• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Donald Trump lost Court Case for Rape, will go to Prison. 20 Women Say he molest them.

leeisphtui

Alfrescian
Loyal
20 over women accusing Donald Trump of sex crimes. HEE HEE

Lose election, police coming to lock him up HEE HEE

https://www.npr.org/2020/10/27/9282...j-bid-that-might-have-quashed-defamation-suit


E. Jean Carroll Suit Against Trump To Proceed After Judge Rules Against DOJ
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • Email
October 27, 202012:49 PM ET
Ryan Lucas in 2018
RYAN LUCAS

Twitter
ap_20295746031830-4d1bf765d3a0c7918d0151180e4ab64b95f3d4e5-s300-c85.jpg

Enlarge this image
E. Jean Carroll (left), who has accused President Trump of raping her in the 1990s, leaves federal court in New York City after a hearing last week in her defamation lawsuit.
John Minchillo/AP
A federal judge has denied the Justice Department's attempt to intervene on President Trump's behalf in a defamation lawsuit filed by a woman who alleges he sexually assaulted her in the mid-1990s.
In her memoir published last year, writer E. Jean Carroll accused the president of raping her in the dressing room of a Manhattan department store more than two decades ago.
Trump denied the allegations and accused her of lying to sell books.
Carroll then sued Trump last year in state court in New York for defamation, contending he harmed her reputation with his counterclaims.
LAW
In Unusual Move, DOJ To Defend Trump In E. Jean Carroll's Defamation Suit

That lawsuit proceeded normally until last month when the Justice Department took the unusual step of intervening in the case. It argued that Trump was acting within the scope of his official duties as president when he denied Carroll's allegations.
The Justice Department argued that the federal government therefore should step in as the defendant in the case.
Judge rejects government position
In his 61-page ruling, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected that request.
"The president of the United States is not an 'employee of the government' within the meaning of the relevant statutes," Kaplan wrote. "Even if he were such an 'employee,' President Trump's allegedly defamatory statements concerning Ms. Carroll would not have been within the scope of his employment."
Kaplan wrote that Trump's comments concerned an alleged sexual assault that predates his time in office, and the allegations against him "have no relationship to the official business of the United States."
Article continues after sponsor message


Justice Department Intervenes To Take Over Trump's Defense In Defamation Lawsuit
NATIONAL
Justice Department Intervenes To Take Over Trump's Defense In Defamation Lawsuit

"To conclude otherwise would require the court to adopt a view that virtually everything the president does is within the public interest by virtue of his office," Kaplan wrote. "The government has provided no support for that theory, and the court rejects it as too expansive."
There was no immediate reaction from the White House, Carroll or the Justice Department.
The legal context
If the judge had allowed the U.S. to replace Trump as the defendant in the lawsuit, legal experts said it likely would have spelled the end of the case because the federal government can't be sued for defamation.
Under the law, if a U.S. Postal Service worker causes a car accident while delivering the mail and is sued, the federal government can intervene. If the government certified that the postal worker was performing his or her official duties when the accident happened, then the federal government can step in and become the defendant in the lawsuit.
Andrew Weissmann, Ex-Mueller Deputy, On Pardons, Barr And Investigating Trump
LAW
Andrew Weissmann, Ex-Mueller Deputy, On Pardons, Barr And Investigating Trump

Attorney General William Barr and the Justice Department argued that the same principle applied in the Carroll case.
Barr had said he considered it "standard practice" that a federal employee being sued in this way would alert the Justice Department so that it could enter the matter, which the attorney general said was again appropriate in this case.
The attorney general's critics, including House Democrats and some former Justice Department employees, have called him too sympathetic to Trump and too eager to deploy the department in ways that help the president politically.
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • Email
 

blackmondy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
20 over women accusing Donald Trump of sex crimes. HEE HEE

Lose election, police coming to lock him up HEE HEE

https://www.npr.org/2020/10/27/9282...j-bid-that-might-have-quashed-defamation-suit


