Jumat, 01 Mei 2020

Joe Biden denies sexually assaulting staff assistant Tara Reade - BBC News

US Democratic candidate Joe Biden has flatly denied sexually assaulting a former staff assistant, Tara Reade, nearly 30 years ago.

"I'm saying unequivocally: it never, never happened," he said of the allegations during a TV interview on Friday.

He asked for a search of the Senate archives for any record of a complaint Ms Reade allegedly filed at the time.

Ms Reade made a criminal complaint to police last month.

She said she was a victim of sexual assault without naming Mr Biden. The police complaint, she said, was filed "for safety reasons only" as the statute of limitations for her claim had expired.

Mr Biden is running against Republican incumbent President Donald Trump, who has been accused of sexual misconduct by some 25 women.

The Democrat put out his statement before speaking on Morning Joe, a show on US cable channel MSNBC.

What are Reade's accusations?

She was working as a staff assistant to Mr Biden from 1992-93, when he was a senator for the US state of Delaware.

Ms Reade, now 56, says that in 1993 he forced her up against a wall in the halls of Congress, and put his hands under her shirt and skirt, penetrating her with a finger.

"I remember him saying, first, as he was doing it 'Do you want to go somewhere else?' and then him saying to me, when I pulled away... he said 'Come on man, I heard you liked me,'" she told podcast host Katie Halper in March. "That phrase stayed with me."

Ms Reade says records of Mr Biden's 36-year career as a US senator will contain evidence that she complained to her superiors about him.

The records are being held at the University of Delaware, which has said it will not release any papers until two years after Mr Biden leaves public life.

It appears there were no witnesses to the alleged assault but three people have backed Ms Reade's account.

Her brother, a former neighbour and a former colleague have all said that they heard her give it shortly after the alleged incident.

Former neighbour Lynda LaCasse told Business Insider: "This happened, and I know it did because I remember talking about it."

"I remember her saying, here was this person that she was working for and she idolised him," Ms LaCasse said. "I remember the skirt. I remember the fingers. I remember she was devastated."

Ms Reade is one of more than half a dozen women who have forward over the last year to accuse him of inappropriate touching, hugging or kissing, though none described his actions as sexual assault at the time.

What did Biden say?

Speaking to MSNBC's Mika Brezezinski on Friday, the former vice-president denied any sexual misconduct against Tara Reade outright.

"It did not happen. Period," he said.

Brezezinski pressed Mr Biden on his former statements suggesting that women should be believed when coming forward with their stories of sexual violence.

In 2018, when now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh was accused of sexual assault by Christine Blasey Ford, Mr Biden was joined by a chorus of top Democrats in supporting Dr Ford's claims, and insisting that she be heard.

"For a woman to come forward in the glaring light of focus, nationally, you've got to start off with the presumption that at least the essence of what she's talking about is real, whether or not she forgets the facts, whether or not it's been made worse or better over time," Mr Biden told reporters at the time.

"Are women to be believed unless it pertains to you?" Brezezinski asked Mr Biden on Friday.

"Women are to be believed, given the benefit of the doubt," Mr Biden said. "Then you have to look at the circumstances and the facts."

"The truth matters."

Mr Biden refused to speculate on Ms Reade's motives, saying she had a right to come forward "and say whatever she wants to say. But I have a right to say: 'Look at the facts.'"

But the former vice-president would not move to open his files at the University of Delaware for a search of documents pertaining to Ms Reade. Despite repeated questioning from Brezezinski, Mr Biden insisted those 1,800 boxes of documents did not contain any personnel files and would be used as political "fodder" for his ongoing presidential campaign.

Could the allegations hurt Biden's election chances?

Some Republicans are seizing on the Reade allegations to portray the Democrats as hypocrites who only defend women who allege wrongdoing against conservatives, the Associated Press reports.

But given the long-standing allegations against Donald Trump, a man who once boasted of grabbing women by the genitals, the Republican camp may struggle to make political capital from Mr Biden's troubles.

At the same time, the Democrats have set themselves up as the party of moral purity, on gender as well as race. The party's politicians are inevitably held to a different standard.

