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E. Jean Carroll Wants Trump To Pay Her $5 Million ASAP As Judge Speeds Up Case

Forbes Published Jul 1, 2026 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
E. Jean Carroll’s attorneys stated that Donald Trump owes her $5.8 million total, comprising a $5 million judgment and $779,783 in accrued interest as of Tuesday.
5800000 USD · total amount owed5000000 USD · original judgment779783 USD · accrued interest
E. Jean Carroll’s attorneys, plaintiff’s legal representatives
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Citation-ready fact
Trump has already paid $5.5 million into a court-controlled account toward the $5.8 million judgment.
5500000 USD · amount paid into court-controlled account
E. Jean Carroll’s attorneys, plaintiff’s legal representatives
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Citation-ready fact
Judge Lewis A. Kaplan ordered Trump to respond to Carroll’s payment request within seven days, by July 7.
7 days · deadline for Trump to respond3 days · deadline for Carroll’s lawyers to respond after Trump’s filing
Judge Lewis A. Kaplan, federal judge overseeing the case
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Citation-ready fact
In a second lawsuit, Trump was ordered to pay Carroll $83.3 million plus interest for defamation.
83300000 USD · judgment amount in second case
article (reporting court orders), journalistic summary
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Citation-ready fact
A jury in May 2023 found Trump liable for defamation and assault (but not rape) in the first case.
2 verdicts · liability findings (defamation and assault)
article (reporting jury verdict), journalistic summary
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Citation-ready fact
A different jury awarded Carroll $83.3 million in January 2024 in the second case, which was solely for defamation.
83300000 USD · defamation judgment
article (reporting jury verdict), journalistic summary
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Citation-ready fact
Forbes estimates Trump’s net worth at $6 billion as of Wednesday.
6000000000 USD · net worth
Forbes, financial news outlet
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Citation-ready fact
Carroll could receive the funds as soon as mid-July, depending on how quickly the judge rules.
at least 15 July · earliest expected payment date
article (reporting on Carroll’s attorneys’ position and judge’s order), journalistic summary
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E. Jean Carroll wants a federal judge to force President Donald Trump to pay her the more than $5 million he owes her—claiming the president is still trying to delay the payment after the Supreme Court rejected his case—and the writer could get her money in the next few weeks, as the judge ruled Wednesday to speed up deadlines in the dispute.

Trump was ordered in 2023 to pay Carroll $5 million plus interest for defaming and abusing her, but that payment has been on hold as he’s appealed the judgment—a process that ended on Monday, when the Supreme Court said it would not take up the case, leaving the $5 million judgment intact.

Carroll’s attorneys on Tuesday told the judge overseeing the case that Trump’s lawyers had asked for the payment to be delayed while the president decides whether to ask the Supreme Court to reconsider its decision—which the court does in only extremely rare cases, and there’s no reason to believe Trump’s request would be granted.

Carroll’s attorneys opposed that request and asked Judge Lewis A. Kaplan to order Trump to pay Carroll immediately, as the previous agreement they reached said the money would be paid out if the Supreme Court rejected Trump’s case.

They also asked Kaplan to speed up the timeline for submitting filings in the dispute by ordering Trump to respond to their request within seven days, rather than the usual 14.

Kaplan agreed to that request Wednesday, ordering Trump to respond to Carroll by July 7, and for her lawyers to respond to his filing three days after that.

If the court agrees with Carroll that the money must be paid now and cannot be further delayed, that means the writer could receive the funds as soon as mid-July, depending on how quickly it takes the judge to rule.

$5.8 million. That’s how much Trump owes Carroll in total, according to her attorneys, between the original $5 million judgment and $779,783 that’s accrued in interest as of Tuesday. Trump has already paid most of that money, $5.5 million, into a court-controlled account that will be given over to Carroll, but he would still owe her the additional interest that’s accrued.

“To date, Carroll has agreed to each of Defendant’s many requests to delay the payment he owes her,” Carroll’s attorneys wrote in their request to the judge Tuesday, referring to Trump. “Given the extraordinary lengths he has taken to avoid such payments and that each of those efforts has been denied in full, that cooperation ends today. It is time for him to pay Carroll.

