Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Senate candidate denies estranged wife’s allegation­s

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BUTLER, PA. » U.S. Senate candidate Sean Parnell took the stand Monday in his contentiou­s custody case and broadly denied allegation­s by his estranged wife that he had hurt her and their children, a newspaper reported.

Testifying under oath in Butler County court, Parnell said he never choked his estranged wife or pinned her down, as she had accused him of doing, and never struck one of their children in a fit of rage, the Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported.

“Did you ever choke your wife?” Parnell’s attorney asked him.

“Never,” Parnell responded.

Asked if he ever got “physical” with his wife, Parnell answered, “never,” the Inquirer reported.

Monday was the first opportunit­y for Parnell to testify and for his lawyers to cross examine Laurie Snell after she testified last week that she had endured years of rage and abuse from him, including once being choked until she had to bite him.

Parnell is endorsed by former President Donald Trump in the contested Republican primary after running for Congress last year and narrowly losing in a Pittsburgh-area district.

Parnell gave similarly unequivoca­l denials Monday to questions about other allegation­s lodged by Snell, including kicking her out of their car alongside a highway and telling her to go get an abortion.

“It just wasn’t a good relationsh­ip,” he said.

Meanwhile, Parnell’s lawyers pointed out that a judge had rejected Snell’s request for a restrainin­g order in 2018 based on two allegation­s she made that he had physically harmed their children.

Neither episode ever happened, Parnell testified.

In one, Snell accused Parnell of striking one of their children hard enough through a T-shirt to leave welts. Parnell said it never happened.

In the second, an angry Parnell punched a closet door, sending it flying into another child’s face, leaving a bruise, she had testified.

Parnell testified that Snell “made up” the story and that the child got startled and bumped his own head on the door.

“Laurie wasn’t even there,” Parnell said.

Under cross-examinatio­n Monday, Snell acknowledg­ed that she went on vacation with Parnell and their children almost immediatel­y after he allegedly struck the child.

Later, after the closet door episode, Snell asked Parnell if he wanted to watch the children and told him, “I know you’re a good dad and it’s important that the kids see you,” according to text messages submitted as evidence.

Parnell responded to his estranged wife’s testimony last week by releasing a statement insisting he “never raised a hand in anger towards my wife or any of our three children” and saying he would “set the record straight” when he testifies.

Pennsylvan­ia’s election next year for an open U.S. Senate seat is expected to be among the nation’s most competitiv­e and help determine control of the chamber.

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