And women are a core constituency for the party, traditionally giving more votes to Democratic candidates than Republicans.

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2020-05-01 14:32:58Z
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North Korean defector says he is '99% sure' Kim Jong Un is dead - Daily Mail

North Korean defector says he is '99% sure' Kim Jong Un is dead and the country could announce it this weekend

  • Defector Ji Seong-ho said he had been 'informed that Kim died last weekend' 
  • Ji said Kim's sister was in line to replace him after a 'complicated succession' 
  • Kim has not been seen in public since April 15 and reports say he had surgery 
  • Seoul and Washington have played down rumours that he is gravely ill or dead 

A North Korean defector claims he is '99 per cent sure' that Kim Jong Un is dead, saying that Pyongyang could announce the news this weekend. 

Ji Seong-ho told South Korea's Yonhap news agency that he had been 'informed that Kim died last weekend' after cardiovascular surgery.

The defector said Kim's sister Kim Yo-jong was in line to succeed her brother but said the secretive state was 'grappling with a complicated succession issue'. 

Kim has not been seen in public since April 11 and his absence has sparked a wave of speculation about his health, but Seoul and Washington have played down claims that he is seriously ill or dead. 

State-controlled media in North Korea has not provided any definitive proof that Kim is alive, beyond reports of letters sent in his name. 

However, there was one sign of life today as Daily NK reported that the regime had issued a directive signed by Kim himself, the first in two weeks.  

North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un (pictured in March this year) has not been seen in public since April 11  - prompting rumours that he is gravely ill or dead

North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un (pictured in March this year) has not been seen in public since April 11  - prompting rumours that he is gravely ill or dead 

Experts have suggested that Kim's sister Kim Yo-jong (pictured together in Pyongyang in September 2018) could be in line to succeed her brother if necessary

Experts have suggested that Kim's sister Kim Yo-jong (pictured together in Pyongyang in September 2018) could be in line to succeed her brother if necessary 

Ji, a defector who was elected to the South's parliament earlier this year, is the latest to suggest that Kim might have died after heart surgery. 

'I've wondered how long he could have endured after cardiovascular surgery. I've been informed that Kim died last weekend,' he said. 

'It is not 100 per cent certain, but I can say the possibility is 99 per cent. North Korea is believed to be grappling with a complicated succession issue.'

Pyongyang has never made any succession plans public, but experts say Kim's sister has been the most visible presence around the dictator in recent years. 

She was named an alternate member of the ruling Workers’ Party’s powerful Central Committee Politburo last month.  

North Korea is the world's most secretive country and reports about Kim and his family, including the suggestion that he recently had heart surgery, are nearly impossible to verify.  

However, other defectors have cast doubt on whether such sensitive information would ever leak out from Kim's inner circle.   

Senior party and government officials celebrate the 108th anniversary of founder Kim Il-Sung's birth in Pyongyang on April 15 - a ceremony which Kim Jong-un inexplicably missed

Senior party and government officials celebrate the 108th anniversary of founder Kim Il-Sung's birth in Pyongyang on April 15 - a ceremony which Kim Jong-un inexplicably missed

Some defectors say that their relatives in North Korea did not know that Kim had been missing from public view for three weeks.  

One said people had been talking about Kim's whereabouts in very private circles after he failed to appear at a ruling party showpiece on April 15. 

Kim's unprecedented absence from the Day of the Sun ceremony honouring his grandfather Kim Il-Sung prompted major speculation about his welfare.     

'I talked to my sister and my niece this morning and they had no clue about these reports and rumours about Kim Jong Un's health,' said one defector, Lee Soon-hee.

'When I told them, they were so cautious about discussing it. North Koreans have a very limited knowledge of these things.' Lee defected to the South in 2009.

North Koreans are keenly aware that they could face punishment for discussing the Kim family, said Sokeel Park, of Liberty in North Korea, a group that works with defectors.

'That doesn't mean people don't take that risk, some people do,' Park said. 'But it's still a super sensitive issue.'

'It's a little like the pope not showing up for Christmas,' he said of Kim's absence from the April 15 celebrations.