E. Jean Carroll Suit Against Trump To Proceed After Judge Rules Against DOJ
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • Email
October 27, 202012:49 PM ET
Ryan Lucas in 2018
RYAN LUCAS

Twitter
ap_20295746031830-4d1bf765d3a0c7918d0151180e4ab64b95f3d4e5-s300-c85.jpg

Enlarge this image
E. Jean Carroll (left), who has accused President Trump of raping her in the 1990s, leaves federal court in New York City after a hearing last week in her defamation lawsuit.
John Minchillo/AP
A federal judge has denied the Justice Department's attempt to intervene on President Trump's behalf in a defamation lawsuit filed by a woman who alleges he sexually assaulted her in the mid-1990s.
In her memoir published last year, writer E. Jean Carroll accused the president of raping her in the dressing room of a Manhattan department store more than two decades ago.
Trump denied the allegations and accused her of lying to sell books.
Carroll then sued Trump last year in state court in New York for defamation, contending he harmed her reputation with his counterclaims.
LAW
In Unusual Move, DOJ To Defend Trump In E. Jean Carroll's Defamation Suit

That lawsuit proceeded normally until last month when the Justice Department took the unusual step of intervening in the case. It argued that Trump was acting within the scope of his official duties as president when he denied Carroll's allegations.
The Justice Department argued that the federal government therefore should step in as the defendant in the case.
Judge rejects government position
In his 61-page ruling, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected that request.
"The president of the United States is not an 'employee of the government' within the meaning of the relevant statutes," Kaplan wrote. "Even if he were such an 'employee,' President Trump's allegedly defamatory statements concerning Ms. Carroll would not have been within the scope of his employment."
Kaplan wrote that Trump's comments concerned an alleged sexual assault that predates his time in office, and the allegations against him "have no relationship to the official business of the United States."
Article continues after sponsor message


Justice Department Intervenes To Take Over Trump's Defense In Defamation Lawsuit's Defense In Defamation Lawsuit
NATIONAL
Justice Department Intervenes To Take Over Trump's Defense In Defamation Lawsuit

"To conclude otherwise would require the court to adopt a view that virtually everything the president does is within the public interest by virtue of his office," Kaplan wrote. "The government has provided no support for that theory, and the court rejects it as too expansive."
There was no immediate reaction from the White House, Carroll or the Justice Department.
The legal context
If the judge had allowed the U.S. to replace Trump as the defendant in the lawsuit, legal experts said it likely would have spelled the end of the case because the federal government can't be sued for defamation.
Under the law, if a U.S. Postal Service worker causes a car accident while delivering the mail and is sued, the federal government can intervene. If the government certified that the postal worker was performing his or her official duties when the accident happened, then the federal government can step in and become the defendant in the lawsuit.
Andrew Weissmann, Ex-Mueller Deputy, On Pardons, Barr And Investigating Trump
LAW
Andrew Weissmann, Ex-Mueller Deputy, On Pardons, Barr And Investigating Trump

Attorney General William Barr and the Justice Department argued that the same principle applied in the Carroll case.
Barr had said he considered it "standard practice" that a federal employee being sued in this way would alert the Justice Department so that it could enter the matter, which the attorney general said was again appropriate in this case.
The attorney general's critics, including House Democrats and some former Justice Department employees, have called him too sympathetic to Trump and too eager to deploy the department in ways that help the president politically.
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • Email
五毛狗,汪汪叫
终国就要死翘翘
五毛狗就要上吊
我们大家哈哈笑!
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
LOL... they are desperate now aren't they? Just like what they did to Kavanaugh during the SCOTUS confirmation hearings.

Nobody believes those 'Me Too' liars anymore. :roflmao:
 

blackmondy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
LOL... they are desperate now aren't they? Just like what they did to Kavanaugh during the SCOTUS confirmation hearings.

Nobody believes those 'Me Too' liars anymore. :roflmao:
These Tiong dogs are basically 垂死挣扎 now, desperately gasping for air with their heads barely above the water.....
 

kiketerm

Alfrescian
Loyal
Unfortunately for Donald J Trump, these kinds of news will not help him in the closing days of the election.

