EXCLUSIVE–Kathleen Willey Thanks Donald Trump for Highlighting Bill Clinton’s History with Women, Urges More Victims to Come Forward
Kathleen Willey, one of the women who famously accused Bill Clinton of sexual assault, and has said she suffered acts of intimidation to silence her, used a radio interview on Sunday to broadcast a message to other possible female victims of Bill Clinton.
Stated Willey:
I
would just like to encourage any woman who has suffered at the hands of
Bill Clinton to please try to find the courage and bravery to come
forth. Because it’s okay now. Nobody can hurt you now. It’s as simple as
that.
Nobody
can touch you now. The word is out. You will be okay but you will be
doing the right thing for all the right reasons and you will be helping
your fellow sisters.
Speaking on “Aaron Klein Investigative Radio,” the popular Sunday
talk radio program, Willey demanded that Hillary Clinton submit to a
lie detector test to answer questions about whether she engaged in
campaigns to silence or intimidate her husband’s female accusers. Klein
doubles as Breitbart’s Jerusalem bureau chief.
Willey also
telegraphed a message of encouragement for Donald Trump, who helped to
skyrocket the issue of Clinton’s sex accusers to front-page status when
the GOP frontrunner complained about
the former president’s “terrible record of women abuse.” Trump was
responding to Hillary’s claim that the billionaire exhibited a “penchant
for sexism.”
“If
Hillary thinks she can unleash her husband, with his terrible record of
women abuse, while playing the women’s card on me, she’s wrong!” tweeted Trump.
Willey
chimed in: “Thank you very much, Mr. Trump, for asking the right
question at the right time. And please keep asking more.”
When Klein petitioned Willey to list the questions that Trump should ask, she replied:
I
think the next question he should ask Hillary is: “Mrs. Clinton, is it
okay with you that your husband flies around in private jets with a
convicted pedophile to a private island called ‘Orgy Island’ and be
entertained by underage girls? The real word for that is pedophilia and
human trafficking. Is that okay with you?”
Willey was referring to Clinton’s association with billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, who served eighteen months in prison after being convicted of soliciting an underage girl for prostitution.
The Daily Mail reported in May–and MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough predicted this past Friday–that Epstein could become an issue for Hillary Clinton’s campaign:
Epstein’s
reemergence in public view – he was last photographed in February 2011 –
will cause new headaches for Hillary Clinton’s message-challenged
presidential campaign, and give her critics another opening to tar and
feather her with scandal.
Her
husband, former US president Bill Clinton, has been associated with
Epstein in the past – even traveling with him 10 times aboard his
private aircraft, dubbed the “Lolita Express.”
Some of those trips included stops at Epstein’s private Caribbean compound that later became known as “orgy island.”
Since
Clinton announced her presidential campaign in April, Willey has spoken
out in numerous exclusive interviews on Klein’s show. In her latest
interview on Sunday, Willey explained why she is motivated to talk publicly.
My
mission here is to educate. What I would like to be able to do is talk
to college students who don’t know about what happened. Explain it to
them. And make them understand what exactly happened back then. And then
let them know all of the horrible, horrific, terrorizing details of
what his wife did to his victims. That’s the story here. That’s the
story… Instead of using that whole thing and feeling betrayed by it, she
used it all as a political opportunity.
You
try to explain to people the consequences of what happens to these
women when Hillary Clinton goes on the attack. It’s another woman who
claims to be a woman’s advocate attacking these women. I mean, this
woman absolutely terrified me. And I don’t get afraid easily. I’m pretty
independent.
Click below to listen to Klein’s interview with Willey.
‘Campaign of intimidation’
Willey
detailed numerous instances of what she says was a campaign aimed at
intimidating her into silence before she could give a deposition in the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit that threatened Bill Clinton’s presidency.
But
I mean, cats went missing. My wonderful German Shepherd–big girl, never
left my side. Disappeared into clear air for three days. I mean, I was
absolutely panicked trying to find her… and three days later she just reappears…
I
came home and found a beautiful, one-year old healthy cat dead on the
deck of my house, and the only way to get to my deck of my house is
through my house. It has no access to the yard.
