Three women, who previously have
accused President Trump of sexual misconduct, banded together Monday to
call for a congressional investigation into the president – in what
could be an opening effort to shift the sexual harassment spotlight from
Congress to the White House.
The women revived their allegations during a press conference and
television interview in New York City.
Trump has long rejected the accusations from over a dozen women who have
made such claims against him, and the White House called the revived
accusations "false." The three accusers spoke out Monday following
high-profile resignations last week on Capitol Hill over misconduct
claims.
“I ask Congress to put aside their party affiliations and ask that they
investigate Trump’s history of sexual misconduct,” Rachel Crooks said
during a press conference in New York City Monday. "If they were willing
to investigate Senator Franken, I think it's only fair that they do the
same for Trump."
Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., announced his resignation last week, as did
Reps. John Conyers, D-Mich., and Trent Franks, R-Ariz.
Trump's accusers on Monday also sought the president's resignation, but
acknowledged that's unlikely.
“In terms of resigning, it’s probably the right thing to do. But I can’t
imagine he will. I think the congressional investigation is the only
thing we can ask for," Crooks said.
The women attracted some congressional attention. Sen. Kirsten
Gillibrand, D-N.Y., who helped lead calls for Franken to step down, on
Monday told CNN that Trump, too, “should resign” – calling the women’s
claims “credible.”
Crooks gave a detailed account of her story, accusing Trump of kissing
her on the lips when she was a receptionist at a company in Trump Tower
when she was 22 years old.
“I was shocked. Devastated. It happened so fast,” Crooks said earlier
Monday on NBC’s “Megyn Kelly Today.” “I wish I would have been
courageous enough to be like ‘what’s going on,’ and ‘you need to
stop.’…I felt horrible.”
Two other women shared their stories during the press conference and on
the same program.
Jessica Leeds, who first told her story during the presidential
campaign, detailed her experience on an airplane in the 1970s. Leeds
said she was on a flight, and was moved to first class—a seat next to
Trump.
She claimed Trump started "kissing and groping" her, and that she
eventually moved to the back of the plane.
"Mr. Trump, he was bored and wanted some entertainment," she said at the
press conference. Leeds said that years later, she ran into Trump in New
York City, where she claimed he remembered her and called her a
derogatory name.
Samantha Holvey, a former Miss USA pageant contestant, alleged that
during one pageant, Trump came backstage to where the contestants were
in hair and make-up in bathrobes.
“He lined us up, and I thought this was going to be like a meet and
greet, like ‘hi, how are ya, nice to meet you,’ it was not,” Holvey said
on NBC. “He was just looking me over like I was a piece of meat, I was
not a human being, I didn’t have a brain, I didn’t have a personality. I
was just simply there for his pleasure. It left me feeling very gross,
very dirty. This is not what I signed up for.”
Later, at the press conference, Holvey said it was her “dream” as a
young girl to compete in a pageant.
“But I have a new dream now. That this man will be held accountable for
his actions,” Holvey said.
Allegations of misconduct by Trump surfaced during the 2016 presidential
campaign. They took center stage in the final weeks after a decade-old
“Access Hollywood” tape revealed Trump making lewd comments about women.
The Trump campaign discounted the tape, at the time, as “locker room
talk.”
The White House released a fresh statement early Monday decrying the
"false" claims of the women at the press conference.
“These false claims, totally disputed in most cases by eyewitness
accounts, were addressed at length during last year’s campaign, and the
American people voiced their judgment by delivering a decisive victory,”
a White House spokesperson said in a statement. “The timing and
absurdity of these false claims speaks volumes and the publicity tour
that has begun only further confirms the political motives behind them.”
But Crooks said the White House’s response was “laughable.”
"A person with this record would have entered the graveyard of political
aspirations never to return, but yet, he is president of the United
States," she said.
Holvey, Leeds and Crooks are just three of 16 women who participated in
a video titled “16 Women and Donald Trump,” which details the
allegations against the president.
Fox News' Lisa Rizzolo contributed to this report. |
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