Audio By Carbonatix
Writer E Jean Carroll has sued Donald Trump in the US state of New York for allegedly raping her in the 1990s.
Ms Carroll is among the first to sue under the Adult Survivors Act, which came into effect on Thursday.
The state law allows a one-year period for victims to file sexual assault lawsuits in New York over claims that would have otherwise exceeded statute limitations.
The former president has denied the allegations against him.
Ms Carroll alleges the attack took place in a New York luxury department store dressing room 27 years ago.
The Adult Survivors Act allows victims to come forward if the sexual assault occurred when they were over the age of 18 and took place on a date that exceeds time limits that exists on most felonies.
It is modelled after the state's recent Child Abuse Act, which applied to victims who were abused as minors.
The Child Abuse Act, which came into effect in 2019, allowed a two-year period for victims to come forward. Around 11,000 lawsuits were filed in New York against churches, hospitals, schools, camps and other institutions under that law.
Ms Carroll has also sued former President Trump for defamation after he accused her of lying when she first made her allegations public in 2019. Mr Trump has called Ms Carroll's claims "fiction". A civil trial for that case is scheduled for 6 February.
In a statement, Ms Carroll's attorney, Roberta Kaplan, said the new lawsuit filed on Thursday is intended to hold Mr Trump accountable for the alleged assault.
Alina Habba, a lawyer for Mr Trump, told US media that, while she respects and admires individuals that come forward "this case is unfortunately an abuse of the purpose of this Act" and "runs the risk of delegitimising the credibility of actual victims".
Others are also planning to file lawsuits under the new law.
This includes a planned class action lawsuit against Robert Hadden, a former gynaecologist at hospitals tied to New York-Presbyterian and Columbia University, who has been accused by dozens of patients of sexual abuse.
Mr Hadden was convicted in 2016 on sex-related charges in state court, but has pleaded not guilty to federal charges of abusing female patients over two decades.
Advocates for survivors of sex abuse believe the legislation provides an opportunity for people to come forward who may not have done so previously due to trauma or fear of retaliation.
Several other states have also extended or temporarily eliminated their statues of limitation on sex crimes in the wake of the #MeToo in 2018, including New Jersey, California, Arizona and Montana.
Latest Stories
-
Government engages large-scale mining companies on GANRAP
3 minutes -
‘3 Faces of Jeffrey Nortey’ returns June 12 with film, stage and street twist
13 minutes -
UPSA to host 9th Mini GUSA Games from May 5
37 minutes -
BBC Industrials marks Global Safety Day with road marking drive in Tema
43 minutes -
IMF urged to come clean on Bank of Ghana losses
47 minutes -
Soyalana Community Gala ignites football fever in Tolon
1 hour -
Talent identification takes Maxwell Konadu and Awudu Issaka to Tolon
1 hour -
At least 130 Nigerians seek repatriation from South Africa after protests, Abuja says
1 hour -
Nigeria plans to repatriate nationals willing to leave South Africa after attacks
1 hour -
Ghana’s fishers hold the knowledge, why are they not shaping policy?
2 hours -
Two killed and many injured after car driven into crowd in German city of Leipzig
2 hours -
GNFS honours firefighters on International Firefighters’ Day 2026
2 hours -
Kasapreko PLC announces GH¢700million IPO on Ghana Stock Exchange
2 hours -
NIA resumes Ghana Card registration for children in Volta and Oti Regions
2 hours -
Handling of BoG 2025 report risks politicisation – Oppong Nkrumah
2 hours