Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens initiated unwanted sex acts: report

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,998
3,605
113
Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens initiated unwanted sex acts: report
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
April 11, 2018
Updated:
April 11, 2018 9:26 PM EDT
Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens speaks at a news conference about allegations related to his extramarital affair with his hairdresser, in Jefferson City, Mo., Wednesday, April 11, 2018. (J.B. Forbes/St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens initiated a physically aggressive unwanted sexual encounter with his hairdresser and threatened to distribute a partially nude photo of her if she spoke about it, according to testimony from the woman released Wednesday by a House investigatory committee.
The graphic report details multiple instances in which the woman said Greitens spanked, slapped, grabbed, shoved and called her derogatory names during a series of sexual encounters as he was preparing to run for office in 2015. The testimony contradicts Greitens’ previous assertions that “there was no violence” and “no threat of violence” in what he has described as a consensual extramarital affair.
The report, signed by all five Republicans and two Democrats on the committee, describes the woman’s testimony as credible and notes that Greitens has so far declined to testify or provide documents to the panel. But it outlines some of the Republican governor’s public comments that appear to run counter to her allegations.
Flanked by other top Republican legislative leaders, House Speaker Todd Richardson announced that the special committee will expand its mission and make recommendations after the May 18 end of the regular legislative session on whether to pursue impeachment proceedings seeking to remove Greitens from office.
The special House investigation was initiated shortly after Greitens was indicted in February on a felony invasion-of-privacy charge for taking a nonconsensual photo of the partially nude woman and transmitting it in a way that could be accessed by a computer. The woman told the committee that Greitens took the photo after manipulating her into a compromising position during an unwanted sexual encounter and that he told her “everyone will know what a little whore you are” if she told anyone about him.
Greitens, 44, has refused to directly answer media questions about whether he took the photo, but he has steadfastly denied any criminal wrongdoing. He said he expects to be proven innocent during this trial, which is scheduled for May 14.
Speaking shortly before the report was released, Greitens told reporters gathered at the Capitol that he expected it to contain “lies and falsehoods” and reaffirmed his commitment to remaining in office.
“This is a political witch hunt,” Greitens said, invoking one of President Donald Trump’s favoured criticisms of unwanted investigations. Greitens later added: “This is exactly like what’s happening with the witch hunts in Washington, D.C.”
“This is a political witch hunt.”Missouri Gov. @EricGreitens calls out investigative report in statement to the p… twitter.com/i/web/status/9…

KRCG 13 (@KRCG13) April 11, 2018
Richardson called the women’s testimony “beyond disturbing” and defended the integrity of the investigation. He said: “Let me be very clear about this: This is not a witch hunt, and the committee had no political agenda.”
If the House were to impeach Greitens, the Senate then would choose seven jurists to conduct a trial on whether Greitens should be ousted. The impeachment process can occur independently of a criminal case.
The report prompted Republican U.S. Senate candidate Josh Hawley to call for Greitens’ resignation. Hawley, the state’s attorney general, said the report contains “shocking, substantial, and corroborated evidence of wrongdoing by Governor Greitens.”
Hawley is seeking Democratic U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill’s seat, and she and Democratic state legislative leaders also called for Greitens’ resignation. Democrats have been running TV ads linking Greitens to Hawley.
According to the report, the woman testified that she met Greitens in 2013 as a customer of her hair salon. She said she had a crush on Greitens but was shocked when he ran his hand up her leg and touched her crotch without her consent during a March 2015 hair appointment. He later invited her to his St. Louis home while his wife was out of town.
After she arrived through the back door, the report said that the woman testified Greitens searched her purse and “patted her down from head-to-toe.” He then asked if she had exercised and had her change into a white T-shirt with a slit on the top and pajama pants.
“I thought, oh, this is going to be some sort of sexy workout,” the woman testified.
But once in his basement, Greitens taped her hands to pull-up rings, blindfolded her, started kissing her, ripped open the shirt and pulled down her pants, the woman testified. She didn’t give consent to be disrobed or kissed, the report said. The woman testified that she then heard a click, like of a cellphone picture, and saw a flash.
The woman testified that Greitens told her: “Don’t even mention my name to anybody at all, because if you do, I’m going to take these pictures, and I’m going to put them everywhere I can. They are going to be everywhere, and then everyone will know what a little whore you are.”
