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Trump deposition in E. Jean Carroll rape defamation case released in court

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Trump deposition in E. Jean Carroll rape defamation case released in court

Former U.S. President Donald Trump disembarks his airplane “Trump Power One” at Aberdeen Airport on Might 1, 2023 in Aberdeen, Scotland. 

Jeff J Mitchell | Getty Photos

The transcript of the deposition of former President Donald Trump by a lawyer for E. Jean Carroll, the author who accuses him in a civil lawsuit of raping and defaming her, was launched in a court docket submitting Friday.

The deposition, taken in October at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago membership in Florida, was filed a day after Carroll’s legal professionals rested their case on the trial for the go well with in U.S. District Court docket in Manhattan. Trump’s legal professionals offered no witnesses of their very own.

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Parts of the transcript have beforehand been launched in separate court docket filings.

And jurors on Thursday had been proven parts of a video of that deposition.

In a single such part, Trump, who has repeatedly mentioned that Carroll was “not my sort,” mistook her for his former spouse Marla Maples in a photograph from the Eighties displaying him, Carroll, her then-husband, and Trump’s then-wife Ivana Trump collectively.

“That is Marla, yeah. That is my spouse,” Trump mentioned earlier than his lawyer Alina Habba stepped in throughout the deposition to inform him, “No, that is Carroll,” Habba mentioned.

Trump then mentioned the picture was “very blurry.”

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From L-R: former President Donald Trump, E. Jean Carroll, John Johnson and Ivana Trump at an NBC celebration, late Eighties.

Source: U.S. District Court docket in Manhattan

Carroll, 79, alleges that Trump raped her within the dressing room of the Bergdorf Goodman division retailer in Manhattan within the mid-Nineties after they’d an opportunity encounter within the public space of that Manhattan retailer.

She additionally alleges in her go well with that Trump, 76, defamed her in feedback final fall accusing her of creating up the declare.

Trump, who’s searching for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, denies raping Carroll.

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“It did not happen,” he mentioned throughout the deposition.

“She is a sick particular person, in my view. Actually sick. There’s something incorrect together with her,” Trump mentioned.

Two associates of Carroll testified on the trial that she instructed them Trump raped her shortly after it allegedly occurred.

And two different girls testified about separate incidents when Trump allegedly groped or kissed them towards their will.

Trump lawyer Joseph Tacopina instructed Decide Lewis Kaplan this week that the previous president wouldn’t testify in particular person on the trial.

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Kaplan gave Tacopina till late Sunday afternoon to alter his thoughts about calling Trump to the witness stand on Monday. If Trump doesn’t accomplish that, closing arguments are set for Monday.

The deposition launched Friday contains Carroll’s lawyer Roberta Kaplan asking Trump about feedback he made on the “Entry Hollywood” tape, when a scorching mic caught him boasting to that present’s host in 2005 about groping and kissing girls with out their permission.

“I am robotically drawn to stunning girls — I simply begin kissing them, it is like a magnet. Simply kiss. I do not even wait,” Trump had mentioned on that tape. “And if you’re a star, they allow you to do it. You are able to do something,” he mentioned, together with “seize ’em by the p—-.”

In his deposition, Trump known as these feedback “locker room speak,” the identical time period he used to dismiss them when the tape turned public shortly earlier than the 2016 presidential election, which he received.

However Trump additionally instructed Kaplan, who just isn’t associated to the decide, that, “Nicely, traditionally, that is true with stars.”

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Kaplan then mentioned, “True with stars that they’ll seize girls?”

Trump replied, “Nicely, that is what — in case you look during the last million years, I suppose that is been largely true. Not at all times, however largely true. Sadly or luckily.”

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Richemont reinstates chief executive role as it navigates luxury market downturn

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Richemont reinstates chief executive role as it navigates luxury market downturn

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Richemont has re-established the role of chief executive after almost a decade as the Swiss luxury group navigates a market downturn.

The group, which is chaired by its controlling shareholder Johann Rupert, said Nicolas Bos, the head of its jewellery brand Van Cleef & Arpels, would take up the position on June 1. He will report to Rupert.

“Building on Richemont’s expanded scale and stronger focus on retail and jewellery, Nicolas will steer the group through the next phase of its evolution,” Rupert said. “The re-established CEO role will help streamline decision making and optimise operational management.”

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The decision to reinstate the role came as Richemont reported a slowdown in fourth-quarter sales.

