New York:A federal appeals court asked a Washington DC appeals court Tuesday to help it decide whether the United States should be substituted for former President Donald Trump as the defendant in a defamation lawsuit brought by a woman who says he raped her over a quarter century ago. The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan in a 2-to-1 decision reversed a lower court ruling that had concluded Trump must face the lawsuit brought in Manhattan federal court by columnist E. Jean Carroll.
But it stopped short of saying the US can be substituted for Trump as the defendant in the lawsuit. Instead, it asked The DC Court of Appeals, the highest court in the District of Columbia, to decide whether Trump's public statements denying Carroll's rape claims occurred within the scope of his employment as president.
Carroll maintains Trump defamed her with public comments he made after she wrote in a 2019 book that Trump raped her during a chance encounter in the mid-1990s in a Manhattan department store. Trump denied the rape and questioned Carroll's credibility and motivations. The 2nd Circuit said Trump would be entitled to immunity by having the U.S. substituted as the defendant in the lawsuit if it was decided that his statements came within the scope of his employment.
But it said courts have been inconsistent in previous rulings and that the D.C. Court of Appeals might be in the best position to answer the question. Roberta Kaplan, an attorney for the longtime advice columnist for Elle magazine, alerted a Manhattan federal court judge in August that she plans to sue Trump in November when the Adult Survivor's Act take effect.
The law offers a one-year look back to enable adult survivors of sexual attacks to bring civil claims when they otherwise would be barred by time requirements. The law, signed by New York Gov. Kathy Hochul in May, was modeled after the Child Victims Act, which provided a similar window to bring lawsuits for people who had been sexually assaulted when they were children. That law expired a year ago.
Alina Habba, a lawyer for Trump, treated the 2nd Circuit ruling as a complete victory, saying it will protect the ability of all future Presidents to effectively govern without hindrance. She added: "We are confident that the D.C. Court of Appeals will find that our client was acting within the scope of his employment when properly repudiating Ms. Carroll's allegations.