When she remained silent, the woman said Greitens “spanked me and said, ’Are you going to mention my name?’ And I said, I just gritted through my teeth, and I said, ’No.’ And he’s like, ’Good, now that’s a good girl.”’
“I was definitely fearful,” the woman testified to the legislative committee.
After telling Greitens, “I don’t want this,” the woman testified that Greitens unbound her hands. She said she started “uncontrollably crying.” She said Greitens then grabbed her in a hug and laid her down. She said he put his penis near her face and she gave him oral sex. Asked by the committee whether the oral sex was coerced, she responded: “Coerced, maybe. I felt as though that would allow me to leave.”
The woman testified that she confronted him later that day about the photo and he responded: “You have to understand, I’m running for office, and people will get me, and I have to have some sort of thing to protect myself.” Then she said Greitens added: “I felt bad, so I erased it.”
The House committee report said it doesn’t possess any physical or electronic evidence of the photo. Prosecutors in his criminal case previously acknowledged that they don’t have the photo, though they could be trying to obtain it.
The woman’s name never has been officially released; it is redacted from the legislative documents and she is identified only by her initials in court filings. Her attorney has repeatedly sought anonymity on her behalf.
The woman testified to the committee that she had several additional sexual encounters with Greitens, including one in June 2015 when “he slapped me across my face” after she acknowledged having slept with her husband. She said she “felt like he was trying to claim me.”
In another subsequent sexual encounter, the woman testified that Greitens “out of nowhere just, like kind of smacked me and grabbed me and shoved me down on the ground, and I instantly just started bawling.”
It “actually hurt, and I know that I actually was really scared and sad when that happened,” she testified.
The woman’s account contradicts statements Greitens made previously. Asked in a January interview with The Associated Press if he had ever slapped the woman, Greitens responded: “Absolutely not.”
Grand jury indicts Missouri governor who admitted affair, but denied blackmailing woman
‘DEEPLY PERSONAL MISTAKE’: Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens admits affair, but denies blackmail
Greitens, a Rhodes Scholar and former Navy SEAL officer who was once considered a rising GOP star, first acknowledged having an extramarital affair on Jan. 10, when St. Louis TV station KMOV ran a story revealing that the woman’s ex-husband had released a secret audio recording of a 2015 conversation in which she told him about the photo Greitens took at his home.
The woman testified to the House committee that her husband had said: “I’m going to ruin this guy.”
Greitens on Wednesday criticized the House report as “one-sided tabloid, trash gossip that was produced in a secret room.”
He also referenced a comment the woman made during a lengthy deposition in his criminal case when she was asked if she saw what she believed to be a phone. A court filing from Greitens’ attorneys quoted her as saying, “I haven’t talked about it because I don’t know if it’s because I’m remembering it through a dream or I — I’m not sure, but yes, I feel like I saw it after that happened.”
Greitens and his defence team have seized on the “dream” comment to attack the credibility of her testimony. But the prosecutor in the case says the defence “cherry picked bits and pieces” of her nine-hour deposition and the woman’s attorney says the comment referred to one particular instance concerning the photo.
In addition to the legislative investigation and the criminal case, Hawley is investigating The Mission Continues, the veterans charity founded by Greitens, as it relates to the state’s consumer protection and charitable registration and reporting laws. That probe came after media reports that Greitens’ campaign had obtained and used a charity donor list in 2015 as it ramped up fundraising for his gubernatorial bid.
Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens initiated unwanted sex acts: report | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,998
3,605
113
Woman says Mo. Gov. Eric Greitens 'coaxed' her into sex while she cried 'like a wounded little animal': Report
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
April 30, 2018
Updated:
April 30, 2018 9:34 PM EDT
In this April 11, 2018, file photo, Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens speaks at a news conference in Jefferson City, Mo., about allegations related to his extramarital affair with his hairdresser. (Julie Smith /The Jefferson City News-Tribune via AP, File)AP
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — A woman with whom Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens acknowledged having a consensual affair told prosecutors that Greitens coaxed her into unwanted sexual activity as she was crying “like a wounded little animal on the ground,” according to a legislative report released Monday that accuses the governor of mischaracterizing the woman’s testimony.
The brief, graphic report from a special House investigatory committee is intended as a rebuttal to Greitens, who had asserted that the video interview of the woman “undermined the narrative” of an earlier House report detailing the woman’s allegations that Greitens had been physically aggressive toward her.
To the contrary, the House panel said the additional interview bolsters the woman’s credibility.
related linksMissouri Gov. Eric Greitens initiated unwanted sex acts: report
But a spokeswoman for Greitens’ legal defence team said it contains “more false information.”
The latest report highlights the escalating tension between the first-term Republican governor and the GOP-led Legislature, which is weighing whether to initiate impeachment proceedings to try to remove Greitens from office. The panel is expected to release another lengthier report later this week examining allegations that Greitens wrongly used a donor list from a veterans charity he founded to raise money for his political campaign.
Greitens already faces two felony charges. He’s scheduled to go to trial May 14 on an invasion of privacy indictment alleging he took and transmitted a nonconsensual photo of the at least partially nude woman in March 2015, before he was elected governor. No trial date has been set yet on a charge of tampering with computer data for allegedly disclosing The Mission Continues donor list to his political fundraiser without the permission of the St. Louis-based charity.
The House committee released a report April 11 with testimony from the woman alleging Greitens had restrained, spanked, slapped, shoved, threatened and belittled her during a series of sexual encounters that at times left her crying and afraid.
The next day, Greitens released a statement asserting that a previously undisclosed video interview of the woman conducted in January by St. Louis circuit attorney’s office “undermined the narrative pushed in the House report.”
Among other things, Greitens said allegations of “coercion, violence and assault” were “false.” He said the woman talked for almost two hours in the video and never mentioned coercion, which Greitens said was inconsistent with her testimony to the House committee.
The House committee quickly issued a subpoena and obtained a copy of the woman’s video interview. It released a transcript of that interview Monday.
The woman did not use the word “coerced” in the prosecutor’s interview, but she described the situation with even more graphic words. When she tried to leave Greitens’ home, she told prosecutors that he laid her down “in the fetal position” while she was crying hysterically, undid his pants and put his penis near her face, so she gave him oral sex so that she could leave.
She said Greitens was “just really coaxing me like a wounded little animal on the ground,” according to the interview transcript.
The woman told prosecutors she was thinking, “He’s disgusting. I hate him. I can’t believe I’m down here” and “felt super degraded.”
The new House report says the woman’s interview with the prosecutor’s office also is consistent with her testimony to the committee that Greitens’ had slapped her forcefully in the face during a sexual encounter in June 2015.
The woman’s name never has been officially released; it is redacted from legislative documents and she is identified only by her initials in court filings.
Maria Jeffrey, a spokeswoman for Greitens’ legal defence team, said in a statement Monday that the new report contains “more false information that has not been subject to cross-examination.”
“Any allegation of sexual violence, coercion, or assault are completely and totally untrue,” Jeffrey said.
Greitens’ attorneys are asking a judge to prohibit testimony from the woman at his upcoming trial because of the “gross misconduct” of a private investigator who interviewed her for prosecutors. Defence lawyers in a Friday court filing also noted that the investigator, William Tisaby, refused to answer questions when he was deposed last week. Judge Rex Burlison didn’t rule Monday. He set a hearing for May 7.
Greitens lawyers have accused Tisaby of lying in court and being slow to turn over evidence to the defence. The St. Louis circuit attorney’s office acknowledges missteps by Tisaby but says his actions haven’t tainted the case.
During a Monday court hearing in St. Louis, Greitens’ attorney said that Missouri Times publisher Scott Faughn had provided a $50,000 payment in January to the law firm representing the woman’s ex-husband, who had secretly recorded his wife discussing her encounter with Greitens.
Faughn said in an internet video Monday that he had hired the attorney, Al Watkins, because he was working on a book about the 2016 gubernatorial campaign.
Greitens’ spokeswoman described it as a payoff to “the people working to take down the governor.”
State Rep. Jay Barnes, the chairman of the House investigatory committee, said the House has subpoenaed Watkins and also will issue a subpoena to Faughn.
Woman: Mo. Gov. ‘coaxed’ me into sex while I cried like an animal | Toronto Sun