A 250-metre-long train belonging to the dictator has been spotted near to his Wonsan holiday compound as recently as Thursday in satellite photos

A 250-metre-long train belonging to the dictator has been spotted near to his Wonsan holiday compound as recently as Thursday in satellite photos

South Korean officials say they have not detected any 'unusual movements' north of the DMZ. 

The South's minister in charge of North Korean affairs said on Tuesday that fear of coronavirus could have kept Kim away from the April 15 ceremony. 

US President Donald Trump said last yesterday: 'I understand what is going on, I cannot just talk about him right now, just hoping that everything will be fine. But I do understand the situation very well'.  

Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe said he was aware of reports on Kim's health and he was was paying close attention to developments. 

Still, experts say it is strange that North Korea would not release a picture of a healthy-looking Kim if there was no truth to the rumours. 

Official media has not provided any verifiable proof of life since April 11, other than reporting that he had sent messages to North Korean workers and to South Africa's president Cyril Ramaphosa. 

Another defector-turned-politician, Thae Yong-ho, has warned that only a small handful of people would know the full story. 

He also cautioned that clues about Kim's whereabouts - such as an apparent sighting of his personal train in the city of Wonsan - could be deliberate diversion tactics. 

Pyongyang officials know that the train can be seen from satellites and have previously sent it around the country to confuse outsiders, Thae said. 

The sighting of the train was followed by further satellite images from Wonsan showing boats often used by Kim and his entourage.     

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2020-05-01 13:44:59Z
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WHO say they want to participate in Chinese probe into origins of Covid-19 after Trump's lab claims - Daily Mail

WHO say they want to participate in Chinese probe into origins of Covid-19 after President Trump claimed he has seen evidence it started in Wuhan laboratory

  • World Health Organization said it was hoping for an invitation from Beijing to take part in its investigation into how coronavirus originated in animals
  • Trump said he was confident the virus came from a lab in Wuhan, China 
  • The president also warned he could impose tariffs of $1 trillion on China as a punishment for the pandemic 
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

The World Health Organization said today it would like to take part in Chinese investigations into the origins of the coronavirus.

The UN agency said it was hoping for an invitation from Beijing to take part in its probe into how the disease originated in animals, then jumped to humans.

President Donald Trump yesterday said he has seen evidence that coronavirus started in the Wuhan virology laboratory and warned he could impose tariffs of        $1 trillion on China in retribution for the pandemic.

It came after US intelligence said it found no evidence the virus was man-made or genetically modified in a laboratory.

Today WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic the agency wants to be part of the Chinese scientific research. 

He said: 'WHO would be keen to work with international partners and at the invitation of the Chinese government to participate in investigation around the animal origins.' 

President Trump taking questions from reporters after speaking about the coronavirus pandemic in the East Room of the White House in Washington yesterday

President Trump taking questions from reporters after speaking about the coronavirus pandemic in the East Room of the White House in Washington yesterday 

Chinese virologist Shi Zhengli is seen inside the P4 laboratory in Wuhan, capital of China's Hubei province, in February

Chinese virologist Shi Zhengli is seen inside the P4 laboratory in Wuhan, capital of China's Hubei province, in February

The president made his explosive allegation that the coronavirus that has caused millions of infections and wreaked havoc on the global economy may have been created in the Chinese lab during his coronavirus press briefing on Thursday. 

He also suggested the federal government is exploring ways to punish China for triggering the outbreak by imposing tariffs but he stopped short of saying he would refuse to pay back US debts.  

'Yes I have. Yes I have,' Trump said when asked if he had seen proof the virus originated in the Wuhan Institute of Technology. 

The lab is located near a wet market that has been identified as the likely epicenter of the outbreak that took place late last year. 

However, the president would not divulge what the evidence was that confirmed his suspicions, when asked by a reporter.

'I can't tell you that. I am not allowed to tell you that,' he responded.

When asked if he would consider refusing to pay US's debts to China as punishment, the president said he 'could do it differently' and suggested the US will impose high tariffs of around $1 trillion on the nation. 

