NYT Responds To Donald Trump, Declines To Take Down Sexual Assault Story

NYT Responds To Donald Trump, Declines To Take Down Sexual Assault Story:

With the latest scandal lobbed at Donald Trump coming last night from the NYT which published the complaints of two women who were allegedly assaulted by Trump as far back as 36 years ago, and seemingly intended to keep deflecting attention from the daily “Podesta Emails” releases by Wikileaks, which will likely continue every day until the election, moments ago the NYT’s assistant general councel David McCraw responded to the threat by Trump’s law firm, Kasowitz, and announced that the New York Times declines to take down the article.

Here’s the NYT’s reason why it “welcomes the opportunity to have a court” set Trump straight.

Dear Mr. Kasowitz,

I write in response to your letter of October 12, 2016 to Dean Baquet concerning your client Donald Trump, the Republican Party nominee for President of the United States. You write concerning our article “Two Women Say Donald Trump Touched Them Inappropriately” and label the article as “libel per se.” You ask that we “remove it from [our] website, and issue a full and immediate retraction and apology.” We decline to do so.

The essence of a libel claim, of course, is the protection of one’s reputation. Mr. Trump has bragged about his non-consensual sexual touching of women. He has bragged about intruding on beauty pageant contestants in their dressing rooms. He acquiesced to a radio host’s request to discuss Mr. Trump’s own daughter as a “piece of ass.” Multiple women not mention. in our article have publicly come forward to report on Mr. Trump’s unwanted advances. Nothing in our article has had the slightest effect on the reputation that Mr. Trump, through his own words and actions, has already created for himself.

But there is a larger and much more important point here. The women quoted in our story spoke out on an issue of national importance — indeed, an issue that Mr. Trump himself discussed with the whole nation watching during Sunday night’s presidential debate. Our reporters diligently worked to confirm the women’s accounts. They provided readers with Mr. Trump’s response, including his forceful denial of the women’s reports. It would have been a disservice not just to our readers but to democracy itself to silence their voices. We did what the law allows: We publish newsworthy information about a subject of deep public concern. If Mr. Trump disagrees, if he believes that American citizens had no right to hear what these women had to say and that the law of this country forces us and  those who would dare to criticize him to stand silent or be punished, we welcome the opportunity to have a court set him straight.

David E. McCraw

The ball is now in Trump’s court: will he sue as he has threatened, and if so, how will both sides provide discovery and evidence for an event that took place in the 1980s?

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