United States author E. Jean Carroll has officially received a wire transfer of over 5.6 million dollars from Donald Trump, marking a major milestone in a high-profile legal battle spanning several years.
The payout follows a previous jury verdict that held the former US President liable for sexually abusing and defaming the writer.
The transaction, totaling $5,625,005.48 to account for the initial damages alongside accumulated interest, was authorized by US Judge Lewis Kaplan. The order was issued after the US Supreme Court rejected a petition from Trump’s legal team to block the release of the funds.
Although Trump’s attorneys argued that the cash should remain frozen while they pursued a petition for a rehearing, the transfer to Carroll’s legal representatives was finalized on the federal court docket.
According to court documents submitted by her attorneys, the 82-year-old author plans to deposit the money into an interest-yielding account to support her retirement, keeping it preserved until Trump’s final rehearing petition is formally resolved.
“Three years ago, a unanimous nine-person jury found President Trump liable for sexually assaulting and defaming E. Jean Carroll. Today, we are pleased to report that she has received the damages payment the jury awarded her as a result of that verdict,” Carroll’s legal team said in a statement.
Meanwhile, Trump’s defence team continues to challenge the financial execution. His lawyers recently approached a federal appeals court to halt the transfer, requesting that the court force the funds back into judicial escrow while the broader appeal process continues. The appellate court has not yet ruled on this latest move, having previously dismissed an emergency request to delay the transaction.
The courtroom saga began when Carroll publicly accused Trump of sexually abusing her in a department store dressing room during the mid-1990s. Trump vigorously denied the allegations, calling the story a complete fabrication designed to drive book sales, and stating that Carroll was “not his type.”
The resulting civil trial ended with a jury finding Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation, awarding Carroll an initial 5 million dollars.
The conflict escalated the following day during a televised CNN town hall, where Trump publicly labeled Carroll’s claims a “fake story” and referred to her as a “whack job.”
These remarks prompted Carroll’s legal team to amend a separate, pre-existing 2019 defamation suit to incorporate the new statements. Trump actively attended the subsequent second trial, even briefly taking the stand to testify.
The second jury concluded that his 2019 statements were indeed defamatory, returning a much larger verdict of 83 million dollars against him. Trump’s defence team is currently preparing a petition to present to the Supreme Court, arguing that presidential immunity shields him from the multi-million dollar judgment.
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