The jury in the E Jean Caroll case spoke after just 2 hours and their verdict screamed loudly- Donald Trump was liable for defamation.
Finally, he must pay for using his voice in a vile and foul way.
There are 83.3 million reasons to read this story from 2023 about E. Jean Carrol’s bravery again:
Why E. Jean Carrol’s Voice Is More Important Than a Scream
“He raped me whether I screamed or not.” E. Jean Carroll on cross-examination.
She didn’t scream.
Real rape victims scream.
I was raped.
Twice.
I did not scream either time.
Really
This is just one of several sexual assault myths perpetrated by the perpetrator Donald Trump in his flaccid attempt to undermine E. Jean Carroll’s testimony about her allegations of rape.
“She didn’t scream?” Trump wrote incredulously of Carroll on Truth Social. “There are no witnesses? Nobody saw this? She never made a police complaint?”
Each of his claims are tired old tropes. These harmful misconceptions and assumptions about rape victims and their response to terror have long been used by defense attorneys to discredit them.
It makes me want to scream.
Once and for all… screaming is not a legal requirement to prove rape.
Coping Mechanisms
Not all victims shriek, and not all fight back. Not all run. They can’t. There often is an emotional reason a woman doesn’t. She shuts down. It is the brain’s safety measure for survival.
Most have heard of “fight or flight” which is a way our bodies respond to threatening stressful situations. The body gears up to either fight back or flee the situation. But sometimes the sudden release of high-level stress hormones triggers an entirely different reaction to terror- to freeze. It can last for only a few moments or for longer periods of time.
Freezing is the brain’s response to detecting danger.
It is an autonomic response which means it happens automatically without conscious thought. You don’t get to pause and think through different options. It literally takes over executive functioning around decision-making, memory, and movement.
Your system is in shock and you are literally frozen. Silenced.
In 1996 Jean Carroll didn’t scream but she did fight back. After Trump slammed her against a wall in the department store dressing room, yanked down her tights, and vaginally penetrated her, she kneed him and fled.
More than many rape victims do.
“I was extremely confused and suddenly realized that what I thought was happening was not happening,” Ms. Carroll said. She said she didn’t want to anger Mr. Trump, explaining, “I didn’t want to make a scene.”
Keeping Quiet
The day started with Carroll describing how she was raised in Indiana in a family that prized a cheerful attitude and a positive outlook on life, where she was taught to move past unhappy things and act as if they didn’t happen.
That resonated deeply for me.
“Move on, forget about it.” I was told when I was 19 and viciously sexually assaulted on a warm summer night in the balsam-scented woods of suburban N.J.
“Put it out of your mind, and let it go,” was the advice I got when I was attacked at knifepoint and raped in my Manhattan apartment at 24.
“Move on, and leave it in your past where it belongs,” was the oft-time comment said by well-meaning folks when I eventually revealed my childhood sexual abuse.
But the past is always present if you are a trauma survivor. And when trauma happens, the past bounces back to life in blooming color. You do not move on. But you do need to use your voice.
E. Jean Caroll admits she did not scream. But she is now relating a tale she said she had waited decades to tell.
I’m here because Donald Trump raped me, and when I wrote about it, he said it didn’t happen. He lied and shattered my reputation, and I’m here to try and get my life back,” Carroll told jurors.
She never pursued criminal charges and said she would have kept the accusation secret forever if not for the #MeToo movement which empowered women to speak up in the wake of sexual assault claims against Harvey Weinstein in 2017.
After testifying for several hours, Carroll’s attorney asked her if she had regretted going public with her story. Carroll paused but then attempted to answer.
“I regretted it about 100 times, but in the end,” Carroll said, pausing as she broke down into tears, “being able to get my day in court…I’m crying, but I got to tell my story in court.”
She didn’t scream in the dressing room at Bergdorf Goodman in 1996. But she is using her voice now in a court of law.
Sometimes a determined voice is louder than any scream.
© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2024. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.













A powerful, important and courageous essay. It explains a lot, and people need to listen to what you and others have to say. And to think twice before telling victims they need to get over it and move on. Thank you.
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Thank you. E Jean Carroll has allowed so many women to tell their stories and there are countless stories to tell.
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I am moved by this piece, Sally. And I am so sorry for what you’ve had to face. As a woman and a #metoo survivor, I identify with E Jean’s victory. And your survival. I’m sending out love to all the women who screamed, who didn’t scream, who told, and who didn’t tell.
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Thank you for your supportive words and my heart goes out in solidarity and love to you as a MeToo survivor. How many, many of us there are.In fact I bet we might be hard pressed to find a woman who doesn’t have some sort of story to tell. And maybe,just maybe women will speak out more. And there will be accountability.
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She plans on using the money to support the victims of his rapes. She feels that will be the best way to screw with his mind. I do. too! Go for it, E. Jean! It’s about time he had to suffer the consequences of his misogynistic abuse of women!
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She is so terrific. I am certain when she does get some of that money iy will go to a cause that will really play with his head.
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I hope it causes an aneurism in his brain that renders him permanently mute. (Not dead, just mute!)
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He sadly seems indestructible, the fact that he hasn’t stroked out yet is miraculous.
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Fingers and toes crossed…
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What an excellent essay as always. What to say to you after what you experienced, sending love to aid you in the healing process. My best friend growing up suffered a rape n her 20’s while working as a social worker in Queens and purposely living in the same neighborhood as her clients to better understand them. I highly recommend the movie Unbelievable: “Unbelievable is an American true crime television miniseries starring Toni Collette, Merritt Wever, and Kaitlyn Dever. It follows a woman who was charged with a crime for reporting that she was raped, and a police investigation that led to the perpetrator’s conviction for the rape of multiple women.” I think it’s on Netflix.
And to top it off, we now have a convicted rapist running for president.
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I did watch that series and it was terrific. I might even watch it again. Thanks for your supportive words abouytmy own challenges. Its in part why my connections with my dogs are so profound, they are my guard dogs of my emotions and ghosts of the past and give me a sense of safety, security and calm that I need.
What is ironic, is that in the time period I was raped, I had an active social life in the city and would often see Donald Trump in a place called Le Club. He was obnoxious, arrogant and a womanizer then, as he is now and I never would have believed this jerk might one day be president and run again.
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I understand much better now your relationship with your dogs, and I’m so sorry for what you went through. I had no idea how many women have been hurt this way.
I think every New Yorker growing up at that time, even those of us who never saw Trump in person knew what a low life he was.
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It is very tragic how many women have a shared history of this kind of trauma. Because of my PTSD, my dogs have been invaluable. And Moe could truly be a service dog. You are right any New Yorker who lived during those times knew what a phoney, low life, wannabee he was. He was the butt of jokes. Now the jokes on us that he has been elevated to the place he is.
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