Jurors watch video of Trump confusing E. Jean Carroll for his ex-wife
Jurors in the trial saw the moment Trump was shown a photo that included E. Jean Carroll — and identified her as Maples.
Jurors in the trial saw the moment Trump was shown a photo that included E. Jean Carroll — and identified her as Maples.
Trump's attorneys said the matter involves "important federal questions" that require the intervention of a federal court.
The former president will not attend, and his only other possible witness is experiencing a medical issue, his attorney said.
Trump will not be in attendance at the hearing, the first in his criminal case since his April 4 arraignment.
In a letter to the judge, Trump's lawyers argued the judge has made "unfair and prejudicial" rulings against the former president.
E. Jean Carroll has accused the former president of rape and then of defamation.
Trump "shattered my reputation," E. Jean Carroll testified in the trial, accusing the former president of rape and then of defamation.
Carroll came forward with her story in 2019, alleging that Trump sexually assaulted her in the 1990s.
Carroll says Trump raped her in the mid-1990s and defamed her when she went public with the story in 2019.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg had sought to block ex-prosecutor Mark Pomerantz from testifying in the Congressional probe.
Former Mark Pomerantz was subpoenaed by the House Judiciary Committee and scheduled to appear Thursday morning.
The House Judiciary Committee and its Republican chairman, Rep. Jim Jordan, are seeking to question former prosecutor Mark Pomerantz about the Trump investigation.
Weisselberg spent three months behind bars after appearing as the star witness in the corporation's tax fraud trial.
Bragg sued on April 11, asking a federal judge to halt a subpoena of a former Manhattan prosecutor.
Trump was expected to have answered questions on Thursday, unlike a previous deposition in which he invoked the 5th Amendment more than 400 times.