US Justice Department investigates E. Jean Carroll for perjury
The Justice Department has initiated a criminal inquiry into E. Jean Carroll. The investigation focuses on allegations of perjury related to her civil lawsuits against Donald Trump. (sources: bbc, cbsnews, thehill, theguardian, nytimes)

The US Justice Department is investigating whether E. Jean Carroll committed perjury regarding the funding of her civil lawsuit against Donald Trump. This inquiry follows Carroll's accusations of sexual assault against Trump.
- The investigation centers on whether Carroll lied about the funding for her civil lawsuit.
- Carroll has accused Trump of sexually assaulting her at a department store 30 years ago.
- The inquiry is being conducted by the US Justice Department.
Why it matters
The outcome of this investigation could have implications for Carroll's legal actions against Trump and the broader context of accountability in sexual assault allegations.
↓ Congress can act on this
2 bills on this issue are moving right now — and the most active one is S3646: No Political Enemies Act.
S3646 · 119th Congress
No Political Enemies Act
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What S3646 actually does
This story is about US Justice Department investigates E. This bill would department: Create additional legal tools/defenses and accountability mechanisms aimed at politically motivated federal enforcement actions.
If passed, it would:
- Create additional legal tools/defenses and accountability mechanisms aimed at politically motivated federal • Potentially change incentives around initiating high-salience investigations that appear retaliatory.
1 other bill moving on this issue
Take action on any of them individually.
This story is about US Justice Department investigates E. This bill would department: Provide additional mechanisms intended to prevent federal agencies from targeting people/organizations for political speech/part.
If passed, it would
- Provide additional mechanisms intended to prevent federal agencies from targeting people/organizations for political • Increase oversight/accountability pressure in politically sensitive DOJ matters like the one described here.
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