Donald Trump Rape Accuser E. Jean Carroll: ‘I Have Not Been Raped’
“I have not been raped,” Trump rape accuser E. Jean Carroll said in an interview the New York Times posted Thursday morning.
“I have not been raped,” Trump rape accuser E. Jean Carroll said in an interview the New York Times posted Thursday morning.
Sens. Mitt Romney (R-UT) and Joni Ernst (R-IA) split from members of their party Tuesday and requested more information on E. Jean Carroll’s claim that Donald Trump raped her 23 years ago.
The slow-motion trainwreck that has come to define Trump-accuser E. Jean Carroll’s publicity blitz has been painful to watch, one more example of our corrupt media — as a means to smear Trump — psychologically abusing someone who is obviously unwell and unreliable.
The New York Post on Friday scrubbed its report on writer E. Jean Carroll’s 25-year-old sexual assault allegation against President Donald Trump at the order of its former editor-in-chief, according to a report.
Monday on CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360,” writer E. Jean Carroll, who has accused President Donald Trump of rape, had a curious exchange with host Anderson Cooper about her status as a “victim” and the definition of rape.
Author E. Jean Carroll, who recently brought forth a nearly 25-year-old rape allegation against President Donald Trump, claimed in a Monday interview that she is putting her “life on the line” by going public with her accusation.
Attorney George Conway, the husband of White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, declared Saturday that the latest rape allegation against President Donald Trump is more credible than Juanita Broaddrick’s claim against former President Bill Clinton.
E. Jean Carroll said she will not seek rape charges against Trump as it would be “disrespectful” to women who are raped at the border.
“I’ve never met this person in my life,” Trump said in a statement sent to reporters.