'I could do the same thing but even for more money just putting on tariffs,' he said.

'So I don't need to do that. It's approximately a trillion dollars - a little bit more I understand but we can do that in probably a little bit more of a forthright manner.'

Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO) Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus at a news conference in Geneva. The WHO said it wants to take part in the Chinese investigations

Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO) Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus at a news conference in Geneva. The WHO said it wants to take part in the Chinese investigations

Trump said withholding debt payments would be a 'rough game' that could damage the 'sanctity' of the dollar and ruled out taking this approach. 

'You start playing those games and that's tough,' he continued.

'We have the dollar to protect. We want to protect the sanctity of the dollar, the importance of the dollar. It's the greatest currency in the history of the world.' 

The president continued: 'It's a good question to say, 'well oh gee, we owe you a certain amount of money, we're going to keep it'. But when you start playing that game you really start hurting the sanctity of the greatest currency on earth but we can do it in other ways.

'We can do it with tariffs.  We can do it with other ways beyond that without having to play that game - that's a rough game.'

Trump's comments came after reports emerged that US administration officials were discussing canceling US debt obligations to China. 

US intelligence officials and government agencies were scheduled to meet Thursday to come up with a plan to punish or demand financial compensation from China over the pandemic, two sources told the Washington Post.  

One option on the table was to cancel the debt, while another was to strip China of its 'sovereign immunity'.   

George Sorial, who formerly served as a top executive at the Trump Organization and has filed a class-action lawsuit against China, told The Post senior White House officials were discussing limiting China's sovereign immunity so that the government could sue China for damages over the pandemic. 

This file photo taken on February 23, 2017 shows Chinese virologist Shi Zhengli inside the P4 laboratory in Wuhan, capital of China's Hubei province. Trump has touted the theory the lab may be the origin of the coronavirus

This file photo taken on February 23, 2017 shows Chinese virologist Shi Zhengli inside the P4 laboratory in Wuhan, capital of China's Hubei province. Trump has touted the theory the lab may be the origin of the coronavirus

'Punishing China is definitely where the president's head is at right now,' one senior adviser said. 

A source also told Reuters a range of options are being discussed to punish China, with the State Department, White House National Security Council, Treasury Department and Pentagon, developing options.

'There is a discussion as to how hard to hit China and how to calibrate it properly,' they said. 

But some officials told The Post they are advising the president against such action, because this could damage the supply of critical medical goods from China to the US amid the pandemic. 

A spokesman for China's Foreign Ministry hit back at the US Thursday, warning the 'enemy is the virus, not China'. 

'As for punishment or accountability, as I have repeatedly stated, such rhetoric has no legal basis, and there's no international precedent,' said Geng Shuang. 

'At this time, undermining others' efforts will end up undermining oneself.'

In Thursday's press conference, Trump also cast doubt on the theory the virus jumped from animals, likely a species of bat, to humans, as coronaviruses have in the past.

'We are going to see where it is. We're going to see where it comes from. You know every theory,' Trump said. 

'You had the theory from the lab, you had the theory from many different – the bats, the type of bat. And the bat is 40 miles away so it couldn't have been here or couldn't have been there there. There's a lot of theories,' Trump said.

'But yeah, we have people looking at it very, very strongly. Scientific people, intelligence people and others. And we are going to put it together and have a very good answer eventually,' he said. 

Mystery: The path for the coronavirus getting into human beings remains unclear despite advances in knowledge of the virus itself seen in a simulation
Mystery: The path for the coronavirus getting into human beings remains unclear despite advances in knowledge of the virus itself seen under an electron microscope

Mystery: The path for the coronavirus getting into human beings remains unclear despite advances in knowledge of the virus itself seen (left) in a simulation and (right) under an electron microscope

But Trump was also optimistic that China, who US officials have bashed for keeping out experts and failing to fully come clean on the virus, would be forthcoming.

'And China might even tell us. China may tell us,' Trump said. 

Trump was responding to a statement from his own Director of National Intelligence, whose office issued a statement knocking down conspiracy theories on the subject. 

