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From The Rachel Maddow Show

Trump keeps generating potential defamation lawsuits by his accusers

On Tuesday night, he could become the first major party nominee to be accused of defamation for what he says in a presidential debate.

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Over the weekend, I shared what I believe to be the real reasons Donald Trump showed up to Friday’s oral argument in his appeal of E. Jean Carroll’s first civil verdict against him. But I didn’t focus on what happened at the argument itself — or at his purported “press conference” thereafter.

Friday's argument — where the legal focus was whether the admission of evidence of Trump’s alleged, prior sexual assaults was erroneous, and if so, whether that error was or was not harmless — turned out to be much less about Carroll herself than another octogenarian, Jessica Leeds. Shortly after the “Access Hollywood” tape was leaked in 2016, Leeds alleged that an “octopus”-like Trump groped her breasts and reached under her skirt as they sat in adjoining seats in the first-class cabin of an airplane in the late 1970s. And her testimony in Carroll's first trial, Trump’s lawyers maintained, should not have been admitted because it was not yet a federal crime to commit sexual assault on a plane at the time of the alleged assault.

The amount of time devoted to discussing Leeds' testimony was a surprise, yes. But the real shock came hours later when, holding court at Trump Tower, the former president decided to attack Leeds, insisting "she made up the story," and continuing, in part:

So think of the impracticality of this. I'm famous. I'm in a plane. People are coming into the plane, and I'm looking at a woman, and I grab her and I start kissing her and making out with her. What are the chances of that happening? What are the chances? And frankly, I know you're going to say, "It's a terrible thing to say," but it couldn't have happened. It didn't happen, and she would not have been the chosen one.

Perhaps realizing what he had said, Trump ruefully concluded, “Now I assume she’ll sue me now for defamation.”

Jessica Leeds in 1978.Courtesy Jessica Leeds

While Leeds hasn’t sued, it’s not clear that Trump’s prediction is wrong. Indeed, at a press conference of her own Monday, Leeds said she is “considering a number of options” because of Trump’s “latest remarks.”

It might seem strange that Leeds could file suit now; after all, the alleged incident itself happened, as Leeds acknowledged, nearly 50 years ago. But the timeliness and validity of a defamation claim turns not on the age of the underlying events but rather when the defendant makes a knowingly false statement and with malice.

That's why, for example, Carroll successfully sued Trump twice: once for statements he made in June 2019 after an excerpt of her book was published in New York magazine and again after an October 2022 social media post renewing his attacks on Carroll. That post — in an eerie parallel to his bashing of Leeds — similarly accused Carroll of making up the story, asserted the assault never happened, and insisted Carroll was not his type. It's also why when, days after Carroll's first trial victory, Trump again publicly denied knowing Carroll and called her story fake, a judge allowed Carroll's lawyers to seek even greater punitive damages at her second trial.

And it's why Leeds is now contemplating going to court. The only question is whether her claim might be even stronger after Tuesday night's debate.

Jessica Leeds hosts a press conference outside Trump Tower in New York on Monday.Julia Nikhinson / AP

Why, you ask, would that be the case? Recall that Kamala Harris’ chief goal at Tuesday's debate is to demonstrate that she is ready and able to be president on Day 1. Key to her case — and there are indications that she is approaching the debate like a trial where she bears the burden of proof — is highlighting her own fitness for the office versus that of her opponent. And given that her 30-plus-year history in public service includes years of prosecuting sex crimes, is it likely that somewhere, somehow, she'll bring up the panoply of women who have accused Trump of sexual assault? I'd bet on it — and I'd also bet on Trump lashing out at one or more of those accusers.

The bottom line? Tuesday's debate could be the first time in American history a major party nominee's debate performance helps nudge a potential defamation plaintiff from press conference to court. Something tells me Leeds might be one of the debate's most attentive viewers.

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