The US supreme court on Monday declined Donald Trump’s request to review a New York jury’s 2023 verdict that found him liable for sexually abusing writer E Jean Carroll, and then defaming her.
The justices did not provide an explanation or reasoning, and no public dissents were noted. The decision leaves intact the $5m civil judgment against Trump that was returned by the jury after the two-week trial in 2023.
The supreme court’s decision comes after a three-judge court panel at the second US circuit court of appeals in Manhattan upheld the jury’s verdict in 2024, and rejected Trump’s arguments that the trial was unfair because the judge let jurors hear evidence of his alleged past sexual misconduct.
Trump reacted to the supreme court’s decision by writing on Truth Social: “Surprisingly, the Supreme Court declined to ‘review’ a Fake Case brought against me.”
Roberta Kaplan, Carroll’s attorney, also issued a statement in response to the decision.
“Today’s supreme court decision affirms once and for all the jury’s unanimous verdict that President Donald J Trump sexually assaulted and defamed E Jean Carroll,” Kaplan said. “His multiple efforts to appeal that verdict have all failed and today’s ruling ends his quest to avoid accountability for his actions.”
US supreme court rejects Trump’s bid to appeal $5m E Jean Carroll verdict
In 2025, Trump, who has repeatedly denied the allegations against him, asked the supreme court to review the case and overturn the verdict. Lawyers for Carroll asked the judges to reject the request.
Trump has been battling Carroll, a former advice columnist for Elle magazine, since she published an excerpt from her memoir in 2019 in which she alleged that Trump had raped her in the 1990s in a Bergdorf Goodman department store dressing room in Manhattan. She filed the lawsuit three years later. Trump has repeatedly denied Carroll’s claims and accused her of lying.
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What else happened today:
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The US military is racing to vaccinate new recruits after a two-month halt on mandatory flu shots – but it’s a temporary reprieve, as the shots will soon expire and new doses will not be available for months.
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The Trump administration plans to evaluate the performance of the California Coastal Commission, in the latest escalation of a dispute between the state’s Democratic leaders and the federal government over energy production.
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After a string of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) primary victories, the loudest response from much of the Democratic establishment’s old guard was not reconciliation, but escalation.
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The US supreme court has ruled that law enforcement’s use of sprawling warrants that sweep up smartphone location data requires privacy protections under the fourth amendment, in a boost to critics who view their use as an unconstitutional dragnet.
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The US Department of Interior on Monday released the names of three firefighters who were killed while working to contain wildfires along the Utah-Colorado border.
Catching up? Here’s what happened on Sunday 28 June.
