The awarding of nearly $90 million to the second-rate advice columnist E. Jean Carroll will doubtless be remembered for generations as the greatest miscarriage of justice in contemporary American history. Jean Carrollโs case was not just ludicrous on the face of it, but between the judge, the โexpertsโ who testified, and the mechanisms by which the case even came to be, itโs impossible for any ordinary person in the West to see this as anything more than the continuation of a series of hoaxes perpetrated on former President Donald J. Trump with the desire to keep him from re-entering the Oval Office in January 2025.
THE โRAPEโ.
During the latest episode of this trial, Carroll admitted she wasnโt doing very well financially and needed to find a way to sell more books. The testimony appears to be the basis for the very first claim she ever made, in New York magazineโs The Cut, in the summer of 2019.
Far from a compelling claim, the 80-year-old writer initially laid out the story that her supposed rape occurred either in 1994, before altering the day to be โin the fall of 1995 or the spring of 1996.โ She couldnโt remember the specifics. What she did remember was that she was wearing a โDonna Karan coatdress and high heels but not a coat.โ She later refused to produce said coat for DNA testing despite admitting to still owning it, describing it as โunworn and unlaundered since that evening.โ It later came to light that the coatdress was not made in 1994 or 1995.
It didnโt matter to Carroll, who has accused multiple men of sexually assaulting or raping her throughout her life, including a babysitterโs boyfriend, a dentist, a camp counselor, an unnamed college date, an unnamed boss, and CBS chief executive Les Moonves.
Carroll also appeared to remember specifics such as the emptiness of the Bergdorf Goodman department store in the early evening โ a detail she called โinconceivableโ โ as well as admitting that it was her who wanted to sexually harrass Trump originally because she wanted a โfunny story to tellโ about getting the then-infamous New York City developer to put on womenโs lingerie.