A decades-old claim about a former president's purportedly self-described health status resurfaced when Epstein's court documents were unsealed.
Following an order by US District Judge Loretta Preska, documents from Virginia Giuffre's civil lawsuit against financier Jeffrey Epstein's associate Ghislaine Maxwell were made public, further connecting the driver of the “Lolita Express” with high-profile people.
Among the names mentioned was that of former President Bill Clinton, prompting rape accuser Juanita Broaddrick to offer her own testimony about the character of the longtime Democratic Party leader who unearthed a health claim that allegedly had done in the 70s.
“After Bill Clinton brutally raped me, he said, 'Don't worry, I'm sterile because of the mumps as a child,'” she posted on X. “Then he said, 'You'd better put some. ice on that,” pointing to my swollen, bleeding lip. There are good men … and then there's Bill Clinton.”
After Bill Clinton brutally raped me, he said:
“Don't worry, I'm sterile from mumps as a child.”
Then he said, “You'd better put some ice on it,” pointing to my swollen and bleeding lip.
There are good men…..
and then there is bill clinton.— Juanita Broaddrick (@atensnut) January 4, 2024
Broaddrick's well-documented claim against the former commander in chief dates back to his 1978 run for governor of Arkansas, where he allegedly brutally raped her in a hotel room after she had contacted him to volunteer for his campaign.
The former registered nurse's claim became a matter of public record in the 1990s as the then-president faced a sexual harassment lawsuit from Paula Jones that ultimately led to her impeachment.
In March 1999, just one month after Clinton had been acquitted during his Senate trial after being impeached by the House on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice related to his denial of an extramarital affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, the Washington Examiner had explored the credibility of Broaddrick's claim by noting that her own daughter Chelsea Clinton was born in February 1980.
Citing James Stewart's book “Blood Sport”, The Scrapbook report he noted that in the late 1970s the Clintons had “contemplated a visit to a doctor at the University of California” and suggested that the Democratic hopeful had believed himself sterile.
The publication detailed: “Two Clinton authorities — Gennifer Flowers and Dolly King Browning — provided THE SCRAPBOOK with more details. Neither recalls Clinton saying she had mumps. But Flowers, who claims a 12-year sexual relationship with Clinton, says Clinton “indicated she had a fertility problem.”
“He never used the word 'barren,' but he was pretty sure he couldn't have children.” Browning, who claims to have had a 30-year sexual relationship with Clinton, and has known him since they were both children, says she confronted Clinton about his habitual refusal to use a condom after hearing rumors that he had been seeing other people women”, the report continued with more allegations about the politician's treatment of women. “'I thought someone might try to get pregnant with him and cause a problem,'” Browning says. “But he said, 'Nobody should worry about me getting pregnant.'
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