E Jean Carroll asks judge to order Donald Trump to pay $5m he owes her
ONP Summary
The U.S. Supreme Court on June 29-30 issued consequential rulings including a 6-3 decision rejecting President Trump's executive order to restrict birthright citizenship for children of undocumented immigrants, with three conservative justices joining the majority against him. The court declined to hear Trump's appeal of the $5 million civil judgment against him in the E. Jean Carroll defamation and sexual abuse case. On federal agency leadership, the court barred Trump from removing Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook but permitted his dismissal of Federal Trade Commission appointee Rebecca Slaughter, demonstrating both boundaries and extensions to executive removal powers.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasized Trump's major defeats, particularly framing the birthright citizenship ruling as a significant blow to his anti-immigration agenda and as a defense of fundamental American rights against his attempt to redefine citizenship.
Moderate: Centrist outlets presented a more balanced account of mixed outcomes, acknowledging both Trump's losses on birthright citizenship and his gains in expanded presidential authority over independent agencies.
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Move follows supreme court refusal to hear Trump’s appeal of civil case verdict in sexual abuse and defamation case
The New York journalist E Jean Carroll asked a judge on Tuesday to mandate that Donald Trump pay her the $5m she is owed from a jury verdict that found the US president liable for sexually abusing her in the 1990s and defaming her after she publicly described in 2019 being attacked by him in a city department store.
Lawyers for Carroll filed papers in a federal court in Manhattan one day after the US supreme court refused to hear Trump’s appeal of the civil case verdict in 2023.
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