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Arrests at the U.S. border fall in April, bucking usual spring increase

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Arrests at the U.S. border fall in April, bucking usual spring increase

A group of people wait to be processed after crossing the border between Mexico and the United States as they seek asylum in April 2024, near Jacumba, Calif.

Gregory Bull/AP


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A group of people wait to be processed after crossing the border between Mexico and the United States as they seek asylum in April 2024, near Jacumba, Calif.

Gregory Bull/AP

WASHINGTON — Arrests for illegally crossing the U.S. border from Mexico fell more than 6% in April to the fourth lowest month of the Biden administration, authorities said Wednesday, bucking the usual spring increase.

U.S. officials have largely attributed the decline to more enforcement in Mexico, including in yards where migrants are known to board freight trains. Mexico won’t allow more than 4,000 illegal crossings a day to the U.S., Alicia Barcena, Mexico’s foreign relations secretary, told reporters Tuesday, down from more than 10,000 Border Patrol arrests on some days in December.

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Migrants were arrested 128,884 times in April, down from 137,480 in March and barely half a record-high of 249,737 in December, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said. While still historically high, the sharp decline in arrests since late December is welcome news for President Joe Biden on a key issue that has nagged him in election-year polls.

San Diego became the busiest of the Border Patrol’s nine sectors along the Mexican border for the first time since the 1990s with 37,370, replacing Tucson, Arizona.

Troy Miller, Customs and Border Protection’s acting commissioner, said more enforcement, including deportations, and cooperation with other countries resulted in lower numbers.

“As a result of this increased enforcement, southwest border encounters have not increased, bucking previous trends. We will remain vigilant to continually shifting migration patterns,” he said.

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Authorities granted entry to 41,400 people in April at land crossings with Mexico through an online appointment app called CBP One, bringing the total to more than 591,000 since it was introduced in January 2023.

The U.S. also allows up to 30,000 Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans if they apply online with a financial sponsor and arrive on commercial flights. About 435,000 entered the country that way through April, including 91,000 Cubans, 166,700 Haitians, 75,700 Nicaraguans and 101,200 Venezuelans.

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Read the Texas Governor’s Pardon

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Read the Texas Governor’s Pardon

PROCLAMATION
BY THE
Governor of the State of Texas
PROCLAMATION No. 2024-0001
DPS #07666731
TO ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME:
WHEREAS, Daniel Scott Perry, TDCJ #02450686, D.O.B. April 24, 1987, was
sentenced in the 147th District Court in Travis County on May 10, 2023, to twenty-
five years in prison for the offense of Murder, Cause No. D-1-DC-21-900007; and
WHEREAS, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles has conducted an exhaustive
review of Daniel Scott Perry’s personal history and the facts surrounding his shooting
of Garrett Foster; and
WHEREAS, both the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution and
Article I, Section 23, of the Texas Constitution protect the right to keep and bear arms
for, among other things, self-defense; and
WHEREAS, Texas law, consistent with those constitutional guarantees, provides one of
the clearest self-defense protections in the United States; and
WHEREAS, Texas Penal Code § 9.32(a) provides that a person “is justified in using
deadly force against another” when that person “reasonably believes the deadly force
is immediately necessary” to protect a person against another’s use of unlawful deadly
force; and
WHEREAS, Texas Penal Code § 9.32(c) provides that a person who is otherwise
lawfully present at the location where deadly force is used “is not required to retreat
before using deadly force”; and
WHEREAS, on July 25, 2020, Daniel Scott Perry, while driving on a public road in
Austin, slowed his vehicle as he rounded a corner onto Congress Avenue and
encountered a group of protestors obstructing traffic; and
WHEREAS, Daniel Scott Perry’s car was immediately surrounded by aggressive
protestors who rushed to obstruct, strike, pound, smash, and kick his vehicle; and
WHEREAS, Garrett Foster then approached within 18 inches of Daniel Scott Perry’s
car, confronted him, and brandished a Kalashnikov-style rifle in the low-ready firing
position; and
WHEREAS, Daniel Scott Perry fired his handgun at Garrett Foster to eliminate a
perceived threat to his safety and called law enforcement less than one minute later to
inform them of the incident; and
WHEREAS, Daniel Scott Perry explained to law enforcement at the time that he used
his weapon because he feared losing his life and has since consistently stated that he
acted in self-defense; and
WHEREAS, Travis County District Attorney José Garza, rather than upholding the self-
defense rights of citizens, has prioritized “reducing access to guns” that citizens may
use to lawfully defend themselves; and
FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE
SECRETARY OF STATE
1:25 PM O’CLOCK
MAY 16 2024

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