He might just end up paying a very high price for "grab them by the pussy"
 

leeisphtui

Alfrescian
Loyal
why all the people of high power status all like that? cannot control issit?

Fat fuck Trump the shit for brains is not just a sex pervert, he is also stupid with very low IQ 50 or so. Soon we end the worse thing ever to happen to the US

ElWf998VcAAGxG9.jpg
 

leeisphtui

Alfrescian
Loyal
New York Times and Factcheck dot org? Yeah, those are most definitely truthful sources eh? :roflmao:

Your Q Anon buddies are howling for blood. Trump's blood HEE HEE HEE HEE

How many children has this fat fuck screwed? Where are the 545 Children? Delivered to White House? Why Rudy got Caught?


_114824940_imageqanon.jpg


Elc73-WXYAEj-1R.jpg
 

kiketerm

Alfrescian
Loyal
The list of women accusing Trump of sex crimes is growning. New one:

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...-of-sexual-assault-by-former-model-amy-dorris


Donald Trump accused of sexual assault by former model Amy Dorris
Amy Dorris in her home town in Florida. Photograph: Mitchel Worley/The Guardian
Exclusive: Amy Dorris alleges Trump forced his tongue down her throat and groped her at 1997 US Open
by Lucy Osborne

Thu 17 Sep 2020 05.45 EDTLast modified on Thu 17 Sep 2020 23.36 EDT

A former model has come forward to accuse Donald Trump of sexually assaulting her at the US Open tennis tournament more than two decades ago, in an alleged incident that left her feeling “sick” and “violated”.
In an exclusive interview with the Guardian, Amy Dorris alleged that Trump accosted her outside the bathroom in his VIP box at the tournament in New York on 5 September 1997.
Dorris, who was 24 at the time, accuses Trump of forcing his tongue down her throat, assaulting her all over her body and holding her in a grip she was unable to escape from.
Play Video
7:53
'I feel sick, violated': former model alleges sexual assault by Donald Trump – video
“He just shoved his tongue down my throat and I was pushing him off. And then that’s when his grip became tighter and his hands were very gropey and all over my butt, my breasts, my back, everything.
3000.jpg

The latest major Trump resignations and firings


Read more
“I was in his grip, and I couldn’t get out of it,” she said, adding: “I don’t know what you call that when you’re sticking your tongue just down someone’s throat. But I pushed it out with my teeth. I was pushing it. And I think I might have hurt his tongue.”
Via his lawyers, Trump denied in the strongest possible terms having ever harassed, abused or behaved improperly toward Dorris.
Dorris, who lives in Florida, provided the Guardian with evidence to support her account of her encounters with Trump, including her ticket to the US Open and six photos showing her with the real estate magnate over several days in New York. Trump was 51 at the time and married to his second wife, Marla Maples.
Dorris with Donald Trump at the US Open in 1997
FacebookTwitterPinterest
Dorris with Donald Trump at the US Open in 1997. She alleges the assault took place behind the partition wall in the background.
Advertisement

Her account was also corroborated by several people she confided in about the incident. They include a friend in New York and Dorris’s mother, both of whom she called immediately after the alleged incident, as well as a therapist and friends she spoke to in the years since. All said Dorris had shared with them details of the alleged incident that matched what she later told the Guardian.
Dorris, now 48 and a mother to twin daughters, said she had considered speaking publicly about the incident in 2016, when several women made public similar accusations against the then Republican candidate for president. But she decided against coming forward, in part because she thought that doing so might harm her family.
3000.jpg

