Tag: pointed

  • E. Jean Carroll, under pointed questioning from Trump lawyer: ‘He raped me whether I screamed or not’

    E. Jean Carroll, under pointed questioning from Trump lawyer: ‘He raped me whether I screamed or not’

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    2023 04 27 ejeancarroll ap 773 jpg

    Carroll, a magazine writer, testified for a second day in her civil lawsuit against the former president. She is suing him for battery and defamation. He has said the alleged incident “never happened.”

    The questioning got off to a terse start as Tacopina wished Carroll “good morning” twice before she would reply to him. “There ya go,” he said when she finally responded.

    Carroll has said that she believes the alleged attack at Bergdorf Goodman occurred in the evening on a day between the fall of 1995 and the spring of 1996, and under questioning from her own lawyer on Wednesday, she added that she believes it took place on a Thursday. A former Bergdorf employee testified that Thursdays were the only nights of the week the luxury department store stayed open late.

    But Carroll has repeatedly said she can’t recall exactly what date it happened.

    On Thursday, Tacopina questioned why Carroll said only now that it was a Thursday and why neither she nor two friends she says she told contemporaneously can recall the date.

    “I wish to heaven we could give you a date,” Carroll said. “I wish we could give you a date.”

    Carroll testified that she always had a hunch the alleged attack occurred on a Thursday, but didn’t identify the day of the week in a book she wrote or in interviews because she wasn’t absolutely sure and “I tried to stick to the facts.”

    Tacopina also questioned Carroll about a 2017 email referencing Trump between her and her friend Carol Martin, in which Martin wrote: “As soon as we are both well enuf to scheme, we must do our patriotic duty again …” Carroll responded: “TOTALLY!!! I have something special for you when we meet.”

    When Carroll testified, as she had also done Wednesday, that she couldn’t recall what the email meant, Tacopina asked how she could remember details from the alleged rape from at least 27 years ago but couldn’t recall anything about a six-year-old email.

    “Those are facts that I could never forget,” Carroll said of the alleged attack. “This is an email among probably hundreds of emails between Carol and I that I have no recollection of.”

    Tacopina also pressed Carroll on why she went public with her story when she did, in 2019. Though Tacopina suggested she was using the claim to try to attract a book publisher, Carroll disputed that, saying she was instead prompted by revelations about film producer Harvey Weinstein’s sexual predation in The New York Times in 2017.

    “When that happened, across the country women began telling their stories, and I was flummoxed [and thought], wait a minute, can we actually speak up and not be pummeled?” Carroll testified. “I thought, well this may be a way to change the culture of sexual violence. The light dawned. I thought, we can actually change things if we all tell our stories. And I thought by god, this may be the time.”

    She continued: “It caused me to realize that staying silent does not work. It doesn’t work. If women speak up, we have a chance of limiting the harm that happens.”

    Tacopina challenged Carroll on specific details of her account of the alleged rape.

    He pressed her on her recollection that she didn’t see anyone in the department store as she and Trump rode the escalators to the sixth floor. “I was not looking for other people,” she said. “I was in a very engaging conversation with Donald Trump.”

    He questioned why, as she has testified, she would have suggested Trump, a relatively tall and heavyset man, try on a skimpy women’s lace bodysuit they found on a counter in the lingerie department. “It just struck me as very funny,” she said. “If a man tells me to put on some lingerie, my natural instinct is to tell him to go put on the lingerie.”

    Tacopina asked how she could have fought back against Trump while wearing 4-inch-heels, as she has said. “I can dance backwards and forwards in 4-inch-heels,” she replied.

    And, in perhaps the most heated moment of the day, Tacopina questioned why she wouldn’t have screamed if she were being sexually assaulted.

    “I’m not a screamer. You can’t beat up on me for not screaming,” she replied, growing agitated. “I’m not beating up on you. I’m asking you questions,” Tacopina said.

    “Women don’t come forward. One of the reasons they don’t come forward is because they’re always asked, why didn’t you scream?” Carroll told the courtroom. Women are told, she said, “You better have a good excuse if you didn’t scream.”

    At that point, Carroll raised her voice. “I’m telling you: He raped me whether I screamed or not,” she exclaimed.

    “Do you need a minute, Ms. Carroll?” Tacopina asked.

    “No,” she replied. “Go right on. I don’t need an excuse for not screaming.”

    The trial will not meet on Friday. Carroll is expected to continue her testimony on Monday.

