Alabama Republican Senate candidate Roy
Moore on Thursday adamantly denied a Washington Post report on a woman
who claims the former judge and staunch social conservative initiated a
sexual encounter with her when she was 14 – allegations that have rocked
the race in the final stretch.
The Post story centered on allegations made by Leigh Corfman, now 53.
She told the newspaper that Moore, then an assistant district attorney,
first approached her in 1979 outside a courtroom in Alabama where she
was sitting with her mother. On another occasion, she said Moore, then
32, took her to his home in the woods and kissed her.
During a subsequent visit, Corfman reportedly claimed he took off her
shirt and pants; touched her over her bra and underwear; and guided her
hand to his underwear. She said the two did not have sexual intercourse,
and that she ended up getting dressed and asking Moore to take her home,
according to the Post.
“I wanted it over with – I wanted out,” she told the Post, apparently
recalling her train of thought at the time. Moore did take her home, she
said.
The report caused immediate problems for Moore with his own party as he
heads into the Dec. 12 election against Democrat Doug Jones. Several GOP
senators called on him to step aside if the allegations are true – and
at least one senator, Arizona’s John McCain, said he should drop out
regardless.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who backed Moore’s rival
Luther Strange in the GOP primary, said in a statement: "If these
allegations are true, he must step aside."
Sen. Cory Gardner, R-Colo., head of the Senate GOP campaign arm, called
the allegations “deeply troubling” and said: “If these allegations are
found to be true, Roy Moore must drop out of the Alabama special Senate
election.”
But Moore’s campaign issued a statement saying the report is “baseless”
and false.
“National liberal organizations know their chosen candidate Doug Jones
is in a death spiral, and this is their last ditch Hail Mary,” Moore
campaign chairman Bill Armistead said. “Judge Roy Moore is winning with
a double-digit lead. So it is no surprise, with just over four weeks
remaining, in a race for the U.S. Senate with national implications,
that the Democratic Party and the country’s most liberal newspaper would
come up with a fabrication of this kind.
“This garbage is the very definition of fake news and intentional
defamation,” he said.
Moore called the accusations “completely false and a desperate political
attack."
The Post noted that the legal age of consent in the state is 16, and
sexual contact by anyone 19 or older with anyone between 12 and 16 years
old is considered second-degree sexual abuse.
The statute of limitations, though, has long since passed.
The Post interviewed three other women who were teenagers at the time
who claimed Moore pursued them when he was in his 30s, though he did not
force them into any type of sexual relationship.
“I have prayed over this,” Corfman told the Post as to why she came
forward, “All I know is that I can’t sit back and let this continue, let
him continue without the mask being removed.” |
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