'The Intelligence Community also concurs with the wide scientific consensus that the COVID-19 virus was not manmade or genetically modified,' it said.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has also blasted China for its conduct related to the virus, and Chinese state media have hit back in highly personal terms. 

Pompeo on Wednesday accused China of spreading disinformation. He has referred to COVID-19 as the 'Wuhan virus.' 

'The mere fact that we don't know the answers - that China hasn't shared the answers - I think is very, very telling,' said Pompeo. 

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has also blasted China for not letting the U.S. in to examine the Wuhan lab

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has also blasted China for not letting the U.S. in to examine the Wuhan lab

He also has pushed China to let outside experts into the lab 'so that we can determine precisely where this virus began.'

Senior administration officials are pushing US spy agencies to search for information of the link, the New York Times reported. Some analysts raised concerns the pressure could warp US conclusions and assessments.  

As well as China, the president launched yet another attack on the World Health Organization Thursday.  

'And I think the World Health Organization ashamed of themselves -- because they are like the public relations agency for China,' he said of the UN body based in Geneva during the press conference. 

'And this country pays them almost $500 million a year, and China only pays $38 million a year.'

'They should be making excuses when people make horrible mistakes that are causing thousands of people around the world to die,' Trump said.

He spoke as his U.S. unemployment claims rose by another 3.8 million, U.S. deaths due the virus hit 60,000, and his own electoral prospects are down in battleground polls. 

'We're looking at exactly where it came from, who it came from, how it happened. Separately and also scientifically. So we're going to be able to find that,' Trump said. 

Proximity: The virus has been linked to the wet market in Wuhan, which sold wildlife for meat. U.S. officials have highlighted it being a 'few miles' from the virology laboratory

Proximity: The virus has been linked to the wet market in Wuhan, which sold wildlife for meat. U.S. officials have highlighted it being a 'few miles' from the virology laboratory

Why did China build a virus lab in Wuhan?

A worker is seen inside the P4 laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan on February 23, 2017

A worker is seen inside the P4 laboratory at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan on February 23, 2017

Chinese officials decided to build the Wuhan Institute of Virology after the country was ravaged by an outbreak of SARS in 2002 and 2003.

SARS, another kind of coronavirus, killed 775 people and infected more than 8,000 globally in an epidemic that lasted about eight months.

It took the Chinese 15 years to fully complete the project, which cost a total of 300million yuan (£34million). The French helped design the building. 

Its crown jewel is a four-storey lab with the highest biosafety level of P4.

It's the most advanced laboratory of its type in China.

Construction of the lab was finished in 2015 and it officially opened on January 5, 2018, after passing various safety inspections. 

Describing the significance of the P4 lab, China Youth Online billed it as the 'aircraft carrier of China's virology'. The state-run newspaper said it 'is capable of researching the deadliest pathogens'. 

One researcher, Zhou Peng, told state news agency Xinhua in 2018: 'We are proud to say that we are already at the forefront in the field of studying the immunity mechanism of bats, which carry viruses for a long time. 

'Bats carry viruses but are not infected [by them]. [They] provide hope for mankind to study how to fight viruses.'

  

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2020-05-01 13:42:02Z
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Joe Biden denies sexually assaulting staff assistant Tara Reade - BBC News

Joe Biden denies sexually assaulting staff assistant Tara Reade - BBC News
Joe Biden in Iowa, 10 August 2019 Image copyright Reuters

US Democratic candidate Joe Biden has flatly denied sexually assaulting a former staff assistant, Tara Reade, nearly 30 years ago.

"I'm saying unequivocally: it never, never happened," he said of the allegations during a TV interview on Friday.

He asked for a search of the Senate archives for any record of a complaint Ms Reade allegedly filed at the time.

Ms Reade made a criminal complaint to police last month.

She said she was a victim of sexual assault without naming Mr Biden. The police complaint, she said, was filed "for safety reasons only" as the statute of limitations for her claim had expired.

Mr Biden is running against Republican incumbent President Donald Trump, who has been accused of sexual misconduct by some 25 women.

