Trump raped Miss Indiana-- decades laterTrump campaigned heavily for Roy Moore when the child molester ran for Senate in Alabama last year, even while many national Republicans distanced themselves from the former state Chief Justice. Moore won the primary and lost the general election and Alabama second Senate seat is held by Democrat Doug Jones. This time around Trump adamantly opposes Moore and has made it clear both on his own twitter account and by having Trump Junior attack Moore as well. It would be hilarious if Trump campaigns against Moore based on Moore’s predatory nature towards women. It would be especially hilarious now that E. Jean Carroll’s very credible first person account of Trump raping her has been published by New York Magazine. A former Miss Indiana and Miss Cheerleader USA, journalist, advice columnist and author. The piece is an except from her newest book, What Do We Need Men For? A Modest Proposal, due out next month in which she writes after she was assaulted by Trump, she never had sex again. The essay explains how Trump made it onto her list of the 21 most hideous men she had ever met. She wrote that “my hideosity bar is high.” She knows one when she sees one. “For 26 years, I have been writing the “Ask E. Jean” column in Elle, and for 26 years, no matter what problems are driving women crazy— their careers, wardrobes, love affairs, children, orgasms, finances— there comes a line in almost every letter when the cause of the correspondent’s quagmire is revealed. And that cause is men… the man who thinks 30 seconds of foreplay is ‘enough,’ the man who cheats on his wife, the man who passes women over for promotion, the man who steals his girlfriend’s credit cards, the man who keeps 19 guns in the basement, the man who tells his co-worker she ‘talks too much in meetings,’ the man who won’t bathe, the man who beats his girlfriend’s dog, the man who takes his female colleagues’ ideas, the man who tries to kill his rich wife by putting poison in her shampoo. Every woman, whether consciously or not, has a catalogue of the hideous men she’s known.”Trump is one of the 21. “ Before I discuss him,” she wrote, “I must mention that there are two great handicaps to telling you what happened to me in Bergdorf’s: (a) The man I will be talking about denies it, as he has denied accusations of sexual misconduct made by at least 15 credible women, namely, Jessica Leeds, Kristin Anderson, Jill Harth, Cathy Heller, Temple Taggart McDowell, Karena Virginia, Melinda McGillivray, Rachel Crooks, Natasha Stoynoff, Jessica Drake, Ninni Laaksonen, Summer Zervos, Juliet Huddy, Alva Johnson, and Cassandra Searles. (Here’s what the White House said: ‘This is a completely false and unrealistic story surfacing 25 years after allegedly taking place and was created simply to make the President look bad.’) And (b) I run the risk of making him more popular by revealing what he did. His admirers can’t get enough of hearing that he’s rich enough, lusty enough, and powerful enough to be sued by and to pay off every splashy porn star or Playboy Playmate who ‘comes forward,’ so I can’t imagine how ecstatic the poor saps will be to hear their favorite Walking Phallus got it on with an old lady in the world’s most prestigious department store.”
This is during the years I am doing a daily Ask E. Jean TV show for the cable station America’s Talking, a precursor to MSNBC launched by Roger Ailes (who, by the way, is No. 16 on my list).Early one evening, as I am about to go out Bergdorf’s revolving door on 58th Street, and one of New York’s most famous men comes in the revolving door, or it could have been a regular door at that time, I can’t recall, and he says: “Hey, you’re that advice lady!” And I say to No. 20 on the Most Hideous Men of My Life List: “Hey, you’re that real-estate tycoon!” I am surprised at how good-looking he is. We’ve met once before, and perhaps it is the dusky light but he looks prettier than ever. This has to be in the fall of 1995 or the spring of 1996 because he’s garbed in a faultless topcoat and I’m wearing my black wool Donna Karan coatdress and high heels but not a coat. “Come advise me,” says the man. “I gotta buy a present.” “Oh!” I say, charmed. “For whom?”“A girl,” he says.“Don’t the assistants of your secretaries buy things like that?” I say.“Not this one,” he says. Or perhaps he says, “Not this time.” I can’t recall. He is a big talker, and from the instant we collide, he yammers about himself like he’s Alexander the Great ready to loot Babylon.As we are standing just inside the door, I point to the handbags.“How about...,”“No!” he says, making the face where he pulls up both lips like he’s balancing a spoon under his nose, and begins talking about how he once thought about buying Bergdorf ’s.“Or... a hat!” I say enthusiastically, walking toward the handbags, which, at the period I’m telling you about— and Bergdorf’s has been redone two or three times since then-- are mixed in with, and displayed next to, the hats. “She’ll love a hat! You can’t go wrong with a hat!”I don’t remember what he says, but he comes striding along-- greeting a Bergdorf sales attendant like he owns the joint and permitting a shopper to gape in awe at him-- and goes right for a fur number.“Please,” I say. “No woman would wear a dead animal on her head!”What he replies I don’t recall, but I remember he coddles the fur hat like it’s a baby otter.“How old is the lady in question?” I ask.“How old are you?” replies the man, fondling the hat and looking at me like Louis Leakey carbon-dating a thighbone he’s found in Olduvai Gorge.“I’m 52,” I tell him.“You’re so old!” he says, laughing-- he was around 50 himself-- and it’s at about this point that he drops the hat, looks in the direction of the escalator, and says, “Lingerie!” Or he may have said “Underwear!” So we stroll to the escalator. I don’t remember anybody else greeting him or galloping up to talk to him, which indicates how very few people are in the store at the time.I have no recollection where lingerie is in that era of Bergdorf’s, but it seems to me it is on a floor with the evening gowns and bathing suits, and when the man and I arrive-- and my memory now is vivid-- no one is present.There are two or three dainty boxes and a lacy see-through bodysuit of lilac gray on the counter. The man snatches the bodysuit up and says: “Go try this on!”“You try it on,” I say, laughing. “It’s your color.”“Try it on, come on,” he says, throwing it at me.“It goes with your eyes,” I say, laughing and throwing it back.“You’re in good shape,” he says, holding the filmy thing up against me. “I wanna see how this looks.”“But it’s your size,” I say, laughing and trying to slap him back with one of the boxes on the counter.“Come on,” he says, taking my arm. “Let’s put this on.”This is gonna be hilarious, I’m saying to myself— and as I write this, I am staggered by my stupidity. As we head to the dressing rooms, I’m laughing aloud and saying in my mind: I’m gonna make him put this thing on over his pants!There are several facts about what happens next that are so odd I want to clear them up before I go any further:Did I report it to the police?No.Did I tell anyone about it?Yes. I told two close friends. The first, a journalist, magazine writer, correspondent on the TV morning shows, author of many books, etc., begged me to go to the police.“He raped you,” she kept repeating when I called her. “He raped you. Go to the police! I’ll go with you. We’ll go together.”My second friend is also a journalist, a New York anchorwoman. She grew very quiet when I told her, then she grasped both my hands in her own and said, “Tell no one. Forget it! He has 200 lawyers. He’ll bury you.” (Two decades later, both still remember the incident clearly and confirmed their accounts to New York.)Do I have photos or any visual evidence?Bergdorf’s security cameras must have picked us up at the 58th Street entrance of the store. We would have been filmed on the ground floor in the bags-and-hats sections. Cameras also must have captured us going up the escalator and into the lingerie department. New York law at the time did not explicitly prohibit security cameras in dressing rooms to “prevent theft.” But even if it had been captured on tape, depending on the position of the camera, it would be very difficult to see the man unzipping his pants, because he was wearing a topcoat. The struggle might simply have read as “sexy.” The speculation is moot, anyway: The department store has confirmed that it no longer has tapes from that time.Why were there no sales attendants in the lingerie department?Bergdorf Goodman’s perfections are so well known-- it is a store so noble, so clubby, so posh-- that it is almost easier to accept the fact that I was attacked than the fact that, for a very brief period, there was no sales attendant in the lingerie department.Inconceivable is the word. Sometimes a person won’t find a sales attendant in Saks, it’s true; sometimes one has to look for a sales associate in Barneys, Bloomingdale’s, or even Tiffany’s; but 99 percent of the time, you will have an attendant in Bergdorf’s. All I can say is I did not, in this fleeting episode, see an attendant. And the other odd thing is that a dressing-room door was open. In Bergdorf’s dressing rooms, doors are usually locked until a client wants to try something on.Why haven’t I “come forward” before now?Receiving death threats, being driven from my home, being dismissed, being dragged through the mud, and joining the 15 women who’ve come forward with credible stories about how the man grabbed, badgered, belittled, mauled, molested, and assaulted them, only to see the man turn it around, deny, threaten, and attack them, never sounded like much fun. Also, I am a coward.So now I will tell you what happened:The moment the dressing-room door is closed, he lunges at me, pushes me against the wall, hitting my head quite badly, and puts his mouth against my lips. I am so shocked I shove him back and start laughing again. He seizes both my arms and pushes me up against the wall a second time, and, as I become aware of how large he is, he holds me against the wall with his shoulder and jams his hand under my coat dress and pulls down my tights.I am astonished by what I’m about to write: I keep laughing. The next moment, still wearing correct business attire, shirt, tie, suit jacket, overcoat, he opens the overcoat, unzips his pants, and, forcing his fingers around my private area, thrusts his penis halfway-- or completely, I’m not certain-- inside me. It turns into a colossal struggle. I am wearing a pair of sturdy black patent-leather four-inch Barneys high heels, which puts my height around six-one, and I try to stomp his foot. I try to push him off with my one free hand-- for some reason, I keep holding my purse with the other-- and I finally get a knee up high enough to push him out and off and I turn, open the door, and run out of the dressing room.The whole episode lasts no more than three minutes. I do not believe he ejaculates. I don’t remember if any person or attendant is now in the lingerie department. I don’t remember if I run for the elevator or if I take the slow ride down on the escalator. As soon as I land on the main floor, I run through the store and out the door-- I don’t recall which door-- and find myself outside on Fifth Avenue.And that was my last hideous man. The Donna Karan coatdress still hangs on the back of my closet door, unworn and unlaundered since that evening. And whether it’s my age, the fact that I haven’t met anyone fascinating enough over the past couple of decades to feel “the sap rising,” as Tom Wolfe put it, or if it’s the blot of the real-estate tycoon, I can’t say. But I have never had sex with anybody ever again.
Trump said yesterday that "I've never met this person in my life. She is trying to sell a new book— that should indicate her motivation. It should be sold in the fiction section." That book, though offers a photo of Trump and "this person" in 1987... so he's doing what he always does in these kinds of circumstances: lie. He did meet E. Jean, at least once, when he was with one of his wivesMay I share a post by John Pavlovitz, Everything We Can’t Get Back, with you now?"One day," he wrote, "this will all be over. History testifies that all brutal empires fall, all hateful movements dissolve, all malevolent momentary victors eventually find themselves defeated and driven out. Every time the pendulum has swung toward inhumanity— it has invariably comeback with even greater opposite force to bend the arc of the moral universe back toward justice again. This will be true here as well."
America will not always be where it is today. It will not be in such fearful, violent, jittery hands. It will not be forever captive to a predatory minority. It will not always be so devoid of accountability for its leaders. It will not always be this dangerous to marginalized people and this openly hostile to diversity.And while I take solace in these inarguable truths, they come with the bitter aftertaste of the realization that we have already lost so much that is simply irretrievable.No matter how quickly some sense of rightness is restored here, there are so many things we will never get back:The countless hours marshaling our energies trying to protect already vulnerable people from powerful leaders fully intent on pilling burdens upon them; moments that could have been used to make and to build and to create and to dream and to breathe.The seemingly endless defenses we’ve had to mount against the most despicable of legislative assaults and Constitutional offenses from within— and the relentless friendly fire of our neighbors and families and friends and pastors.The hundreds of sleepless nights we restlessly inventoried the sheer scale of the collective sickness we’d witnessed earlier that day, and hoping for miraculous mornings of respite that so rarely came.The separations between us and people we once felt such natural affinity with; all the quiet disconnections, the social media explosions, and the decisive dinner table blowups— the countless relational fractures that will far outlive this Administration.The trust we had in the center holding; of checks and balances and of good people who would not be compromised by momentary gain.These things are gone for good.So much time unnecessarily squandered.So much precious daylight wasted.So many friendships sharply severed. So much faith burned away— and the collateral damage to marriages and friendships and families and neighborhoods.And no matter how much we’re able to undo the damage to our systems and how much integrity we’re able to return to our elections and no matter how well we’re able to nationally right ourselves— we’ve lost some critical stuff forever.We’ll never get back the hours we’ve spent worrying.We’ll never get back the days we grieved the losses.We’ll never get back the words we’ve spoken in haste. We’ll never get back the estranged birthdays and Christmases and funerals.We’ll never get back the cherished image of people we love, that we had before all this began.We’ll never get back the full optimism we felt about the place we call home. We’ll never get back the young black men and transgender teenagers and migrant families and school shooting victims, who never mattered to those in power right now.So yes, the History books will record the inevitable course correction of this season, and it will appear from the distance of time that we recovered— but we who are alive right now will know the truth from this painful proximity.We’ll know that we will never be able to recover everything beautiful and precious and hopeful that we lost in these days.There is so much gone that we will never get back.