Politics

Trump slammed with $83M verdict for repeatedly defaming advice columnist E. Jean Carroll just hours after storming out of court

Donald Trump was ordered Friday to pay a whopping $83.3 million in damages for de﷽faming E. Jean Carroll, t🔜he advice columnist whom a prior jury found that Trump sexually assaulted inside a department store fitting room.

The jury verdict was broken down into $65 million meant to punish Trump, $11 million to help Carroll rebuild her reputatꦯion and another $7.3 million to compensate her for her pain and suffering.

Trump — who had already left court when the decision came down — vowed to appeal and blasted the verdict as “Absolutely ridiculous!” in a Truth Social post roughly 20 minutes later.

Meanwhile, Carroll said it was “a great victory for every woman who stands up when she’s been knocked down, and a huge defeat for every bully who has tried to keep a woman down.”

The verdict, handed down Friday by a separate jury of five men and four women in Manhattan federal court, includes the bulk of its damages to punish the billionaire ex-president, 77, for acting “out of hatred, ill will, or spite” by claiming to have “never met” Carroll — even after jurors last May found him liable for abusing the writer inside🅰 a Bergdorf Goodman in 1996.

“This case is about getting him to stop, once and for all,” Carroll’s attorney Roberta Kaplan had told jurors in closing arguments Friday morning.

Trump was also ordered to pay $11 million toward Carroll rebuilding her reputation after Trump claimed in June 2019 — within hours of Carroll going public with her allegations — that the “Ask E Jean” columnist was a “whack job” who should “pay dearly” for accusing him.

Trump walks out during attorney Roberta Kaplan’s closing argument on Friday. REUTERS

He must also pay $7.3 million to compensate Carroll for the pain and suffering she has dealt with after receiving a deluge of death threats in the wake of Trump’s rebukes.

The jury rendered the decision after under th🅘ree hours of deliberations.

Carroll and her lawyers held hands as they nervously awaited for the verdict to be read out. The trio shared a hug immediately after. Leaving the courthouse, Carroll — arm-in-arm with her lawyers — flashed a grin but didn’t answer reporters’ questions before getting into a black SUV and driving away.

“Today’s verdict proves that the law applies to everyone in our country, even the rich, even the famous, even former presidents,” Roberta Kaplan said in a statement.

Trump, who was present inside the Manhattan courthouse for ༺closing statements earlier Friday, left the courthouse before the verdict was read. He was not in the room when🌱 the award was announced.

“I fully disagree with both verdicts, and will be appealing this whole Biden Directed Witch Hunt focused on me and the Republican Party,” Trump’s post said. “Our Legal System is out of control, and being used as a Political Weapon.”

The verdict in the Donald Trump defamation trial was handed down on Friday. REUTERS

“They have taken away all First Amendment Rights. THIS IS NOT AMERICA,” he blasted.

Trump lawyer Alina Habba also railed against the verdict when she left court, telling reporters: “Don’t get it twisted — we’re seeing a violation of our justice system, ladies and gentlemen.”

Habba claimed Judge Kaplan decided before the trial began “that every single defense President Trump had, we were not allowed to raise in front of the jury.”

The verdict comes after jurors heard five days of testimony — including a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it stint on the stand from Trump himself.

He testified for less than three minutes after Judge Lewis Kaplan ordered that he be kept on a tight leash, stopping him — in light of last year’s verdict — from claiming not to have sexually assaulted Carroll.

Jurors in last year’s verdict found that Trump “forcibly and without consent” penetrated Carroll using his fingers, court records show.

“This case is about getting him to stop, once and for all,” Carroll’s attorney Roberta Kaplan had told jurors in closing arguments Friday morning. REUTERS

Judge Kaplan — no relation to Carroll’s attorney — already found Trump liable 🌳for defaming Carroll in the current case before the trial b💝egan earlier this month, leaving jurors to only decide how much damages, if any, Trump must pay.

Carroll took the stand and told jurors that Trump’s statements destroyed her reputation as a respected journalist and “ended the world” she lived in.

“Now I’m known as a liar, a fraud and a whack job,” she♒ said.

The trial was marked by several outbursts from Trump, including on Friday, when he stormed out of the courtroom during Carroll’s lawyer’s closing statement, before returning when it was time for his lawyer to speak.

The Republican presidential candidate was also ripped for providing running commentary to his team during the proceedings — including grousing within earshot of the jurors that Carroll’s testimony was “false.”

Protesters demonstrate outside court on Thursday. AP

After Judge Kaplan warned he would boot him from the courtroom for future interruptions, Trump responded that he “would love it” if he was removed.

Trump’s lawyers had argued that he should not be blamed for the online attacks on Carroll because he did not “direct” the online trolls to go after her.

“He did not condone them, he did not direct them, he just told his truth,” Habba said during Friday’s closing statements.

But Trump’s “truth” is a “lie,” Carroll lawyer Shawn Crowley argued in some of the final words jurors heard before starting deliberations.

“That may be how Donald Trump lives his life, but that’s not how it works in a court of law,” Crowley added.

Carroll walks outside court on Friday. REUTERS

Habba also claimed that Carroll was enjoying her newfound spotlight as a result of coming forward with her allegations — but Carroll maintained on the stand that she was bringing the current case to “get my reputation back.”

Crowley also ripped Trump for thinking “rules don’t apply to him” — including those about how defendants are supposed to act in court.

“He gets to do whatever he wants. He gets to ignore a jury verdict,” Crowley said. “You saw how he behaved during this trial. You saw him walk out of the courtroom.”

Trump continued to rip Carroll on his Truth Social account𓄧 throughout the trial and as recently as Friday afternoon.

The trial was marked by several outbursts from Trump. REUTERS

“He gets to use his massive platform to keep ruining her life,” Crowley said.

“Make him pay enough so that he will stop.”

A nine-person jury in the earlier civil case fo🎉und that Trump forcibly penetrated Carroll using his fingers, but cleared him of a rape claim after the jury was “unconvinced” that Trump penetrated Carroll using his penis.

Still, Carroll’s testimony that Trump “raped” her is “substantially true” in the sense of how people think abou🌜t rape today, Judge Kaplan wro✤te in a ruling earlier this month.

The verdict is just the latest in a series of legal woes for Trump, who has pleaded♍ not guilty to 91 felony criminal counts across four states.

Trump is also facing the prospect of a $370 million penalty and an order barring him from doing business in New York, depending how a separate state judge rules in a civil fraud trial — a decision expected by the end of January.

Additional reporting by Kyle Schnitzer