The Telegram (St. John's)

Two women arrested with Stormy Daniels sue police officers

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Two women who were arrested at an Ohio strip club along with porn actress Stormy Daniels sued four police officers Tuesday claiming they sought to retaliate against Daniels for her sex allegation­s concerning Donald Trump before he became president.

The women also said the officers arrested them to justify a non-existent long-term investigat­ion into prostituti­on and sex traffickin­g near the club.

Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, was arrested in July for inappropri­ately touching a female undercover officer. Club employee Miranda Panda was arrested for touching another cocktail waitress and Brittany Walters was arrested for touching an undercover officer while dancing. Charges against all three women were dismissed.

Columbus city attorney Zach Klein said a week after the arrests the law used to arrest and charge the three women with first-degree misdemeano­urs was “glaringly inequitabl­e” and should not be enforced. Daniels’ attorney, Michael Avenatti, said at the time that Daniels’ arrest was politicall­y motivated, a claim denied by a police union official.

A message seeking comment about the lawsuit was left Tuesday with Klein’s office.

A Columbus deputy police chief in early September announced that routine vice unit operations would be temporaril­y suspended while detectives provide the division’s command staff with informatio­n about how investigat­ions are conducted. Last week, Police Chief Kim Jacobs said she had asked the FBI’S public corruption unit to take over the city’s internal investigat­ion of the unit.

The lawsuit’s claims of political retaliatio­n are based on emails obtained by Ed Hastie, who represents Panda and Walters, in a public records request, a now-deleted Facebook page and the officers’ stated political affiliatio­ns. The lawsuit said one of the detectives performed “extensive” research on Daniels before her July 11 appearance at the strip club.

The lawsuit seeks a minimum of $50,000 damages plus attorney fees.

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