
NEW YORK (AP) â President Donald Trump wonât have to pay an $83 million defamation award to a longtime advice columnist until the U.S. Supreme Court gets a chance to review the case or reject an appeal, according to a court entry Tuesday.
Click here to read the court's original ruling
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed to a request by one of Trumpâs lawyers that it let the president delay the payment to E. Jean Carroll, though it required that Trump post a $7.4 million bond to cover any additional interest costs, a request Carrollâs attorney had made.
The appeals court late last month refused Trumpâs request for a rare meeting of the full 2nd Circuit to hear an appeal of a three-judge panelâs affirmance of the January 2024 verdict.
Afterward, Trump attorney Justin D. Smith asked the 2nd Circuit to stay the effect of its decision upholding the award so that Trump would not be forced to pay the judgment before the high court has a chance to consider an appeal.
Smith said last week there was a âfair prospectâ that the Supreme Court will find in favor of Trump, who has called Carrollâs claims first made publicly in 2019 that she was sexually attacked by Trump in a Manhattan luxury department store dressing room in spring 1996 a âmade up scam.â
The $83 million award to Carroll, 82, came from a jury that briefly heard Trump testify and observed his animated behavior for several days.
In upholding the verdict, a 2nd Circuit panel wrote last September that Trump continued his attacks against Carroll for at least five years, making them âmore extreme and frequent as the trial approached.â
âHe also continued these same attacks during the trial itself,â the appeals court said. âIn one such statement, issued two days into the trial, Trump proclaimed that he would continue to defame Carroll âa thousand times.â â
The jury had been instructed to accept the findings of a jury that in May 2023 awarded Carroll $5 million after concluding Trump sexually abused her in the department store and then defamed her after she published her account of it in a 2019 memoir.
Trump is challenging the $83 million award on several grounds, asserting âabsolute immunityâ for comments he made while president as he disavowed knowing Carroll and attacked her motivations, saying they were politically driven or arose from a desire to promote her memoir.