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    #Jean #Carroll #pointed #questioning #Trump #lawyer #raped #screamed
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • 2020 Delhi riots: Court rejects bail plea of man who pointed gun at cop

    2020 Delhi riots: Court rejects bail plea of man who pointed gun at cop

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    New Delhi: A court here on Monday rejected the bail plea of Shahrukh Pathan, who had allegedly pointed a gun at a Delhi Police head constable during the 2020 riots in the national capital.

    Additional Sessions Judge Amitabh Rawat was hearing Pathan’s bail plea, which was moved in October last year but not pressed on his request for considering it after the main eyewitnesses in the case were examined.

    It was taken up for hearing after Pathan moved an application last month for pressing the bail plea “in view of the threats” faced by him in prison.

    “This court does not see any reason at all to grant bail to the applicant or accused. Accordingly, the bail application … stands dismissed,” the judge said.

    He noted that Pathan’s bail plea was earlier dismissed both by the present court and the Delhi High Court and the court had also framed charges against him and others for various offences under the Indian Penal Code (IPC), including rioting and attempt to murder, and under the provisions of the Arms Act.

    None of the accused had challenged the order on the charges passed in December 2021 and the grounds raised in the bail plea, such as the alleged discrepancies in the statements of witnesses or interviews, were dealt with in detail in the earlier orders on bail and charges, the court said.

    It said from the perusal of the entire case file, it was apparent that after the framing of the charges, there was no delay in the trial on account of the prosecution’s fault.

    It was primarily because of reasons, such as the co-accused persons “purposefully absenting themselves on court dates”, accused Kaleem Ahmed pleading guilty during the trial and charges being framed against one of the accused, Babu Wasim, who was arrested subsequently, the court pointed out.

    “It has to be noted that the date has always been given as per the choice of the counsel for the accused who, despite the court asking for short dates, had insisted by showing his diary to contend that he does not have dates and that the date be given as per his diary,” the court added.

    Rejecting Pathan’s arguments about “threats from jail officials”, the court said the entire flood of applications regarding the same did not inspire confidence and the allegations of harassment and torture were “prima facie” for obtaining bail.

    Taking note of Pathan’s behaviour in the jail as seen in the CCTV footage of two separate incidents of January 30 and February 10, along with the recovery of a mobile phone from the accused inside the prison, the court said his conduct was “completely unsatisfactory”.

    It noted that according to the footage of January 30, Pathan had left the video-conferencing room of the Tihar Jail and voluntarily entered a cell for two-and-a-half hours without informing the authorities and was seen “mingling and having lunch with co-inmates, including gangsters”.

    On being traced, Pathan was given a punishment ticket by the jail superintendent and after coming out of the official’s room, he voluntarily met two convicts, including a death-row convict in the Red Fort bomb blast case, and after talking to them for a while, gestured towards an assistant superintendent, who then slapped him.

    “The entire demeanour of the accused … during the time when he was in the cell with other inmates and having lunch with them or when he was walking towards the jail superintendent’s room or outside shows his casual and comfortable approach and does not show any harassment or sign of threat,” the court said.

    It said Pathan made aggressive gestures towards the assistant superintendent and it appeared that he was trying to provoke the prison officials.

    “This obviously does not justify the assistant superintendent … slapping him since being a public servant and in charge, he has to act in a more restrained way and take the aggressive and malafide conduct of the accused or undertrial in his stride,” the court added.

    Taking note of Pathan’s conduct on February 10 as seen in the CCTV footage played in the court, the judge said the accused was allegedly again found outside his high-risk ward, where he mingled with “three other hardened prisoners or criminals”, and “from the shadow”, he could be seen intentionally beating up an undertrial prisoner and then bandaging him.

    The undertrial prisoner made a complaint to the jail inspecting judge the next day that he and Pathan were badly beaten up, tortured and harassed by the jail superintendent, the court said.

    “It was only on the production of this CCTV footage in the court that the said application was not pursued,” the court said, adding, “In all the footage shown, the accused can be seen constantly arguing with the jail staff.”

    It further said after the incident, Pathan was shifted from the high-risk prisoners’ ward to the special prisoners’ ward (a high-risk ward with round-the-clock camera surveillance) and the accused’s counsel had moved an application seeking directions to transfer his client back to the earlier ward as he faced threats from gangsters and other prisoners.

    “However, when it was highlighted that despite being a high-risk prisoner, the accused was voluntarily violating the rules himself by mingling with convicts and gangsters, the counsel for the accused suggested that it was the fault of the jail authorities and not so much of the accused’s fault,” the court said.

    The Jafrabad police station had filed a chargesheet against Pathan and others.

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    #Delhi #riots #Court #rejects #bail #plea #man #pointed #gun #cop

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )