Roy Moore’s ninth accuser says he grabbed her behind

Republican Alabama Senate candidate’s latest accuser Tina Johnson spoke out on Friday about her alleged experience with him in 1991, claiming that she was left ‘scarred for life’ when he groped her in his office during a meeting about her son’s custody. 

Johnson, who this week emerged as the ninth woman to accuse Moore, 70, of sexual misconduct, went on the Megyn Kelly Today show to provide details of her encounter with the beleaguered candidate while he worked as an attorney in Alabama more than two decades ago.

Johnson was then 28 and in a strained marriage, and was visiting with her mother who had hired Moore to handle a custody petition involving Johnson’s son. 

 

She spoke out about the allegations on Megyn Kelly Today on Friday

Accuser speaks out: Tina Johnson, one of nine women who so far have accused Roy Moore of sexual misconduct, spoke out about the allegations on Megyn Kelly Today on Friday  

Johnson told Kelly Moore 'forcefully grabbed her behind' as she was leaving his office in 1991

Johnson told Kelly Moore ‘forcefully grabbed her behind’ as she was leaving his office in 1991

‘As soon as we came into his office, it was ongoing flirting, telling me I was pretty,’ Johnson recounted for Kelly.

Johnson said Moore asked her out on a date, even though he was married – a fact she was not aware of at the time, she said.

‘He got out of his desk and his sat on the end…his knee was touching my knee and I could smell his breath even,’ the accuser recalled.

Johnson, who also had two young daughters, said Moore complemented her on her eyes, asked how old her girls were and inquired if they had her ‘beautiful eyes.’

‘I was just shocked,’ she told Kelly, referring to Moore’s comments. ‘It was already uncomfortable when he started mentioning the two girls. Bells went off.’

As Johnson and her mother got up to leave Moore’s office at the conclusion of the meeting, Johnson said, he groped her buttocks.

Johnson said of Moore: 'I think that he wanted to take my power so he could feel powerful'

Former Alabama Chief Justice and U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore speaks at a news conference, Thursday, Nov. 16, 2017

Strong words: Johnson said of Moore: ‘I think that he wanted to take my power so he could feel powerful.’ She also claimed the candidate (pictured right on Thursday) scarred her for life 

‘He just grabbed my behind. I mean, forcefully grabbed it. And I didn’t even react, I just walked out,’ she said. ‘I was so ashamed. I thought I did something.’

Choking back tears, Johnson added: ‘The day he’d done that, he scarred me for life. I was vulnerable from the start, and he was in a position of power. I think that he wanted to take my power so he could feel powerful.’ 

Johnson told Kelly that she has no interest in politics, and that people in her home state were no supportive of her decision to air her ‘dirty laundry’ in public, but she decided to come forward after learning that another woman claimed Moore initiated a sexual encounter with her decades ago when she was 14 and he was in his 30s.

Moore’s campaign on Thursday lashed out at the women accusing him of sexual misconduct, declaring ‘let the battle begin,’ despite mounting calls from Washington Republicans for the candidate to step aside. 

‘You ask me if I believe the girls. No, I don’t believe the girls. I believe Judge Moore,” Moore strategist Dean Young said. ‘Let the battle begin. … Get ready to fight Mitch McConnell. We’re going to fight you to the death on this.’

President Donald Trump, through a spokeswoman, called the allegations of sexual misconduct against the former judge ‘very troubling.’ The Republican president stopped short of calling on Moore to quit the race, however, breaking with most Republican leaders in Washington, including McConnell, the Senate majority leader.

The fifth accuser, Beverly Young Nelson, held an emotional press conference on Monday alleging that Moore sexually assaulted her in his car in 1977

The fifth accuser, Beverly Young Nelson, held an emotional press conference on Monday alleging that Moore sexually assaulted her in his car in 1977

Wendy Miller

Kelly Harrison Thorp

Wendy Miller (left) says she was just 14 and dressed as an Elf who was a ‘Santa’s helper’ at the mall when Moore allegedly asked her out. Kelly Harrison Thorp (right) said she was asked on a date by Moore when she was just 17 years old

Debbie Wesson Gibson says she was 17 when Moore allegedly kissed her once in his bedroom and once at a local country club pool

Debbie Wesson Gibson says she was 17 when Moore allegedly kissed her once in his bedroom and once at a local country club pool

‘He thinks that the people of Alabama should make the decision on who their next senator should be,’ White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said, declining to clarify whether Trump continued to back Moore.

In Alabama, Moore appeared alongside more than a dozen religious leaders, who took turns bashing the Christian conservative’s many critics – especially his female accusers.

‘This is a man who does not lie. Compare that to his accusers,’ charged Gordon Klingenschmitt of the group Pray in Jesus’ Name.

With Moore looking on, Klingenschmitt quoted the Ten Commandments in a message aimed at two women he called out by name – one has said she was 14 and the other that she was 16 when Moore initiated sexual contact as a district attorney in his 30s.

‘Thou shalt not bear false witness,’ Klingenschmitt declared.

Another Moore supporter, professor Joel Brind of Baruch College, singled out Gloria Allred, the attorney for one of the accusers, for supporting an agenda designed to ‘enable serial child predators’ – a reference, Brind said, to Allred’s support for abortion rights.

Moore called the allegations ‘unsubstantiated,’ ‘unproven’ and ‘fake.’ ‘They’re not only untrue, but they have no evidence to support them,’ he insisted, refusing to answer any questions from reporters about the allegations.

Moore’s attorney has demanded that one of the accusers, Beverly Young Nelson, release a yearbook she contends Moore signed so it can be analyzed by a handwriting expert to prove its authenticity. Nelson says that Moore aggressively groped her in a locked car when she was 16.

