E Jean Carrol case stands! Appeal denied.

Trump should have had better lawyers. Oh well
Maybe but that's not relevant to the gold.l digging shore claiming she got raped but didn't know when. It's also amazing ny passed a law to change the statue of limitations just long enough to let the gold digging whore file the case. If they are so sure he did it why not charge him criminally? An criminal conviction would.be much more convincing
 
I defended a guy once who kissed a woman but it turned out to be against her will. The State charged him with Battery, not sexual assault, because the prosecutor did not think it was sexual assault.

That being said, my opinion and the law are two different things, if you had asked me about the law, I would have had to look New York law and tell you how it is defined.

I understand from media reports, the civil law definition of rape is different than the criminal law definition in New York. Apparently in New York, what TACO did would be rape under the Criminal Law, but is Sexual Assault under the Civil Law.
No. What Trump did was not rape at the time criminally because the law required penis in the vagina for it to be rape.
NY law was different from most states and federal law which says anything inserted qualifies as rape.
The law in NY has since been changed.

Carroll couldn't say for sure if it was penis or tiny finger so jury didn't find it to be rape. Trump could have cleared this up by showing that his penis was maybe a little bigger than his tiny thumb.
 
What federal issue does TACO have with regards to the case where they found he committed sexual assault?
Donald Trump's lawyers are arguing that the testimony of two women who accused him of sexual assault should not have been admitted in the E. Jean Carroll lawsuit against him. They claim this testimony was improperly admitted and may have tainted the jury's verdict.

Trump's legal team appears to contend that allowing these women to testify at the trial, where E. Jean Carroll accused Trump of sexual assault, improperly influenced the jury's decision. They argue this evidence was "highly inflammatory" and amounted to "inadmissible propensity evidence".
 
Maybe but that's not relevant to the gold.l digging shore claiming she got raped but didn't know when. It's also amazing ny passed a law to change the statue of limitations just long enough to let the gold digging whore file the case. If they are so sure he did it why not charge him criminally? An criminal conviction would.be much more convincing
OMFG. You are really ignorant of the US Constitution.
 
Maybe but that's not relevant to the gold.l digging shore claiming she got raped but didn't know when. It's also amazing ny passed a law to change the statue of limitations just long enough to let the gold digging whore file the case. If they are so sure he did it why not charge him criminally? An criminal conviction would.be much more convincing
You mean like the 34 felonies Trump was convicted of. You find those convincing?
 
Donald Trump's lawyers are arguing that the testimony of two women who accused him of sexual assault should not have been admitted in the E. Jean Carroll lawsuit against him. They claim this testimony was improperly admitted and may have tainted the jury's verdict.

Trump's legal team appears to contend that allowing these women to testify at the trial, where E. Jean Carroll accused Trump of sexual assault, improperly influenced the jury's decision. They argue this evidence was "highly inflammatory" and amounted to "inadmissible propensity evidence".
He can claim that all he wants. It isn't a federal issue in a civil case.
 
Donald Trump's lawyers are arguing that the testimony of two women who accused him of sexual assault should not have been admitted in the E. Jean Carroll lawsuit against him. They claim this testimony was improperly admitted and may have tainted the jury's verdict.

Trump's legal team appears to contend that allowing these women to testify at the trial, where E. Jean Carroll accused Trump of sexual assault, improperly influenced the jury's decision. They argue this evidence was "highly inflammatory" and amounted to "inadmissible propensity evidence".
Sounds like a State Court issue, as the case was tried under the New York Rules of Civil Procedure, not the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, how would this issue end up in a Federal Court?

From AI, I did not feel like typing it out or researching the details:

Federal jurisdiction refers to the authority of the United States federal courts to hear and decide specific types of cases. These courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, meaning they can only hear cases authorized by the U.S. Constitution or federal statutes. Generally, this includes cases involving federal law, the U.S. Constitution, or disputes between citizens of different states where the amount in controversy exceeds a certain threshold.

Key aspects of federal jurisdiction:
 
We'll have to wait and see. Hence my "we shall see" post.
Yes, we will, just asking what you thought about how that is a Federal Issue?


From AI...

Federal jurisdiction refers to the authority of the United States federal courts to hear and decide specific types of cases. These courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, meaning they can only hear cases authorized by the U.S. Constitution or federal statutes. Generally, this includes cases involving federal law, the U.S. Constitution, or disputes between citizens of different states where the amount in controversy exceeds a certain threshold.

Key aspects of federal jurisdiction:
 
Citation as to them changing it for her?
You know that can't be done But why did they change it temporarily? At the very least she took advantage of a very fortuitous temporary change in the law. What do you suppose the probability of that happening randomly is?
 
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