What A Day - The Many Trials of Donald Trump
Episode Date: April 28, 2023Writer E. Jean Carroll, who is suing Donald Trump for allegedly raping her in 1996, faced hours of cross examination Thursday – leading to a heated exchange with Trump’s lawyer, who questioned her... memory and actions surrounding the alleged attack.The Biden administration has announced plans to open migrant centers throughout Latin America in an effort to slow down the influx of migrants heading to the U.S. The announcement comes as Title 42, which border officials have used to turn away asylum-seekers on public health grounds, is set to expire on May 11th.And in headlines: former Vice President Mike Pence testified before the federal grand jury investigating Donald Trump’s alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election results, legislators in Kansas voted to enact a sweeping anti-transgender bathroom bill, and a new Twitter alternative is preparing to launch.Show Notes:RAINN: National Sexual Assault Telephone Hotline – https://www.rainn.org/about-national-sexual-assault-telephone-hotlineWhat A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whatadayÂ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Friday, April 28th.
I'm Trevelle Anderson.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
And this is What A Day.
Whereas April comes to a close,
we suggest you start preparing now
for a Justin Timberlake jump scare.
Yes, all of those it's gonna be May memes.
It's not funny anymore.
Just stop it.
Neither is May the 4th.
They're not cute.
They're not clever.
And you know they're the people
who live to do it every single year.
They just live for it.
On today's show, former Vice President Mike Pence has testified before the federal grand jury investigating the January 6th insurrection.
Plus, another Twitter alternative has made its debut. But first, E. Jean Carroll returned to the stand on Thursday for a particularly heated day of cross-examination in her civil battery and defamation lawsuit
against former President Donald Trump. Just a warning to our listeners, this story involves
sexual assault. If you'd rather not listen, you are welcome to skip ahead a few minutes.
Carroll, a former magazine columnist, alleges that Trump raped her in the
dressing room of a New York City department store in 1996 and defamed her when she came forward with
her allegations in 2019. Trump has repeatedly claimed that that never happened, that he never
knew Carol, which is not true. There's a photograph of them together, and that she wasn't his type,
which is just a gross thing to say when met with these kind of allegations.
This is just one of many allegations of inappropriate behavior, sexual harassment, and sexual assault against Trump by at least 18 women. But this is the first one to reach trial.
You know, 18 sets of allegations.
Yeah, that's a lot.
A lot. A whole lot.
All right, so tell us what happened in the courtroom yesterday.
Yeah, so Carol faced hours of cross-examination
from Trump's attorney, Joe Tacopina.
He is, really just seems like a piece of work.
Most of it centered around her memory
of the alleged attack,
inconsistencies in her recollection,
and other questions that most people consider
completely misogynistic and completely inappropriate to ask victims of sexual violence,
including what she was wearing at the time, why she didn't scream, why she didn't report it to
the police, just the worst things imaginable. Carol's testimony included graphic details at
points and some of the exchanges between her and Takapina became sharp, with the judge even scolding Takapina for asking questions that were argumentative
and repetitive.
I'm glad the judge at least is trying to establish some sort of decorum here.
Right.
But he shouldn't have to.
But here we are.
I know.
It's, I guess, not surprising that Donald Trump found himself like just another terrible
human being to be his lawyer.
But I guess something we should have expected.
But over the course of the day, Carol testified that like many survivors of sexual assault, she didn't contact the police for fear of retaliation.
And that she never planned to go public with her story, but that the Me Too movement inspired her to speak out.
Originally, she had only filed a defamation lawsuit against Trump,
alleging that in his response to her allegations, he had defamed her character.
But the battery charge was added after a new law in New York offered sexual assault victims a
limited window to file civil suits against their attackers if the statute of limitations had
expired in their cases. You know, like this one. This happened in 1996. She wouldn't be able to take this up in the
court previously, but with this law, she was able to add the battery charge to her lawsuit.
Gotcha. All right. So now has Trump been present for all of this in the courtroom?
I mean, thank God he has not been because I imagine there would be nothing more traumatic
in the world for her than to have to recount all of this with him sitting there and just being himself.
He hasn't been there since the trial started.
He's not expected to appear.
Jurors are expected to see a taped deposition that he gave.
