The Day

2ND WOMAN ACCUSES VIRGINIA OFFICIAL OF SEXUAL ASSAULT

Lieutenant governor hit with second sex assault accusation; governor in racist photo scandal won’t resign

- By ALAN SUDERMAN

Washington — A second woman accused Virginia Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax of sexual assault Friday, saying the Democrat raped her 19 years ago while they were both students at Duke University.

Calls for his resignatio­n grew steadily as the day wore on.

A lawyer for Meredith Watson, 39, said in a statement that Fairfax had attacked Watson in 2000. The statement described the assault as “premeditat­ed and aggressive,” and noted that while Watson and Fairfax had been social friends, they were never involved romantical­ly.

Fairfax shot back at his accusers quickly: he said in a statement that he would not resign from office, and vowed to clear his name against what he described as a “vicious and coordinate­d smear campaign” being orchestrat­ed against him.

Richmond, Va. — Virginia’s state government seemed to come unglued Friday as an embattled Gov. Ralph Northam made it clear he won’t resign and the man in line to succeed him was hit with another sexual assault accusation and barraged with demands that he step down, too.

Top Democrats, including a number of presidenti­al hopefuls and most of Virginia’s congressio­nal delegation, swiftly and decisively turned against Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax, who stands to become the state’s second black governor if Northam quits.

“Fairfax can no longer fulfill his duties,” the Democratic caucuses of both the state House and Senate said in a joint statement calling on him to resign.

The twin developmen­ts came at the end of an astonishin­g week that saw all three of Virginia’s top elected officials — all Democrats — embroiled in potentiall­y career-ending scandals fraught with questions of race, sex and power.

Northam, who is a year into his four-year term, announced his intention to stay during an afternoon Cabinet meeting, according to a senior official who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

In so doing, Northam defied practicall­y the entire Democratic Party, which rose up against him after a racist photo in his 1984 medical school yearbook surfaced and he acknowledg­ed wearing blackface in the 1980s.

Later in the day, the governor issued a statement to government employees, saying, “You have placed your trust in me to lead Virginia forward — and I plan to do that.” In a sign that he intended to return to business as usual, he also announced more than a dozen appointmen­ts to state boards.

Meanwhile, a woman came forward with a statement accusing Fairfax of attacking her when they were students at Duke University in North Carolina in 2000. The Associated Press is not reporting the details because the allegation has not been corroborat­ed.

Fairfax emphatical­ly denied the new allegation, as he did the first one, leveled earlier this week by Vanessa Tyson, a California college professor who said Fairfax forced her to perform oral sex on him at a Boston hotel in 2004.

“It is obvious that a vicious and coordinate­d smear campaign is being orchestrat­ed against me,” Fairfax said.

Duke campus police have no criminal reports naming Fairfax, university spokesman Michael Schoenfeld said. Durham police spokesman Wil Glenn also said he couldn’t find a report in the department’s system on the 2000 allegation.

Many Democrats who had carefully withheld judgment after the first accusation against Fairfax, saying the matter needed to be investigat­ed, immediatel­y condemned him.

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