'It felt like tentacles': the women who accuse Trump of sexual misconduct


Read more
“Now I feel like my girls are about to turn 13 years old and I want them to know that you don’t let anybody do anything to you that you don’t want,” she said. “And I’d rather be a role model. I want them to see that I didn’t stay quiet, that I stood up to somebody who did something that was unacceptable.”
Dorris said she spent several days with Trump in September 1997 after being taken to New York for a long weekend by her then boyfriend, Jason Binn. At the time, Dorris was living with friends in Boca Raton, Florida, regularly travelling to Miami for modelling and occasional acting work. Binn, the founder of several luxury fashion and lifestyle magazines, was a friend of Trump; in 1999, he reportedly described the real estate businessman as his “best friend”.
On Friday 5 September, Dorris said Binn took her to meet Trump at his office in Trump Tower in Midtown Manhattan, before they went together to the US Open in Queens.
“He came on very strong right away,” Dorris said of Trump. “It seemed typical of a certain guy, people who just feel like they’re entitled to do what they want … even though I was there with my boyfriend.”
Amy Dorris sat between Donald Trump and Jason Binn athe the US Open in Queens 1997.
FacebookTwitterPinterest
Amy Dorris sat between Donald Trump and Jason Binn at the US Open in Queens 1997
The couple were joined by other friends of Trump in his private box, a luxury carpeted suite that had a balcony overlooking the court. Photos from the day show Dorris alongside Trump and his friend Marylou Whitney.
Advertisement

Dorris said the alleged assault occurred when she got up to go to the bathroom, which was hidden behind a partition wall just metres from where Trump’s guests were watching the tennis. “I was having some issues with my contact lenses,” she said. “I remember going in there to moisten my lens.”
When she came out, she alleges, Trump was waiting outside. “Initially I thought that he was waiting to go to the bathroom, but that wasn’t the case, unfortunately,” she said. She alleges Trump forced himself on her after a brief exchange in which she recalls nervously laughing and telling him: “No, get away.”
She alleged she told Trump “no, please stop” but “he didn’t care”. “It doesn’t matter who you are,” she said. “Any time anyone says no, no means no. And that just didn’t work out for me. It wasn’t enough.”
“I just kind of was in shock,” she added. “I felt violated, obviously. But I still wasn’t processing it and just was trying to go back to talking to everyone and having a good time because, I don’t know, I felt pressured to be that way.”
Dorris cannot recall if she told Binn the full details of the alleged assault, but she says she asked him to tell Trump to leave her alone. She said she told Binn: “He’s all over me. I can’t deal with this. You have to do something.”
Binn did not respond to a request for comment. However, according to Trump’s lawyers, Binn told them he had no recollection of Dorris telling him that anything inappropriate had happened with Trump or that she felt uncomfortable around him.
Advertisement

Dorris said that soon after the alleged incident, she phoned a friend who lived in the city and told them what had happened. “I think I just felt safe knowing that I had someone in New York that I could go to, God forbid it got worse,” she said.
She said Trump did not seriously assault her again during her stay in New York, but that he continued to pursue her despite her firm rejection of his advances.
The day after the alleged assault, Dorris and Binn returned to Trump’s box at the US Open. Dorris said she decided to wear a “conservative” outfit of khakis, a blue knit sweater and loafers in an effort to discourage further advances from Trump.
The couple stopped off at Trump’s apartment in Trump Tower on the way, where they posed for photographs with celebrities who were also visiting the real estate tycoon before attending the tennis, including the musicians Lenny Kravitz and Sean Combs, AKA Puff Daddy.
Posing with Puff Daddy and Lenny Kravitz at Trump Tower.
FacebookTwitterPinterest
Posing with Puff Daddy, left, and Lenny Kravitz, second right, at Trump Tower.
Dorris said Trump continued to pursue her, asking questions such as: “Could you see yourself living here?” “It didn’t matter that I changed my clothes, it was still the same situation,” she said. “I didn’t feel like myself that second day at all. It did feel like something was taken away.”
Later they were joined in Trump’s box by more VIP guests, including Leonardo DiCaprio and the illusionist David Blaine, with whom they posed for photographs. DiCaprio, Blaine, Kravitz and Combs did not respond to requests for comment.
More VIP guests including David Blaine and Leonardo DiCaprio in the box at the US Open
FacebookTwitterPinterest
David Blaine, second right, and Leonardo DiCaprio, second left, in the box at the US Open.
Advertisement

