility. It does not engage with the core of the original post; the unprecedented sequence of legislative, funding, judicial, and procedural steps, but instead relies on a jumbled timeline, ad hominem attacks ("cult members," "out of touch with reality"), and selective framing.
Here is a point-by-point authoritative breakdown based on court records, jury verdicts, and contemporaneous reporting.
1. Your response completely botches the timeline, suits, and damage awards.
Your response claims:
- Carroll "first filed suit in 2019 for defamation. (She won that suit and was awarded $83 million.)"
- Then, after the May 2022 Adult Survivors Act (ASA), she filed "under that as well along with another defamation suit" and was "awarded roughly $2 million for the assault and $3 million for the defamation."
This is inverted and wrong.
- Carroll I (the 2019 defamation suit, over Trump's initial denials): Tried in January 2024. Jury awarded $83.3 million ($18.3 million compensatory + $65 million punitive) solely for defamation. No new assault findings; the jury was bound by the prior verdict via collateral estoppel (issue preclusion). Trump was barred from relitigating whether the underlying sexual abuse occurred.
- Carroll II (filed November 24, 2022—literally minutes after the ASA's one-year lookback window opened): Battery (sexual abuse/rape claim) under the ASA + additional defamation (for Trump's 2022 statements). Tried April–May 2023. Jury awarded $5 million total for sexual abuse + the 2022 defamation. (Sources do not break it as "~$2M assault + $3M defamation"; your response's numbers are approximate at best and wrongly attributed.)
The ASA (signed May 24, 2022, by Democrat Gov. Kathy Hochul; passed by the Democrat-controlled legislature) created a temporary, retroactive one-year window precisely for decades-old claims like Carroll's (undated to the day, no corroborating physical evidence beyond her testimony and the dress).
Carroll had publicly announced her intent to file under it months earlier and was the first to do so the moment it took effect.
My original post's description of this as a "retroactive temporary law" tailored for "decades-old accusations that could not be dated, located, or defended with alibis" is accurate. Your response's "it's so funny... don't understand how time works" is simply false on the sequence.
2. Your response ignores the political funding, secrecy, and sealing of records. My original post's strongest point ( Democrat mega-donor Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn co-founder and major Democrat funder secretly routing millions through his nonprofit, American Future Republic, to cover Carroll's legal costs via her firm Kaplan Hecker & Fink), is entirely unaddressed.
- Carroll's 2022 deposition (in Carroll I) stated no third-party funding.
- Disclosure only came in April 2023 (during Carroll II discovery), after Trump's team pressed.
- Judge Lewis A. Kaplan (Clinton appointee) sealed the funding records at Carroll's request; the jury never heard about Hoffman's public anti-Trump statements or the arrangement.
As of 2026, the DOJ is criminally investigating Hoffman's nonprofit over this exact funding (and related issues like potential perjury by Carroll on the funding question). Your responses' silence here is glaring; the "political network" claim stands unrebutted.
3. Jury verdict on rape vs. sexual abuse: Your response is half-right but dodges the judge's
post-hoc ruling.
- Correct: The Carroll II jury explicitly checked "no" on the verdict form for rape under New York's statutory definition at the time (forcible penile penetration only) and "yes" on sexual abuse/forcible touching (digital penetration).
- Judge Kaplan later ruled (post-verdict and in dismissing counterclaims) that this still proved "rape" under the common definition (non-consensual penetration), stating the verdict did not mean Carroll failed to prove rape "as many people commonly understand the word." New York expanded its rape statute in 2024 partly because of this case.
My original post is correct that the jury rejected the specific "rape" question on the form, yet the judge effectively relabeled the finding.
Your response's claim that rejecting statutory rape "precludes" nothing under the common definition is fair, but it ignores why this distinction mattered: the verdict form used the narrow legal term, and the judge's clarification came after the fact.
Your response "Do you think that because you are in a cult?" is not an argument.
4. Testimony, DNA, and the second jury: Partial truths with key omissions
- Testimony: Trump gave a videotaped deposition (played for the Carroll II jury). He did not testify live in the 2023 trial. In the 2024 Carroll I defamation trial, he briefly took the stand (under 3 minutes) but was heavily restricted by the judge due to collateral estoppel; he could not contest the "facts" already found in Carroll II. Your response's blanket "He refused to testify" is misleading.
- DNA: Carroll requested a sample in 2020 (dress evidence). Trump refused for years. His late 2023 conditional offer (just before trial) was rejected by Judge Kaplan as an untimely delay tactic. (Note: The dress had no sperm; DNA would not have been conclusive anyway.) The response is accurate that he did not provide one, but overstates its centrality.
- Second jury: The $83.3M jury did not re-find the abuse facts or award anything for "rape." They applied issue preclusion and focused only on defamation damages from the 2019 statements. Trump was legally barred from arguing the core denial before them. Your responses' "once a jury finds a fact... it is considered true by the courts" is correct on the law; but that is precisely the "no precedent" procedural stacking the original post highlights.
Your errors on which trial awarded what (and when) are basic and easily verifiable from public court records and news.
You dodged the coordinated legislative timing, undisclosed Hoffman funding (now under DOJ scrutiny), record-sealing by a Clinton-appointed judge, and the use of preclusion to prevent Trump from defending the underlying facts before the damages jury.
These steps produced a cumulative result no prior U.S. civil case matches, exactly as I stated.
Your silly "cult" rhetoric does not change the documented sequence. My original post's critique of the process holds; your response rebuts a strawman version of it.