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Donald Trump appears before debate with women who accused Bill Clinton of rape, unwanted advances

ST. LOUIS — Just before the second presidential debate, Donald Trump appeared with women who have accused Bill Clinton of rape, unwanted advances. Paula J...
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ST. LOUIS — Just before the second presidential debate, Donald Trump appeared with women who have accused Bill Clinton of rape, unwanted advances.

Paula Jones says she’s in St. Louis to support Donald Trump.

She was the first of four women to speak at an unusual pre-debate meeting with Trump in St. Louis as the Republican presidential nominee tried to shine a spotlight on the sexual transgressions of Hillary Clinton’s husband.

Jones offered a message about Trump: “They should all look at the fact that he is a good person. He is not what other people are saying he’s being.”

In 1998, Bill Clinton agreed to an $850,000 settlement with Jones. She was an Arkansas state worker who accused Bill Clinton of exposing himself and making indecent proposition when Clinton was governor.

The settlement included no apology or admission of guilt.

Juanita Broaddrick, a former Arkansas nursing home administrator, first claimed 17 years ago that Bill Clinton raped her during a meeting in Little Rock in 1978.

Broaddrick sued Bill Clinton in 1999, but the case was dismissed in 2001.

A Twitter account that claimed to be that of Broaddrick revived the allegations on Saturday. Clinton has long denied her account.

Broaddrick said that three weeks after the alleged assault, Hillary Clinton approached her at a political event and thanked her for helping with Clinton’s campaign for Arkansas governor. Broaddrick has claimed that she interpreted Hillary Clinton’s comment as an attempt to force her silence about the alleged assault but there were no witnesses to the conversation. Hillary Clinton has never commented on Broaddrick’s charge.

Kathleen Willey, a former White House volunteer, has said President Bill Clinton forced himself on her in 1993. She says she’s supporting Donald Trump, in part, because he “can bring peace to this world.”

Willey also joined Trump at the meeting posted on his Facebook page. Clinton denied her charge and an independent prosecutor later concluded there was no evidence to doubt Bill Clinton’s denial.

Willey also claimed that Hillary Clinton helped try to discredit her. Like Broaddrick, her accusation has never been independently verified by a judge or jury. Bill Clinton has long denied the accusations and Hillary Clinton has declined to address them.

Kathy Shelton, n Arkansas woman who was sexually assaulted at the age of 12 and whose assailant was defended by Hillary Clinton said the Democratic nominee put her “through something you’d never put a 12-year-old through.”

She accused Clinton of laughing at her.

Shelton was sexually assaulted in northwest Arkansas in 1975.

Clinton was asked by a judge overseeing the case to represent her alleged attacker. After the prosecution lost key evidence, Clinton’s client entered a plea to a lesser charge.

In an interview a decade later, Clinton expressed horror at the crime, but was recorded on tape laughing about procedural details of the case. The audio has been seized on by conservative groups looking to attack Clinton’s presidential candidacy.

Hillary Clinton’s campaign says Donald Trump is continuing a “destructive race to the bottom” by appearing with a group of women who have accused former President Bill Clinton of rape and unwanted sexual advances.

Clinton communications director Jennifer Palmieri said Clinton plans to use the Sunday night debate to talk to voters and “this stunt doesn’t change that.”

Palmieri said Clinton is “prepared to handle whatever Donald Trump throws her way.”

 

Under fire for his hot-mic comments in which he boasts about forcing himself upon women, Donald Trump  signaled he will go after Hillary Clinton during tonight’s presidential debate for her husband’s past sex scandals.

When Bill Clinton’s sex scandals were still fresh back in the 1990s, however, Trump took a much different approach to discussing them — expressing sympathy for Hillary Clinton, defending Bill Clinton and dismissing his accusers, and in one interview with Howard Stern, making light of Bill Clinton’s infidelity.

Already this election season, Trump has called Bill Clinton the “greatest woman abuser of all time” and pointed the finger at Hillary Clinton for what he has described as enabling her husband’s sexual misdeeds and attacking the women who came forward against him.

