Thursday, May 28, 2026

Trump’s justice department reportedly opens criminal investigation into E Jean Carroll – as it happened

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Pocket
WhatsApp

Trump’s justice department reportedly opens criminal investigation of E Jean Carroll, who won sexual abuse case against Trump

CNN reports that the US Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation of E Jean Carroll, the writer who won a $5m civil judgment against Donald Trump in 2023, when a federal jury found that he had sexually abused her in 1996 and defamed her in 2022 when he denied attacking her.

According to CNN’s sources, who were not named, the investigation is focused on whether Carroll committed perjury in testimony in her two civil lawsuits against Trump, one for allegedly sexually abusing her in a department store dressing room in 1996, and the second for defamation.

The apparent legal theory prosecutors are pursuing is a claim that Carroll lied in a 2022 deposition when she said she had received no outside funding for her lawsuit.

Nearly six months later, before the trial started, Carroll’s attorneys informed the judge and Trump’s lawyers that a nonprofit funded by Reid Hoffman, the billionaire LinkedIn co-founder, had paid some legal fees and expenses. Carroll’s lawyers said she never met or spoke with anyone from the nonprofit. The judge allowed Trump’s attorney, Alina Habba, to question Carroll again in a second deposition.

Excerpts from Carroll’s videotaped depositions with Habba were included in a new documentary, Ask E Jean, which opened last week in New York.

E Jean Carroll, right, attended a screening of a documentary about her, Ask E Jean, with her lawyer, Robbie Kaplan, on 21 May in New York City.
E Jean Carroll, right, attended a screening of a documentary about her, Ask E Jean, with her lawyer, Robbie Kaplan, on 21 May in New York City. Photograph: Arturo Holmes/Getty Images

Juries later awarded Carroll millions of dollars in damages, which the president is appealing. Trump has appealed the $5m in damages in the sexual abuse case judgement and $83m in the defamation case. Trump has repeatedly tried to have the awards thrown out.

A three-judge federal appeals court panel in New York already dismissed the claim that Carroll had lied in her deposition in 2024. In their opinion affirming the judgement against Trump, on 30 December 2024, the judges wrote:

double quotation markMs. Carroll plausibly represented that she had forgotten about the limited outside funding counsel obtained in September 2020 when this question was first posed to her in 2022, and the additional discovery did not indicate otherwise. Rather, it showed that Ms. Carroll simply was not involved in the matter of who was or was not funding her litigation costs. Ms. Carroll testified that, after her counsel informed her in September 2020 that they had received some outside funding, she did not speak with her counsel about this topic again until the spring of 2023 and did not even know the funder’s political position or why they were partially funding her lawsuit. Therefore, by the time of her deposition in October 2022, Ms. Carroll had not spoken with her counsel about the matter of outside funding for over two years.

The New York Times reports that the investigation was opened by Andrew Boutros, the US attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, who was appointed by Trump.

Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, defended Trump in the Carroll case, and has recused himself, sources told both CNN and the Times.

Boutros is currently at the center of an inquiry himself, after a defense attorney for an anti-ICE protester whose case was dismissed told a federal judge in Chicago on Tuesday that he has “reason to believe” that Boutros had personal contact with the grand jury in the case.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Closing summary

This concludes our live chronicle of the second Trump administration to a close, on a day when the president casually suggested that the US ally Oman had to “behave” or “we’ll have to blow ‘em up”. Here are the latest developments:

  • In a new interview with CBS News, Jill Biden, the former first lady, said that she was “frightened” as she watched her husband, then-president Joe Biden, freeze up during his disastrous 2024 debate against Donald Trump. Pressed to explain what happened, Jill Biden said: “I don’t know what happened. I mean as I watched it, I thought, ‘Oh, my God, he’s having a stroke’. And it scared me to death.”

  • CNN reports that the US Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation of E Jean Carroll, the writer who won a $5m civil judgment against Donald Trump in 2023, when a federal jury found that he had sexually abused her in 1996 and defamed her in 2022 when he denied attacking her.

  • Two House Democrats, Don Beyer of Virginia and Dina Titus of Nevada, announced that they plan to introduce a bill that would “explicitly prohibit construction of President Trump’s proposed ‘triumphal arch’ outside Arlington National Cemetery”.

  • Cam Higby, a rightwing activist disguised as a pro-Palestinian activist, disrupted a news conference with the Democratic congressmen Jerry Nadler and Dan Goldman outside the Delaney Hall immigration detention center in Newark, New Jersey.

source

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Pocket
WhatsApp

Never miss any important news. Subscribe to our newsletter.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Never miss any important news. Subscribe to our newsletter.

Recent News

Editor's Pick