But true to form, he is busy, quote unquote,
truthing up a storm on True Social,
telling his followers that the case was a, quote,
made up scam and that her lawyer is a political operative.
I believe the judge stepped in, told his lawyer to tell him to stop doing that.
It appears that he has he's started to listen for now.
So hopefully that sticks.
But there's that.
Yeah.
OK, so what happens in the event that the jury finds him guilty here? Yeah, so this is a civil suit. So
Trump could be on the hook for a lot of money and damages. The amount isn't specified, but it could
be millions of dollars. There isn't like jail time or anything like that associated with this.
But all of this is going on during his third bid for the presidency. All of this, all of his other legal drama, all of it playing out at the same time.
You know, who knows how it would affect him politically if the jury found him guilty of battery for what Carol alleges happened here.
Like one would hope that would have severe ramifications with the electorate.
But like, God only knows, America has made some terrible choices before.
I'm sure we are capable of some more.
But yeah, we would like to think nothing good would come of this if the jury finds him guilty.
Well, only time will tell.
Truly.
Now on to the Biden administration's, let's say, interesting plan to address the influx of migrants.
Yesterday, they announced plans to
set up migrant centers throughout Latin America, which they believe will help slow down the number
of migrants coming to the U.S., especially through the southern border. The goal of the plan is to
both crack down on immigrants who might enter the country without legal permission and to create new
pathways to support those who need or want to be here. As of right now,
these centers will be in Guatemala and Colombia, though political reports that other hubs could
in time be built in Costa Rica and Ecuador. This first round of centers is expected to be up and
running within a couple weeks, and the idea is that at these facilities, migrants will be screened
to determine if they qualify for entry
to the U.S. Now, you know, it's always interesting talking about migration for me because, right,
these borders are all ultimately human-made constructs, you know, that only mean as much
as we give the meaning, but I will step off my soapbox here because I'm digressing. If migrants are deemed eligible at these centers,
they'll then be referred for refugee resettlement
or other quote-unquote approved pathways to entering the country,
such as parole programs or family reunification.
Now, at these centers, it'll be folks from the UN Refugee Agency
and the International Organization for Migration doing the actual screenings.
And the administration also said that both Canada and Spain will accept migrants referred from these centers.
Okay, all of this is very interesting sounding.
I mean, remains to be seen how it will play out.
But, like, seems like there could be good things from this.
Why is this announcement coming now?
Is there anything behind it?
Absolutely.
Well, you know, in addition to Biden now officially being back in campaign mode after announcing he's running again, after we all told him not to.
We are about two weeks out from a major shakeup in border policy, which will be the lifting of Title 42.
Now, Title 42 is a public health rule and Trump era policy that allows border officials to expel asylum seekers inside the U.S.
and turn them away at the border, all on the grounds of preventing the spread of Miss Funky Covadena.
It's been used almost three million times since March 2020.
But on May 11th, that rule will be lifted,
which immigration officials predict
will lead to issues at the border.
They're actually predicting 13,000 apprehensions
of migrants per day after May 11th.
And so basically, the Biden administration
is trying to prepare for that.
But they have to balance, unfortunately, what can be seen as progressive policies with others that, to be quite honest, Republicans and other conservatives won't rake him over the coals for. relief claims at the border faster. The Department of Homeland Security will also significantly
expand the use of expedited removal to process those claims and deport those who don't qualify
within days or weeks. Officials actually said that deportation flights will double or triple
for certain countries. Oof, okay. I don't know if I like the sound of that at all. Yeah, not great.
The Biden administration is also planning to implement a version of a different Trump-era policy called a transit ban,
which would bar some migrants from applying for asylum in the U.S. in the first place if they cross the border without legal approval
or if they don't first apply for safe harbor in another country,
particularly if they are passing through another country before they get to the U.S. So it's kind of a mixed bag overall. As one
former administration official told Politico, talking about kind of the tightrope that the
administration has to walk here, he said, quote, they're walking on a knife's edge. Will they be
able to get to the other side without getting cut? They're likely going to get
slammed on both sides, which may mean they found the right balance. But like you said, Priyanka,
it's yet to be seen if this set of plan and policy proposals will actually be a net good
or a net negative. Yet to be seen. And also like just a crazy little metaphor that official made. I don't know.
