Trump posts $91m bond as he appeals against E Jean Carroll defamation case
Donald Trump has posted a $91.6m (£71m) bond as he appeals against the verdict in E Jean Carroll's defamation lawsuit against him.
A jury in January found Mr Trump owed the former columnist millions of dollars for defamation when he denied he sexually assaulted her.
A judge had rejected the former president's request for more time to secure a bond to cover the penalty.
Mr Trump also owes over $400m in a separate fraud case.
When posting the bond, Mr Trump asked to pause the verdict while he fights to reverse the decision in a separate court.
"Due to the numerous prejudicial errors made at the lower level, we are highly confident that the Second Circuit will overturn this egregious judgment," the former president's lawyer, Alina Habba, said in a statement.
A different jury last year found Mr Trump sexually assaulted Ms Carroll, a former Elle Magazine columnist, in a Manhattan Bergdorf Goodman store in the 1990s. The jury found Mr Trump liable of defamation for lying about the assault in 2019, and in January he was ordered to pay her $83.3m.
The bond payment is equal to 110% of the amount he was required to pay Ms Carroll, and was required to stay the verdict while he appeals.
Mr Trump was also ordered to pay Ms Carroll $5m in a separate defamation case related to the sexual assault last year. He put up the money shortly after.
Judge Lewis Kaplan made the verdict official in February and gave Mr Trump 30 days to post a bond or put up the cash.
In this year's trial, the jury found Mr Trump liable of defamation for lying about the assault in 2019, and in January he was ordered to pay her $83.3m, much of it in punitive damages.
On Thursday, Judge Kaplan said Mr Trump waited too long - 25 days - before seeking to delay the payment.
"Mr Trump's current situation is a result of his own dilatory actions," he wrote.
Ms Carroll's lawyers opposed the request, writing to Judge Kaplan that Mr Trump "asks the Court to 'trust me' and offers, in a case with an $83.3 million judgment against him, the court filing equivalent of a paper napkin; signed by the least trustworthy of borrowers".
A spokesperson for the former president said the decision was "a continuation of a totally lawless witch hunt," a frequent comment from Mr Trump's team throughout his numerous legal trials.
But the 77-year-old is facing mounting legal bills and damages this year.
In February, Judge Arthur Engoron ordered Mr Trump to pay $355m - which amounts to more than $450m with interest - for fraudulently inflating his assets to secure better loan deals.
An appellate judge rejected Mr Trump's request to post a bond for just a fraction of the penalty in that case.
The likely Republican presidential nominee claimed this week that he was not worried about securing the funds in his legal cases.
"I have a lot of money. I can do what I want to do," he told Fox News on Tuesday.