The Moore campaign dug up Nelson’s divorce papers, which had been signed by Moore, and held them up to cameras suggesting she had copied the signature.

It was unclear whether the campaign was taking other steps to probe the background of his accusers. Moore strategist Dean Young said ‘no’ when asked Thursday whether the campaign had hired a private investigator.

Not backing down: A defiant Moore appeared alongside more than a dozen religious leaders in Birmingham, Alabama, Thursday 

Not backing down: A defiant Moore appeared alongside more than a dozen religious leaders in Birmingham, Alabama, Thursday 

Gloria Allred, Nelson’s attorney, said she and her client were prepared for Moore’s ‘slash and burn’ approach.

‘If in fact his attempt is to intimidate her or me, he has failed miserably,’ she said. ‘We prepared. We knew that this would be a battle for the truth, that this is someone who most likely will fight to the end.’

At least three new allegations of misconduct surfaced on Wednesday, including one by Tina Johnson, who initially told AL.com about the alleged 1991 groping inciden.

Two others told The Washington Post they were young women when Moore courted them as a district attorney in his 30s. Three other women told the newspaper last week that they were teens when Moore tried to initiate romantic relationships. One said she was 14 when Moore touched her over her bra and underwear.

The Alabama Republican Party reiterated its support for Moore on Thursday, a day after its 21-member steering committee privately contemplated the situation.

The state GOP has the power to revoke Moore’s GOP nomination and ask election officials to ignore ballots cast for him, although the state party has little interest in alienating Moore’s followers a year before statewide elections.

Meanwhile, the National Organization For Women condemned the attacks against Moore’s accusers, suggesting that the tactics help explain why many victims of sexual harassment are afraid to go public.  

ROY MOORE’S ACCUSERS: 

On November 9, The Washington Post printed interviews with four women who claimed that Moore had acted improperly with them in the 1970s, when he was in his thirties and they were teenagers.

Four days later another woman, Beverly Young Nelson, came forward to accuse Moore of sexually assaulting her just after she turned 16. Two more women spoke to AL.com and another two to the Post on Wednesday. 

Moore has denied all claims, saying that he only recognized two of the women named in the initial Washington Post piece, and neither of the women accused him of molestation or assault. 

The age of consent is 16 in Alabama. 

Leigh Corfman 

Corfman told The Washington Post she was 14 when Moore, then a 32-year-old district attorney, asked for her phone number.

She says he picked her up a days later, drove her to his home in the woods, and kissed her. 

He picked her up again another, she said, again took her to a secluded location, and stripped both of them down to their underwear.

She says he then touched her over her bra and underpants, and made her touch his penis through his own underwear.

Two of her childhood friends said she told them at the time, and her mom says her daughter told her around 10 years later, when he became a judge.

Corfman said that she is a long-time Republican voter, and voted for Donald Trump at the presidential elections. 

Wendy Miller

Miller told the Post that she first met Moore when she was 14, and that he asked her for a date when she was 16, but her mother forbade it. 

Moore has denied any encounter with Corfman, Nelson or Miller.

Debbie Wesson Gibson 

Gibson said she went on dates with Moore when she was 17, but they did not involve anything other than kissing, according to The Post. 

Moore confirmed to Sean Hannity that he dated Gibson.

Gloria Thacker Deason

Deason was an 18-year-old cheerleader when Moore took her on dates and plied her with wine, she told the Post. The legal drinking age in Alabama is 19. She said she did not have sexual contact with Moore.

Moore also confirmed to Hannity that he dated Deason, but said he never gave her alcohol.

Beverly Young Nelson

Nelson alleged in a statement to The New York Times that Moore sexually assaulted her in either December 1977 or January 1978, when she was 16; her birthday was the previous November.

She said Moore, who had previously flirted with her – as many customers had also done – offered to give her a lift home, as her boyfriend was late.

She claims he then drove to the rear of the restaurant, in a ‘dark and deserted’ area, and began to grope her breasts and tried to force her head down to his crotch.

Frightened and tearful, she says she fought back until he gave up, at which point he told her: ‘You are a child. I am the district attorney of Etiwah County. If you tell anyone about this, no one will believe you.’

She says he either pushed her out or she fell out of the car, and that she was lying on the ground as he drove away. 

Tina Johnson

Johnson from Moore’s hometown of Gadsden, Alabama, said the Senate candidate groped her behind during a visit to his law office in 1991.

She claims that in 1991, when she was 28 years old, she was at Moore’s Third Street law office in Gadsden with her mother when Moore started commenting on her looks.

Moore had been hired by Johnson’s mother for a custody matter.

As Johnson was walking out of the office, Moore grabbed her buttocks, she claimed.

Kelly Harrison Thorp

Thorp claimed that Moore asked to date her in 1982, when she was just 17, and he was in his mid-30s.

She said Moore told her he went out ‘with girls your age all the time’.

Gena Richardson

Richardson said that Moore asked her out when she was a high school senior working at Sears.

She declined to give him her phone number, so Moore decided to call her school.

‘I said “Hello?”‘ Richardson told The Washington Post . ‘And the male on the other line said, “Gena, this is Roy Moore.’ I was like, ‘What?!’ He said, ‘What are you doing?’ I said, ‘I’m in trig class.’

Moore asked her out again on the call, and later returned to Sears and asked her out a third time.

Richardson finally said yes, and their date ended with Moore giving what she says was an unwanted, ‘forceful’ kiss that left her scared.

Becky Gray

Gray said she rejected Moore’s advances when she was 22 years old and working in the men’s section of Pizitz, a regional department store.

‘I’d always say no, I’m dating someone, no, I’m in a relationship,’ says Gray, now 62, said. ‘I thought he was old at that time. Anyone over 22 was just old.’

 

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