- Donald Trump again denied rape and defamation claims against him by writer E. Jean Carroll.
- The presumptive Republican presidential nominee said on CNBC's "Squawk Box" that the numerous judgments against him in New York will prompt companies to leave the state.
- Trump days earlier posted a $91.6 million bond to secure the judgment from one of Carroll's defamation cases while he appeals the verdict.
- Carroll's attorneys responded that the writer's legal team is closely monitoring Trump's latest remarks about her â and suggested that another lawsuit could be in store.
Donald Trump on Monday once again denied allegations by E. Jean Carroll that he raped and defamed her, despite facing nearly $90 million in civil penalties for making similar statements about the writer.
Carroll's attorney quickly responded that the writer's legal team is closely monitoring Trump's latest remarks about her â and suggested that a third defamation lawsuit could be in store for the former president.
Trump in an interview on CNBC's "Squawk Box" said that several civil court judgments against him in New York â two of them in Carroll's favor â will cause companies to leave the state.
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"People aren't moving into New York, because of the kind of crap they're pulling on me," he said.
They're "the most ridiculous decisions," Trump said, "including the 'Ms. Bergdorf Goodman,' a person I'd never met."
Carroll has said Trump raped her in a dressing room in the Bergdorf Goodman department store in Manhattan in the mid-1990s.
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"I have no idea who she is, except one thing, I got sued," he said in Monday's interview. "From that point on I said, 'Wow, that's crazy, what this is.'"
"I got charged, I was given a false accusation and had to post a $91 million bond on a false accusation," Trump added, referring to the bond he secured in recent days to guarantee the most recent judgment in Carroll's favor in Manhattan federal court.
The interview echoed remarks Trump made about Carroll over the weekend at a campaign rally in Georgia, where the presumptive Republican presidential nominee accused her of making "false accusations."
After the CNBC interview aired, Carroll's lawyer Roberta Kaplan in a statement said, "The statute of limitations for defamation in most jurisdictions is between one and three years."
"As we said after the last jury verdict, we continue to monitor every statement that Donald Trump makes about our client, E. Jean Carroll," Kaplan said.
George Conway, an attorney and leading Trump critic who encouraged Carroll to file her first defamation suit against him, in a tweet Monday said that the former president had opened himself up to a third lawsuit from the writer.
"The fact that Trump libeled @ejeancarroll on @CNBC @SquawkCNBC is highly significant for a procedural reason in addition to a substantive one," Conway wrote in his post on the social media site X.
Because Trump's remarks were made on the CNBC show, which is broadcast from Manhattan, Carroll "likely may now sue" in the same federal court where she filed her first two lawsuits against him, Conway wrote in his post on the social media site X.
"If she does that, the case would be assigned to Judge Lewis A. Kaplan as a case related to the earlier two cases that produced $88.3 million in damages awards," Conway wrote. The judge is not related to Carroll's lawyer.
Carroll in a 2019 magazine article first publicly accused Trump of raping her.
She then sued him in Manhattan federal court alleging defamation after the then-president denied the rape claim, and accused her of making up her account because of political animus and a desire to boost sales of her book.
Carroll sued Trump in the same court again in late 2022, for battery related to the alleged rape, and for defamation related to new comments he had made about her.
Trump, who had left the White House by then, in those October 2022 comments also referred to Carroll as "Ms. Bergdorf Goodman."
A jury last May in the second case awarded Carroll $5 million in damages after finding Trump liable for sexual abusing and defaming her.
In January, another jury ordered Trump to pay $83.3 million for defaming Carroll in the statements he made about her rape claim when he was president.
Trump is appealing the verdicts in both cases.
He has posted bonds and cash totaling $97.2 million to secure the judgments in Carroll's favor as he appeals them. The money and bond he put up would be returned if he wins his appeals.
Trump separately faces a judgment of $454 million in total damages and interest after losing a lawsuit by the New York Attorney General's Office accusing him of civil business fraud.
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