“She’s been the total enabler. She would go after these women and destroy their lives,” Trump said at a campaign rally in May. “She was an unbelievably nasty, mean enabler, and what she did to a lot of those women is disgraceful.”

On Sunday, Trump twice retweeted Juanita Broaddrick, the woman who in 1999 at the tail end of his presidency, accused Bill Clinton of raping her in the 1970s when he was the attorney general of Arkansas. Clinton denied the allegations through his lawyers at the time, and no legal proceedings were ever brought against him.

The Trump campaign in late September circulated talking points telling surrogates to bring up women like Gennifer Flowers and Monica Lewinsky to counter questions about comments Trump made about former beauty queen Alicia Machado.

For more information on the 2016 election, click here. 

Speaking with Wolf Blitzer in November 1999 in video reviewed by CNN’s KFile, Trump said Hillary Clinton had been through more public controversy than any women should have to bear.

“I think she’s gone through terrible times,” Trump told Blitzer in the interview. “I think she’s been through more than any woman should have to bear — everything public. I mean, women go through this on a private basis and can’t take it, she’s on the front page of every newspaper every week with what went on in Washington.”

A month before, in an interview with CNBC, Trump expressed a similar sentiment about Hillary Clinton and blasted the independent investigator Ken Starr as “a total wacko.”

“I think she’s a very, very good person,” Trump said of Clinton. “I think she’s had a very tough life the last few years. I mean, what could be tougher than that? I mean, can you imagine those evenings when he’s just being lambasted by this crazy Ken Starr, who is a total wacko? There’s the guy. I mean, he is totally off his rocker. And can you imagine being lambasted like that all day and then saying, ‘Darling, what are we having for dinner?’ It’s gotta be pretty tough.”

Trump also repeatedly dismissed and at times mocked Bill Clinton’s accusers.

In a 2008 interview with CNN, Trump called the Lewinsky scandal “totally unimportant” and said it was “nonsense” that Republicans tried to impeach him.

In another interview, with CNBC in 1998 and first unearthed by the Washington Post, Trump called Clinton accuser Paula Jones “a loser.” In August 1998, Trump again dismissed Jones, and said Bill Clinton was actually the victim.

“I don’t necessarily agree with his victims,” Trump said to Fox News’ Neil Cavuto in a clip uncovered earlier in the year by the “Daily Beast.” “His victims are terrible. He is, he is really a victim himself. But he put himself in that position.”

“These people are just, I don’t know, where he met them – where he found them,” Trump continued. “But the whole group — it’s truly an unattractive cast of characters. Linda Tripp, Lucianne Goldberg, I mean, this woman, I watch her on television. She is so bad. The whole group, Paula Jones, Lewinsky, it’s just a really unattractive group. I’m not just talking about physical.”

The Trump campaign did not return a request for comment.

As reported on Saturday by CNN’s KFile, Trump also joked about Jones’s celebrity boxing match in 2002, calling her “not very talented” and saying, “it’s too bad she didn’t run like that from Bill (Clinton).”

Trump — who now wields Bill Clinton’s past misdeeds as a weapon against Hillary Clinton — made light of Clinton’s sex life in an interview Howard Stern in 1999, joking that she may have encouraged Bill Clinton to cheat.

“What’s gonna happen with Clinton when he retires as a young man of 53 or 54?” Trump asked in the interview.

“He’s gonna run a company or something,” replied Stern.

“But do you think he’ll stay married?” Trump asked.

“I think he will because –,” said Stern, before co-host Robin Quivers interjects, “She lets him do whatever he wants.”

“He’s got the perfect marriage,” Stern added.

“Right,” responded Trump.

“He does whatever he damn well pleases,” said Stern.

“I think she might even encourage him,” said Trump.

“Right, I don’t think she really wants him on top of her and that’s the way it goes,” said Stern, to which Trump laughs.

Information from the Associated Press is included in this story. 

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