Journalist Megyn Kelly expressed concerns about the $83 million defamation fine imposed on Donald Trump in E. Jean Carroll’s case, questioning the media’s coverage and suggesting that Trump should be allowed to call Carroll a liar and defend himself if he didn’t assault her.
Kelly highlighted the lack of evidence and the 30-year gap between the alleged assault and the accusation.
Journalist Glenn Greenwald joined her, criticizing the “weaponization of the judicial system” and the bias against Trump in some cases.
Critics attack Trump accuser E. Jean Carroll for living in a house with mice in the middle of the forest called “The Mouse House. "
She is accused of having bizarre names for her dogs. She paints trees & rocks in the forest
Trump suggests she's unstable and not credible. pic.twitter.com/qse7dcDaYJ
— AnalyzingAmerica (@AnalyzAmerica) January 19, 2024
“Let’s just entertain for a minute that Trump is the truth-teller, here,” Kelly said, “that Trump actually has no memory of this person, and certainly didn’t sexually assault her, and that she really is some sort of a kook who decided to make up a story about him to get her name in the headlines, to potentially get money from a deep-pocketed guy.”
“The media has zero appetite for entertaining that possibility.”
“She’s a wack job! What’s he supposed to say?” Kelly said.
“She couldn’t even remember when it happened,” she said of Carroll. “She didn’t have a police report; she didn’t have a medical report; she had nothing other than two friends who said, ‘yeah she mentioned it at the time.’”
“There’s an attempt to destroy political enemies and one of those weapons is the judicial system,” journalist Glenn Greenwald said.
Trump has consistently denied the assault allegations, and during the trial, he posted social media content criticizing Carroll.
Read Also:
Rep. Ilhan Omar Accused Of Committing Treason, Faces Censure Resolution
Man Who Leaked Trump’s Tax Returns Learns His Fate