The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sexual misconduct accusers: Trump’s win ‘heartbreak­ing’

Women renew claims against president.

- By Mark Berman and Frances Stead Sellers

As the country grapples with a national reckoning over sexual misconduct allegation­s against powerful men, three women who accused the most high-profile man in America again questioned Monday why their claims did nothing to stop him from winning the presidency.

It was “heartbreak­ing” for women to go public with their claims against President Donald Trump last year, only to see him ascend to the Oval Office, said Samantha Holvey, a former Miss USA contestant who in October 2016 said Trump inappropri­ately inspected pageant participan­ts.

“I put myself out there for the entire world, and nobody cared,” Holvey said Monday on NBC’s “Megyn Kelly Today” show.

During the television appearance and a news conference, Holvey sat alongside Jessica Leeds, a New York woman who said Trump groped her on a plane, and Rachel Crooks, who said he kissed her on the lips at Trump Tower, to renew their allegation­s against the president.

The women also called for Congress to investigat­e these allegation­s amid the dramatic shift happening nationwide in response to charges of sexual misconduct against men from Hollywood to Capitol Hill. Claims have erupted across industry after industry, against lawmakers and movie stars alike, as the country has shown a sudden, newfound willingnes­s to take such accusation­s seriously.

Trump has denied all of the allegation­s against him, which were made public after The Washington Post published the “Access Hollywood” recording last year capturing Trump boasting about grabbing women by the genitals.

The White House’s position is that Trump’s accusers are lying and that the issue was settled when he was elected president after the stories emerged.

“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,” the White House said in a statement Monday. “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.”

Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Trump’s press secretary, repeated that sentiment later Monday afternoon, telling reporters the president has denied all the charges against him and saying “these allegation­s have been answered through” the election.

“The American people knew this and voted for the president and we feel like we’re ready to move forward,” Sanders said of the allegation­s. She added: “The president has firsthand knowledge on what he did and didn’t do.”

The women who spoke Monday morning on television recounted their allegation­s against Trump, saying they felt threatened and disgusted by these encounters with the future president.

“I was shocked,” Crooks told Kelly after describing Trump kissing her at Trump Tower. “Devastated. It happened so fast ... I wish I would’ve been courageous enough to say, ‘What’s going on and you need to stop this.’”

Crooks said she felt at the time that she had no way to respond to the situation out of fear that if she reported it to her bosses — who did business with Trump’s organizati­on — she might lose her job. “I wish I had been stronger,” she said. Crooks said she came forward after reading an account from another woman accusing Trump of misconduct, saying that this made her feel a sense of relief knowing that “it wasn’t just me.”

When the women were read the White House’s statement Monday describing their claims as false, Crooks called it “laughable.”

The news conference was organized by Brave New Films, a nonprofit group launched by Robert Greenwald, an Emmy Award-winning producer, with the goal of promoting activism around progressiv­e causes through short low-budget documentar­ies. The group has a budget of about $2.6 million, according to Jim Miller, its executive director.

The company, which aims for mass free distributi­on via YouTube and other social networks, has produced videos about gun control and mass incarcerat­ion. In November, it posted a video about the women accusing Trump, weaving together clips of them retelling their stories. That video, along with the news conference, was funded by donations of between $5 and $50 that came in response to social media and email solicitati­ons, the group said.

Greenwald said after the video was launched, his group decided to reach out to the women, some of whom hesitated when they received an email about it.

“I didn’t want to go through it all again,” Holvey said in an interview after the news conference, recalling the backlash a year ago and the feeling that she hadn’t been heard. But the idea of getting together with other women who had similar experience­s interested her.

“As a group there might be more of an impact,” she said. And she was also noticing a change in her Facebook feed in the #metoo era, seeing people asking: “What about Trump?”

Some women contacted by Brave New Films were too fearful of joining the news conference, Greenwald said. The three who did gather met at a dinner Sunday night for the first time.

Beyond pushing for renewed attention to their claims, it was unclear what the women hoped would be the next step after the news conference. Greenwald said that answer would come later, saying for now that he believes “we have an opportunit­y.”

Leeds said at the news conference Monday that none of the women were speaking publicly for fame, but instead were doing it because they felt it was the right thing to do.

“None of us want this attention,” Leeds said at the news conference. “None of us are comfortabl­e with it ... But this is important, so when asked, we speak out.”

The women spoke Monday as a wave of allegation­s of sexual assault and harassment by men have swept across the country in recent weeks, stretching into fields including politics, entertainm­ent, the media, the courts and the finance industry.

 ?? JAMES KEIVOM / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS ?? (From left) Rachel Crooks, Jessica Leeds and Samantha Holvey, who publicly accused President Donald Trump of sexual misconduct, speak during a news conference hosted by Brave New Films on Monday in New York.
JAMES KEIVOM / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS (From left) Rachel Crooks, Jessica Leeds and Samantha Holvey, who publicly accused President Donald Trump of sexual misconduct, speak during a news conference hosted by Brave New Films on Monday in New York.

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