Audio By Carbonatix
Ex-President Donald Trump can be held liable for disparaging comments he made about a woman who accused him of rape, the US Department of Justice has said.
Its lawyers previously argued Mr Trump was legally immune as he was president when he made the remarks in 2019.
But on Tuesday government attorneys said they no longer had "sufficient basis" to conclude Mr Trump had acted within the scope of his duties.
The decision boosts E Jean Carroll's defamation lawsuit against Mr Trump.
In May, Mr Trump was ordered to pay the former magazine columnist $5m (ÂŁ3.9m) after being found liable for sexual abuse of her in 1996 at a New York department store.
Ms Carroll, 79, is currently seeking $10m from Mr Trump in a defamation lawsuit, which is due to go to trial in January.
The legal action cites his remarks as president about her in 2019 while responding to reporters' questions.
The lawsuit has been updated to reflect further comments he made about her during a CNN town hall the day after the court's verdict two months ago.
The justice department had previously taken the position that Mr Trump could be defended by government attorneys because he was serving in his capacity as president when he made the remarks.
But on Tuesday its lawyers said "there is no longer a sufficient basis to conclude that the former president was motivated by 'more than an insignificant' desire to serve the United States Government".
In a letter filed with the judge presiding over the case, the justice department wrote that "Mr Trump was motivated by a 'personal grievance' stemming from events that occurred many years prior to Mr Trump's presidency".
The letter said new evidence had emerged since Mr Trump, 77, left office, referring to the Manhattan civil trial earlier this year.
The justice department said that though Mr Trump's comments were made via official channels, the accusation that prompted the statements were in regards "to a purely personal incident: an alleged sexual assault that occurred decades prior to Mr Trump's presidency".
Ms Carroll's lawyer welcomed the justice department's reconsideration.
"We have always believed that Donald Trump made his defamatory statements about our client in June 2019 out of personal animus, ill will, and spite, and not as president of the United States," said Roberta A Kaplan.
Latest Stories
-
Wassa Gyapa: Western Regional Minister orders investigation into mining near school after viral video
4 minutes -
Boakye Agyarko calls on Bawumia ahead of nationwide tour for NPP Chairmanship bid
5 minutes -
Our energy progress requires unity, not politics – Energy Analyst, Kwegyir Essel
10 minutes -
Newsfile to tackle Akosombo fire and BoG’s GH¢15.6bn loss
21 minutes -
Kasoa maternal death: GHS assures family of thorough investigation, rules out shoddy work
34 minutes -
War criminal Mladic close to death, say lawyers asking judge for jail release
1 hour -
BoG’s performance should be judged by mandate, not balance sheet – Cudjoe Kuagbedzi
1 hour -
Dorcas Affo-Toffey leads delegation to China on transport modernisation drive
1 hour -
May Day: Lands and Mines Watch Ghana demands safer conditions, fair wages for workers
2 hours -
Brazil’s Congress approves plan to drastically cut Bolsonaro’s jail term
2 hours -
8 NPP members seek court injunction to halt Tarkwa-Nsuaem polling station elections amid deepening internal dispute
2 hours -
Israeli police arrest man after nun attacked in Jerusalem
2 hours -
Central banks, like governments, pay the price to stabilise the economy
2 hours -
BoG losses amount to wealth transfer to banks – Gideon Boako
2 hours -
The Real Greek restaurant chain on brink of collapse
2 hours