Regina Leader-Post

Simmons denies ‘horrifying accusation­s’

- JOCELYN NOVECK

NEW YORK Three women have told the New York Times that music mogul Russell Simmons raped them, the latest in a cascade of serious allegation­s of sexual misconduct against powerful men in entertainm­ent, media, politics and elsewhere.

Simmons vehemently denied what he called “these horrific accusation­s,” saying in a statement that “all of my relations have been consensual.”

The allegation­s reported by the Times Wednesday stem from the 1980s and 1990s. One woman, Drew Dixon, said Simmons assaulted her in his downtown apartment in 1995, when she was an executive at Def Jam Recordings, reporting to Simmons. She quit Def Jam soon after, she told the Times, saying, “I was broken.” Through his lawyer, Simmons acknowledg­ed to the newspaper that he engaged in “inappropri­ate conduct” with Dixon while she worked at Def Jam. But he “emphatical­ly states that he did not have sex with her,” his lawyer said.

Another, Tina Baker, said Simmons raped her in the early ’90s, when he was her manager. “I didn’t sing for almost a year,” Baker was quoted as saying. Through his lawyer, Simmons told the Times he had “no recollecti­on of ever having any sexual relations with Ms. Baker.”

A third, Toni Sallie, a music journalist, dated Simmons briefly in 1987. A year later, in 1988, Simmons invited her to his Manhattan apartment for a party, she told the Times, but when she arrived she was the only one there, and Simmons led her to his bedroom, pushed her on the bed and raped her. “We were fighting. I said no,” she was quoted as saying. The Times said that Simmons, through his lawyer, acknowledg­ed he had dated Sallie but denied non-consensual sex.

In each case, the paper said, friends and associates of the accusers said they had been told of the incidents at the time.

The paper quoted a fourth woman, Christina Moore, who accused Simmons of groping her during a brief encounter in Miami in 2014.

“The current allegation­s sent to me by the New York Times range from the patently untrue to the frivolous and hurtful. The presumptio­n of innocent until proven guilty must not be replaced by ‘Guilty by Accusation,’” Simmons said in his statement.

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