Sarah’s News Roundup 11.18.17

George HW Bush
Former President George HW Bush has now been accused of sexual assault by eight women.

They all say that he touched or grabbed their bottom while posing for photographs.

Although his spokesperson previously explained that when Bush was in a wheelchair his arm falls on the lower waist of people during photo shoots, Bush also assaulted women in this way years before he needed to use the chair.

One of his victims said, “photo ops obviously were, or are, his modus operandi”.

Roy Moore
Roy Moore, candidate for the Alabama Senate and former Supreme Court judge, continues to deny a string of allegations of sexual assault on teenage girls, describing them as a “witch hunt”.

He is also resisting calls from the Republican Party to step aside from the Senate race.

Jeff Sessions, Mitch McConnell and John McCain are among the politicians who have this week said they believe the women who made the allegations.

Donald Trump has not yet commented but White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said the president found the allegations “very troubling”.

Ivanka Trump said there’s a “special place in hell for people who prey on children”.

Al Franken
Democrat Senator Al Franken has been criticised on twitter by Trump for the photo of him appearing to grope Leeann Tweeden during his overseas tour in 2006.

He tweeted: “the Al Frankenstien (Trump used a misspelled reference to the monster) picture is really bad, speaks a thousand words…and to think that just last week he was lecturing anyone who would listen about sexual harassment and respect for women.”

Franken apologised to the LA radio host but denied “forcibly” kissing her.

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand said that if Bill Clinton had had an affair with his intern today rather than 20 years ago he would have been compelled to resign. She went on to comment on Trump: “things have changed today, and I think under those circumstances there should be a very different reaction. And I think in light of this conversation, we should have a very different conversation about President Trump, and a very different conversation about allegations against him.”

Sylvester Stallone
Sylvester Stallone and his bodyguard have been accused of sexually assaulting a 16 year old fan in Las Vegas in 1980s.

According to the police report the unnamed girl did not press charges because she felt “humiliated, ashamed and scared”.

Stallone’s spokesperson said the story was “categorically false”.

Rebel Wilson
In a series of tweets Australian actress Rebel Wilson has described being sexually harassed by “a male star in a position of power”.

She alleged that she was repeatedly asked to perform an obscene act and that the unnamed star’s friends had attempted to film her.

The Pitch Perfect star said she complained to the film studio but was “threatened by one of the star’s representatives”.

She tweeted: “I’ve told hundreds of people in the industry the story in more graphic detail basically to warn them off this individual…if I witness this behaviour, whether it happens to me or someone I know, I will no longer be polite.”

Ellen Page
Ellen Page said when she was 18 she was “outed” as gay in public by Brett Ratner.

She said that Ratner pointed at her and told another woman to sleep with her “to make her realise she’s gay.”

Page described feeling violated and ashamed and said that she did not feel ready to come out: “I knew I was gay, but I did not know, so to speak.”

Tessa Brennaman
Ex-wife of Texas gunman Devin Kelley experienced abuse, violence and death threats from her then husband including having a gun held to her head for getting a speeding ticket and being hit, choked and kicked.

He also broke the skull of his infant stepson.

Kelley carried out a mass shooting in a church in Texas earlier this month.


Kevin Jansen Neal, the man who went on a shooting rampage in Rancho Tehama on Tuesday, killed his wife on Monday evening.

He hid the body under the floorboards in their home then began shooting early Tuesday morning.

Four people were killed and fourteen, including seven children, were injured.

A restraining order had been taken out against him which meant he was not allowed to own a gun.

Catherine Lawson
Finally, the movement #MeAt14 began in response to the allegations published in the Washington Post about Roy Moore pursuing and sexually assaulting a 14 year old girl when he was 32.

North Carolina lawyer Catherine RL Lawson started this when she tweeted the hashtag with a photo of herself at 14.

She told the BBC: “I shared a picture of me at 14 to illustrate there is no acceptable version of this story; teenagers can’t consent to a relationship with a grown man, ever. It’s not a question about the legal age of consent, but about affirming a shared social value that children deserve our protection.”

Since then women have been posting pictures of themselves aged 14 on social media with the hashtag #MeAt14 to highlight how young 14 really is.

I know that when I was 14 I was way too young to consent.

Sarah x

#metoo

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