I
mean, I found a man in the middle of the night at the door of my
walkout basement. I opened my car door, my tires were all
slashed. Somebody found the car, found me, and flattened three tires
with a nail gun.
I opened up my car door one day and there was an unidentified, strange cell phone sitting right in the driver’s seat.
Willey has also said that she received threats against herself and against her children by name.
She
recalled that late English author Christopher Hitchens filed an
affidavit against his former longtime friend, Clinton aide Sidney
Blumenthal, detailing the contents of a lunch conversation in which
Blumenthal indicated there was a campaign afoot to smear Willey.
Hitchens wrote about that lunch talk and his affidavit in an April 30, 1999 Vanity Fair article titled, “I’ll Never Eat Lunch in this Town Again.”
Hitchens related his conversation with Blumenthal and why he came to believe Willey’s allegations of intimidation.
He recounted that the meal took place right after Willey had gone public on 60 Minutes with her sexual assault accusation against Clinton.
Hitchens wrote:
And
what impressed me most at the time, and depressed me, too, was the tone
of voice Sidney used in discussing this. “Yeah, her poll numbers are
high now, but they’ll be down by the end of the week. You’ll see.” There
was a sort of “We’ll take care of her” tone that I didn’t like, and
Carol and I couldn’t look at each other.
However,
as time went by, the significance of the conversation metamorphosed. I
became convinced that, a few weeks before the lunch, Kathleen Willey had
been threatened in person, had received threats against her children by
name, and earlier had had her car brutally vandalized.
I
discovered that, within days of the lunch, she received a telephone
call from a private detective named Jared Stern. Hired to invigilate
her, he had sickened of his work and decided to give her an anonymous
call warning her that she had influential enemies. It also appeared that
Ms. Willey had been subjected to pressure by a politically connected
tycoon named Nathan Landow, whom I knew by reputation as one of the less
decorative members of Clinton’s soft-money world. (Asked by the grand
jury whether he spoke to Ms. Willey about her testimony in the Paula
Jones lawsuit on his own behalf or on the president’s, Mr. Landow has
taken the Fifth Amendment.)
I
refuse to believe for a second that Sidney knew anything about this,
but in the week that we talked, the White House “found” and released Ms.
Willey’s correspondence with Clinton. I say “found” because when these
same letters had been subpoenaed in the Jones case in January 1998, they
couldn’t be located anywhere. Just another day in Clinton’s Washington.
Speaking
to Klein, Willey demanded that Hillary Clinton take a lie detector test
to answer for what she says the former First Lady did to her and other
women.
“I
would like to challenge Hillary Clinton to take a lie detector test,”
stated Willey. “And I would also like to challenge her to stand before
her daughter and her granddaughter and explain why she will or will not
take a lie detector test.
“And
I would also like to add that I took one. And I volunteered to take
one. I drove to Washington and it was administered by the top polygraph
expert in the country at the FBI Headquarters and I passed it.”
Breitbart’s
Klein has been spotlighted by the news media in recent days for
exclusively interviewing Bill Clinton’s famous sex accusers, including Juanita Broaddrick, Paula Jones, and Willey.
Gennifer Flowers, who had consensual relations with Clinton, also warned about a Hillary presidency on Klein’s show.
The
interviews helped to spark the current debate about Bill’s alleged
female victims, a topic that has engulfed Hillary’s frontrunning
campaign.
The Washington Post on Thursday cited a
Breitbart article in which Klein described how his radio program had
become “a support center of sorts” for Bill Clinton’s female accusers —
“a safe-space for these women to sound off about the way they were
allegedly treated by both Bill and Hillary.”
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2016 Presidential Race, Hillary Clinton, Bill and Hillary Clinton, gennifer flowers, Hillary Cliinton, Juanita Broaddrick, Kathleen Willey, Paula Jones, White House
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