By CANDACE SMITH
ADAM KELSEY
VERONICA STRACQUALURSI
ADAM KELSEY
VERONICA STRACQUALURSI
Oct 14, 2016
Donald Trump took aim at the women who have accused him of sexual assault in recent days, calling them “horrible,” “sick,” and “liars” at a campaign event today, and said that he "wasn't impressed" when Hillary Clinton walked by him.
After rebuking the allegations made against him in recent days as “phony,” and noting their timing “less than a month before one of the most important elections in the history of our country,” Trump personally attacked the individuals who made the claims against him and accused them of doing it for fame.
“Believe me, she would not be my first choice, that I can tell you,” Trump said of Jessica Leeds, one of two women told their stories to the New York Times. Leeds says
Trump sexually assaulted her in the '90s while they were on a first class flight to New York.
Trump has vehemently denied the allegations and threatened legal action against the New York Times for printing the story.
Sunday during the second presidential debate, Trump noted that his opponent, Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, assailed accusers of her husband, former President Bill Clinton.
"Hillary Clinton attacked those same women and attacked them viciously,” he said. Bill Clinton was not criminal charged in the case rape accusations, denied sexual assault allegations and admitted no wrongdoing in another case.
From the lectern in Greensboro, NC today, Trump made direct allusions to that debate, brushing off criticism that he encroached upon Clinton's personal space during the town hall-style event.
"When she walked in front of me, believe me, I wasn’t impressed," said Trump. "But she walks in front of me, and she takes a question, and then she walked back. And that was the end of that, no problem. Then she said the next day I invaded her space. Give me a break."
It was not clear what he meant by the remarks.
Of one of the women -- it was not clear which -- Trump said: "When you looked at that horrible woman last night you said I don't think so. I don’t think so."
He also said of the accusations: "These people are sick, these people are sick."
In what appeared to be divert attention from the assault accusations, Trump questioned why he was being singled out, saying that anyone could be cited similarly, even President Barack Obama.
"Obama is an incompetent. He is an incompetent president. He doesn't know what he's doing... why doesn't some woman maybe come up and say what they say falsely about me they could say about him?" said Trump. "They could say it about anybody. They could say it about anybody. He better be careful because they could say it about anybody."
Trump, in what appeared to be an attempt to paint the accusers that have spoken out as a result of the "biased" media, also unveiled a new line of attack. He invoked Carlos Slim, a businessman and shareholder in the New York Times.
“He comes from Mexico,” Trump said. "He's given many millions of dollars to the Clintons and their initiative... We are not going to let foreign corporations and their CEO decides the outcome.”
Trump said an investigation would reveal that he had done nothing wrong in “just about all cases.”
"It's like unbelievable. Even a simple investigation would have shown these allegations against me in just about all cases it's nonsense, it's false,” he said.
Interspersed through the crowd were a few protesters; at one point a Trump supporter put a protester in a headlock. Both were escorted out.
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