Very creative, but okay. Very, very creative. Of course, we will have more on all of this very
soon, but that is the latest for now. Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines.
Former Vice President Mike Pence yesterday testified before the federal grand jury that's been investigating Donald Trump's alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election results.
Pence's appearance began just hours after a federal appeals court rejected Trump's attempt to stop Pence's testimony.
And it comes after a bit of a back and forth about whether or not Pence would actually answer questions.
Back in February, Pence was subpoenaed to testify and both Trump and Pence initially resisted it.
Trump on the grounds of executive privilege and Pence saying he was protected under the Constitution's speech and debate clause.
In March, a judge eventually ruled that Pence must testify, but partially sided with Pence's constitutional claims and limited what he could be questioned about,
though Pence would still have to give answers about any illegal acts committed by his former boss.
Though details of Pence's closed-door testimony are still unclear,
the former vice president is considered a key witness,
and his appearance comes as he's hinted at possibly entering
the 2024 presidential race as a challenger to Trump.
Please, sir.
If there is one thing you do not do, please don't do that.
I don't think that will go very well for you.
And quite frankly, I think there's quite a lot of people who think the same. The assault on transgender rights
continues and Republican lawmakers in Kansas somehow managed to one up the other red states
yesterday by imposing what may be the most sweeping bathroom law in the country. Legislators
voted to override Democratic Governor Laura Kelly's veto of the bill, which bars transgender
people from using restrooms
that align with their own gender identity.
The law mainly covers bathrooms at schools,
locker rooms, and other places supporters argue
require separate facilities due to, quote,
biology, safety, or privacy.
Still, there is hope,
but we'll have to make like Dorothy
and get out of Kansas to find it.
First, the Justice Department has trained
its sights on Tennessee. The feds have sued the state over its ban on gender-affirming care for
youth and have asked the courts to block it before it takes effect on July 1st. And both Washington
State and Minnesota have declared themselves sanctuaries for both young trans folks and for
people seeking abortions. Laws signed yesterday in both states will protect people from extradition
requests, warrants, or other court orders if they're coming from out of state to receive
gender-affirming health care or to get an abortion. The Air National Guardsman accused of leaking
classified documents will remain in federal custody while a judge decides whether he will
stay in jail leading up to his trial. As you'll recall, 21-year-old Jack Teixeira was
arrested earlier this month after he leaked photos of top-secret governmental documents
on the messaging platform Discord. Yesterday, he appeared at a detention hearing in Worcester,
Massachusetts, where prosecutors said he should stay in jail while he awaits trial,
arguing that he tried to obstruct their investigation, has a history of
racist and violent remarks, and poses a serious flight risk because he could still have access
to classified documents of interest to foreign governments. On the flip side, Teixeira's defense
attorneys denied he's a flight risk and said prosecutors were being, quote, hyperbolic.
Instead, they want him released to the custody of his father on a $20,000
bond. The magistrate judge overseeing the case did not immediately make a decision on whether or not
to release Teixeira before his trial and will take more time to consider the matter before issuing a
ruling. Yesterday, Meta announced that it will sunset its short-lived Facebook Watch original
content slate after axing the executive in charge of its development and programming
in its latest round of layoffs.
Over the years, Facebook Watch has seen its fair share of scripted and unscripted shows
intended to be watched sort of accidentally while you're browsing your Facebook feed,
which for many of us would also be an accident.
Justin Bieber, JoJo Siwa, and Cardi B have apparently all hosted shows on the
platform. Yesterday, the company canceled the last original program standing, Jada Pinkett Smith's
Red Table Talk, an iconic program. Whether you tuned in only to see the Jordan Woods episode,
that would be me, or you're a regular drop-in to the family-hosted Roundtable, the program proved
a rare success for Facebook Watch with 11 million followers
and an active Facebook discussion group
that touted over 600,000 members.
Wow.
While the series is reportedly searching for a new home,
fingers crossed they find one
because that was some top-notch content,
Meta is looking on to greener
or at least more three-dimensional pastures.