$5.8 million. That’s how much Trump owes Carroll in total, according to her attorneys, between the original $5 million judgment and $779,783 that’s accrued in interest as of Tuesday. Trump has already paid most of that money, $5.5 million, into a court-controlled account that will be given over to Carroll, but he would still owe her the additional interest that’s accrued.

“To date, Carroll has agreed to each of Defendant’s many requests to delay the payment he owes her,” Carroll’s attorneys wrote in their request to the judge Tuesday, referring to Trump. “Given the extraordinary lengths he has taken to avoid such payments and that each of those efforts has been denied in full, that cooperation ends today. It is time for him to pay Carroll.”

It’s unclear how long it could take Kaplan to rule on whether Trump has to pay Carroll right away, and it remains to be seen if Trump could ultimately ask the Supreme Court to consider the case again. The $5 million case is one of two lawsuits that Carroll brought against Trump, and he’s also been ordered to pay her $83.3 million plus interest in the other case. That payment is also on hold as the case has been appealed. Trump’s lawyers have said they plan to ask the Supreme Court to take up the issue, but nothing has yet been formally filed, and it’s unclear how long it could be before any money in that case could be paid out.

Forbes estimates Trump’s net worth at $6 billion as of Wednesday afternoon, making the $5.8 million he owes Carroll—and the $83.3 million in the other case—only a small percentage of his total wealth.

Carroll alleged Trump raped her in the 1990s in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room, which Trump has long denied. When Carroll went public with her allegations in 2019, Trump immediately responded by criticizing the writer—claiming she was not “my type”—which prompted Carroll to sue him for defamation. The case that resulted in the $5 million judgment was actually the second case Carroll filed against Trump, under New York’s Adult Survivors Act, but was the first one to go to trial after the other litigation got tied up. A jury in May 2023 found Trump liable for defamation and assault, but did not find him liable for rape. A different jury then heard the second case in January 2024, which was only for defamation, and awarded Carroll the $83.3 million judgment. Trump has continued attacks against Carroll, even after being ordered to pay millions for his other comments, and Carroll’s attorneys have not ruled out bringing further litigation. The president has decried the litigation against him as a “witch hunt” and appealed both rulings to higher courts, but all appeals courts have so far ruled against him.

It’s unclear how long it could take Kaplan to rule on whether Trump has to pay Carroll right away, and it remains to be seen if Trump could ultimately ask the Supreme Court to consider the case again. The $5 million case is one of two lawsuits that Carroll brought against Trump, and he’s also been ordered to pay her $83.3 million plus interest in the other case. That payment is also on hold as the case has been appealed. Trump’s lawyers have said they plan to ask the Supreme Court to take up the issue, but nothing has yet been formally filed, and it’s unclear how long it could be before any money in that case could be paid out.

Forbes estimates Trump’s net worth at $6 billion as of Wednesday afternoon, making the $5.8 million he owes Carroll—and the $83.3 million in the other case—only a small percentage of his total wealth.

Carroll alleged Trump raped her in the 1990s in a Bergdorf Goodman dressing room, which Trump has long denied. When Carroll went public with her allegations in 2019, Trump immediately responded by criticizing the writer—claiming she was not “my type”—which prompted Carroll to sue him for defamation. The case that resulted in the $5 million judgment was actually the second case Carroll filed against Trump, under New York’s Adult Survivors Act, but was the first one to go to trial after the other litigation got tied up. A jury in May 2023 found Trump liable for defamation and assault, but did not find him liable for rape. A different jury then heard the second case in January 2024, which was only for defamation, and awarded Carroll the $83.3 million judgment. Trump has continued attacks against Carroll, even after being ordered to pay millions for his other comments, and Carroll’s attorneys have not ruled out bringing further litigation. The president has decried the litigation against him as a “witch hunt” and appealed both rulings to higher courts, but all appeals courts have so far ruled against him.

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