Turning to a pivot point of Carroll's trial, Carroll's lawyer asks:
Q: Did you scream?
A: No.
The butler entered the room, interrupting them, and then Stoynoff says that Trump remarked after.
"Don't forget what Marla said. Best sex she ever had."
Stoynoff says she didn't tell anyone from People magazine, which she was running a one-year anniversary of Mar-a-Lago.
"I was worried that they would kill the story."
She says she was worried about Trump's retaliation.
"I did not want to cause trouble for the magazine."
Stoynoff says that she's Canadian — and characteristically polite. She says Trump's alleged attack made her change her interviewing approach.
"Maybe being so smiling and nice brought that on," she says she thought, though she now realizes it wasn't something she did.
Unlike other witnesses, Stoynoff calls herself as generally apolitical. She's voted for Democratic candidates in the U.S., and conservative candidates in Canada.
She acknowledges she has tweeted about Trump.
She may have called him an "Enemy of the People," she says.
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This is expected to be the last day of witness testimony in E. Jean Carroll v. Donald Trump. She's planning to rest her case today; he isn't planning to present a defense case.
Follow every wrinkle for the last time until summations, @lawcrimenews.
For those who heard Trump's claim that he's going to fly in from Ireland to "confront" Carroll in New York, reporter @molcranenewman sets you straight, via the ex-president's lawyer.