DOJ opens perjury inquiry into E. Jean Carroll, reports say
According to reporting cited by Vox, the U.S. Justice Department has opened a criminal inquiry into journalist E. Jean Carroll for alleged perjury during a deposition in her civil case against President Donald Trump. Carroll won $88.3 million in damages after federal juries determined Trump sexually abused her in 1996 and later defamed her. The perjury allegation centers on whether Carroll lied about who was funding her legal fees. In 2020, her attorney told her that an outside source—Democratic donor Reid Hoffman—was funding the lawsuit; during a 2022 deposition, Carroll said no one was “presently paying” her fees. The DOJ’s theory, per CNN and the New York Times, is that she knowingly lied. However, the Second Circuit previously ruled that Carroll plausibly represented she had forgotten about the funding and was not involved in that matter. The Vox article notes that Trump’s attempts to prosecute opponents have repeatedly failed, citing failed cases against James Comey, six Democratic lawmakers, and others.
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Sources: vox.com