Two days later, on 8 September, 1997, Dorris said she attended a memorial service for Gianni Versace with Binn and Trump.
Asked why she continued to spend time with Binn and Trump in the days after the alleged assault, Dorris said: “I was there from Florida and I was with Jason. I had no money, nowhere to go. We were going from event to event and it was overwhelming.” She did not fully process what had happened until later, she added. “People spend years around people who have abused them, that’s what happens when something traumatic happens, you freeze.”
Lawyers for Trump said Dorris’s version of events did not stand up to any scrutiny and had there been any inappropriate behaviour by Trump outside of the bathroom within the VIP box, there would have been numerous witnesses.
Signing autographs with Donald Trump
FacebookTwitterPinterest
Dorris signing autographs with Donald Trump
Trump’s lawyers said it seemed incredible that Dorris would voluntarily choose to be in the vicinity of Trump, at the US Open and the Versace memorial, in the days following the alleged assault. They said Binn had raised similar questions about her account. Trump’s lawyers also questioned why Dorris sat next to Trump at the Versace memorial, when she could have sat the other side of Binn.
They said Dorris had never raised the allegations with a law enforcement agency or to Trump, and said the timing of the claims so close to the November presidential election suggested they might be politically motivated.
The Guardian first heard about Dorris’s accusation against Trump via a model agent she had worked with in Chicago, in whom she had confided. Dorris first shared her allegation with the Guardian in confidence 15 months ago, but was unsure about going public. She recently decided she was ready to take that step, in part to be a role model to her daughters, who are now in their teens.
“When you invade someone’s space, it doesn’t matter if you were raped, it’s sexual assault, and it’s not OK,” she said. “You don’t touch someone unless they want to be touched. And I did nothing to encourage him to touch me.”
Dorris said she was also frustrated to hear Trump’s many other accusers being accused themselves of lying. “I’m sick of him getting away with this,” she said. “I’m tired of being quiet. It’s kind of cathartic. I just want to get this out. And I want people to know that this is the man, this is our president. This is the kind of thing he does and it’s unacceptable.”
Americans are fighting to vote ...
... in the most consequential election in modern US history. But the Trump administration and its supporters are waging an aggressive campaign to discredit and suppress mail-in voting – a crucial method in the midst of a pandemic.

This is one of a number of attempts to suppress the votes of Americans – something that has been a stain on US democracy for decades. The Voting Rights Act was passed 55 years ago to undo a web of restrictions designed to block Black Americans from the ballot box. Now, seven years after that law was gutted by the supreme court, the president is actively threatening a free and fair election.

Through our Fight to vote project, the Guardian has pledged to put voter suppression at the center of our 2020 coverage. This election will impact every facet of American life. But it will not be a genuine exercise in democracy if American voters are stopped from participating in it.

At a time like this, an independent news organisation that fights for truth and holds power to account is not just optional. It is essential. Like many other news organisations, the Guardian has been significantly impacted by the pandemic. We rely to an ever greater extent on our readers, both for the moral force to continue doing journalism at a time like this and for the financial strength to facilitate that reporting.

You’ve read more than
81 articles
in the last year. We believe every one of us deserves equal access to fact-based news and analysis. We’ve decided to keep Guardian journalism free for all readers, regardless of where they live or what they can afford to pay. This is made possible thanks to the support we receive from readers across America in all 50 states.


As our business model comes under even greater pressure, we’d love your help so that we can carry on our essential work. If you can, support the Guardian from as little as $1 – and it only takes a minute. Thank you.
 

leeisphtui

Alfrescian
Loyal
Moving truck coming to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave next Jan. And they will remove Fat Fuck and throw his ass out HEE HEE HEE

Ek2oc3mXUAI6IhV.jpg
 

leeisphtui

Alfrescian
Loyal
Who here thinks Fat Fuck will be arrested for 26 Counts of Sex Molestation or fraud by the Southern District of New York? or both?




EkjsuMQVgAEBn0d.jpg
 

kiketerm

Alfrescian
Loyal
I think there will be a line of indictments coming, 4000 lawsuits against Donald J Trump plus the Southern District of New York might be the sexual predator cases.

His future is not looking bright.
 
Top