The tech company hopes to shift its focus
to original programming in the VR space,
promoting exciting titles like the notorious B.I.G.'s
Sky's the Limit, a VR concert experience,
the Shacktacular Spectacular,
a New Year's countdown special,
and Trick VR Treat,
starring the one and only Vanessa Hudgens.
So, got a lot of questions there.
But our flowers to Red Table Talk
and Godspeed, Mark Zuckerberg.
You know, Red Table Talk was a moment in culture.
Truly.
Okay.
You mentioned the Jordan Woods episode.
Also shout out to the,
I think we're calling it the entanglement episode.
Oh, yes.
Oh, yes.
I also tuned in for that one.
What was going on you know
we were all tuning in to find out they had the show that everybody wanted shout out to jada shout
out to gammy shout out to willow we love to see it now on to this vr side of things priyanka
you know i'm just glad that vanessa hudgens of high school musical fame has some work to her name, you know?
That is a generous and lovely read on this.
Absolutely.
And those are the headlines.
We'll be back after some ads to talk about the social media platform
that promises to somehow be much cooler than Mastodon.
It's Friday, WOD Squad.
And for today's Tim Check, to skeet or not to skeet that is the question okay
don't turn no it's not no it's not i'm going to explain let me explain people okay former twitter
ceo jack dorsey has launched a social media alternative for the online crowd of people who
are getting a little fed up with the varied shenanigans of Elon Musk.
The app, called Blue Sky Social,
markets itself as a decentralized microblogging platform
which allows users to publish 300-character posts,
reply to others, as well as share and repost images.
So, for the most part, business as usual.
Except instead of a timeline, it's the skyline
now and it's skeets instead of tweets. Okay. Now that's an absolute no. Listen, no. Listen,
Lil Jon and the East Side Boys are somewhere going crazy. For those who know that reference,
we see each other. They are suing. That's what they're doing.
And no DMs just yet, in case you were wondering.
In its current beta testing form, the platform remains invite only, but it seems to be picking up some steam this week.
Yesterday marked the platform's biggest single day jump in users yet.
Legendary Twitter users Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Drill were confirmed among the crowd of new users. And according to the app's developers, the waitlist for an invite is already over 1 million people long.
So, Priyanka, what do you think?
Are we about to hustle for some invites?
Or does this feel like Mastodon all over again?
Yeah, I absolutely am not hustling anywhere.
Let me tell you that.
One million people is just fine.
It's not going to be one million one because of me.
I'm also though famously a late adopter of this kind of stuff.
If other people get on the platform, if it's picking up steam, sure.
But I don't feel like I need to go out of my way, spend a lot of extra time on a social
media platform, which we shouldn't be doing in the first place.
I'm trying to curb my social media addiction,
not add to it.
I'm not going to be the one of those first people
making it the good time for other people.
But I just, that's just something I know about myself.
But Trayvon, what do you think about this?
Are you, are you trying to, I don't even,
I can't even say it.
I'm so sorry.
I'm not.
Are you going to be joining Blue Sky?
Because I will not be saying the verb
for what it is that you do there.
Absolutely not.
Listen, I will not be joining because, to be quite honest, I'm barely on Twitter these days, okay?
Same.
No one gets on Facebook anymore except my dad.
Sounds about right.
You know?
And the skeeting of it all. I just come on now.
Yeah.
Like, did he not Google?
No, absolutely did not.
I know we're a family podcast, so I'm trying not to go there, you know.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, I'm sorry.
It's Instagram, TikTok and be real for me.
And that is it.
Just like that.
We've checked our temps. They're skeptical, to say the least. And that's about it. And that is it. Just like that, we've checked our temps.
They're skeptical, to say the least.
We're not doing it.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, come to the Red Table, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just how many degrees of separation are between me and a blue sky invite like me.
But it is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked dot com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi.
I'm Trayvon Anderson.
And have a shaktacular weekend.
Oh, my God. You know, also glad that Shaq has a gig as well.
You know?
Yeah, I'm sure he really needed it.
So.
What?
What a Day is a production
of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed
by Bill Lance.
Our show's producer
is Itzy Quintanilla, and Raven Yamamoto
is our associate producer.
Jossie Kaufman is our head writer,
and our senior producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard
and Kashaka.