Current:Home > MyTrump's comments about E. Jean Carroll caused up to $12.1 million in reputational damage, expert tells jury -WealthSpot
Trump's comments about E. Jean Carroll caused up to $12.1 million in reputational damage, expert tells jury
View
Date:2025-04-18 11:08:57
It could cost as much as $12.1 million to repair the harm to the writer E. Jean Carroll's reputation caused by a pair of defamatory statements former President Donald Trump made in 2019, a professor told a federal jury in New York on Thursday.
Thursday's testimony by Northwestern University professor Ashlee Humphreys sought to quantify how many people saw and believed two statements Trump made denying he sexually assaulted, or had ever even met, Carroll. The judge overseeing Carroll's suit against Trump has already determined the statements were defamatory, and the jury is tasked with determining what damages she should be awarded. A separate jury last year found Trump liable for sexual abuse and another defamatory statement.
Trump attended the first two days of the damages trial, but was not in the courtroom Thursday as Humphreys described how she quantified the harm done to Carroll. The former president was in Florida, attending his mother-in-law's funeral.
In 2019, Carroll wrote a story in New York magazine accusing Trump of assaulting her in a department store dressing room in the 1990s. Trump vehemently denied the accusation. After coming forward, Carroll was the target of a torrent of criticism and graphic threats, including of rape and murder, some of which were displayed for the jury on Wednesday.
Humphreys said she calculated the harm to Carroll's reputation by analyzing articles, tweets and TV broadcasts referencing both of Trump's defamatory statements. She then determined how many people had seen the stories or segments on the same day they appeared. She concluded the damage to Carroll's reputation as a journalist was "severe."
She said there were as many as 104,132,285 impressions on those pieces on just the first day each was aired or published. As many as 24,788,657 viewers likely believed the claims, she said.
Humphreys said an analysis of comments made about Carroll before Trump's defamatory statements showed she "was known as kind of a truth-teller, a sassy advice columnist." Afterwards, Humphreys said she was perceived as "a liar, a Democratic operative."
The cost of repairing Carroll's reputation would range from $7.3 million to $12.1 million, Humphreys concluded.
Earlier Thursday, Carroll completed more than a day of testimony in the case. Under cross-examination, Trump attorney Alina Habba pointed out that there were celebrities who lauded Carroll after her trial victory over Trump in May 2023, when a jury awarded her $5 million. Habba asked Carroll if she's more well-known now than before she first made her allegations.
"Yes, I'm more well-known, and I'm hated by a lot more people," Carroll said.
Habba also displayed negative tweets that users posted during the five-hour period in 2019 between her allegations becoming public and Trump first commenting.
Under questioning by her own attorney, Roberta Kaplan, Carroll said that during that window she was the subject of mean tweets, but did not receive rape or death threats, and was not accused of being a Democratic operative working against Trump.
Kaplan also played a brief video clip of Trump repeating his denial of Carroll's claims during a speech in New Hampshire on Wednesday. Throughout the trial, Kaplan and other attorneys for Carroll have pointed to ongoing allegedly defamatory statements said by Trump, including in recent days, and indicated they want the jury to award more than just an amount needed to fix Carroll's reputation.
They've said they want the jury to decide "how much money he should pay to get him to stop doing it."
Graham KatesGraham Kates is an investigative reporter covering criminal justice, privacy issues and information security for CBS News Digital. Contact Graham at [email protected] or [email protected]
veryGood! (2517)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- 'I am Lewis': Target's Halloween jack-o'-latern decoration goes viral on TikTok
- RHOC's Tamra Judge Slams Disgusting Ozempic Claims After Suffering Intestinal Obstruction
- Powerball jackpot reaches historic $1.55 billon. What to know about Monday's drawing.
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Russian teams won’t play in Under-17 Euros qualifying after UEFA fails to make new policy work
- 2 top Polish military commanders resign in a spat with the defense minister
- Rookie sensation De'Von Achane to miss 'multiple' weeks with knee injury, per reports
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- 2 top Polish military commanders resign in a spat with the defense minister
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- 'Feels like the world is ending': Impacts of strikes in Gaza already devastating
- Nobel Prize in economics goes to Harvard professor Claudia Goldin for research on workplace gender gap
- British TV personality Holly Willoughby quits daytime show days after alleged kidnap plot
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Kendall Jenner Shares How She's Overcome Challenges and Mistakes Amid Shift in Her Career
- NATO equips peacekeeping force in Kosovo with heavier armament to have “combat power”
- 'This is against all rules': Israeli mom begs for return of 2 sons kidnapped by Hamas
Recommendation
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Seager still going deep in Texas, helps send Rangers to ALCS with sweep of 101-win Orioles
John Lennon's ex May Pang says he 'really wanted' to write songs with Paul McCartney again
Thousands got Exactech knee or hip replacements. Then, patients say, the parts began to fail.
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Raiders vs. Packers Monday Night Football highlights: Las Vegas ends three-game skid
Swans in Florida that date to Queen Elizabeth II gift are rounded up for their annual physicals
Milwaukee suburb begins pulling millions of gallons per day from Lake Michigan