The Democrat put out his statement before speaking on Morning Joe, a show on US cable channel MSNBC.

What are Reade's accusations?

She was working as a staff assistant to Mr Biden from 1992-93, when he was a senator for the US state of Delaware.

Ms Reade, now 56, says that in 1993 he forced her up against a wall in the halls of Congress, and put his hands under her shirt and skirt, penetrating her with a finger.

"I remember him saying, first, as he was doing it 'Do you want to go somewhere else?' and then him saying to me, when I pulled away... he said 'Come on man, I heard you liked me,'" she told podcast host Katie Halper in March. "That phrase stayed with me."

Ms Reade says records of Mr Biden's 36-year career as a US senator will contain evidence that she complained to her superiors about him.

The records are being held at the University of Delaware, which has said it will not release any papers until two years after Mr Biden leaves public life.

It appears there were no witnesses to the alleged assault but three people have backed Ms Reade's account.

Her brother, a former neighbour and a former colleague have all said that they heard her give it shortly after the alleged incident.

Former neighbour Lynda LaCasse told Business Insider: "This happened, and I know it did because I remember talking about it."

"I remember her saying, here was this person that she was working for and she idolised him," Ms LaCasse said. "I remember the skirt. I remember the fingers. I remember she was devastated."

Ms Reade is one of more than half a dozen women who have forward over the last year to accuse him of inappropriate touching, hugging or kissing, though none described his actions as sexual assault at the time.

What did Biden say?

Speaking to MSNBC's Mika Brezezinski on Friday, the former vice-president denied any sexual misconduct against Tara Reade outright.

"It did not happen. Period," he said.

Brezezinski pressed Mr Biden on his former statements suggesting that women should be believed when coming forward with their stories of sexual violence.

In 2018, when now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh was accused of sexual assault by Christine Blasey Ford, Mr Biden was joined by a chorus of top Democrats in supporting Dr Ford's claims, and insisting that she be heard.

"For a woman to come forward in the glaring light of focus, nationally, you've got to start off with the presumption that at least the essence of what she's talking about is real, whether or not she forgets the facts, whether or not it's been made worse or better over time," Mr Biden told reporters at the time.

"Are women to be believed unless it pertains to you?" Brezezinski asked Mr Biden on Friday.

"Women are to be believed, given the benefit of the doubt," Mr Biden said. "Then you have to look at the circumstances and the facts."

"The truth matters."

Mr Biden refused to speculate on Ms Reade's motives, saying she had a right to come forward "and say whatever she wants to say. But I have a right to say: 'Look at the facts.'"

But the former vice-president would not move to open his files at the University of Delaware for a search of documents pertaining to Ms Reade. Despite repeated questioning from Brezezinski, Mr Biden insisted those 1,800 boxes of documents did not contain any personnel files and would be used as political "fodder" for his ongoing presidential campaign.

Could the allegations hurt Biden's election chances?

Some Republicans are seizing on the Reade allegations to portray the Democrats as hypocrites who only defend women who allege wrongdoing against conservatives, the Associated Press reports.

But given the long-standing allegations against Donald Trump, a man who once boasted of grabbing women by the genitals, the Republican camp may struggle to make political capital from Mr Biden's troubles.

At the same time, the Democrats have set themselves up as the party of moral purity, on gender as well as race. The party's politicians are inevitably held to a different standard.

And women are a core constituency for the party, traditionally giving more votes to Democratic candidates than Republicans.


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2020-05-01 13:14:00Z
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Coronavirus: Politicians in 'bulletproof vests' as protesters with rifles enter state capitol - Sky News

A US senator has said some colleagues wore bulletproof vests as protesters with assault rifles entered the Michigan State Capitol on Thursday.

Hundreds of people, some of them armed, attended the "American Patriot Rally" against extending the coronavirus lockdown in the state.

Police allowed more than 100 to enter the building, where weapons are permitted.

Inside, they sang the national anthem and chanted "let us work".

Senator Dayna Polehanki tweeted a picture from the chamber of "men with rifles yelling at us".

"Some of my colleagues who own bulletproof vests are wearing them. I have never appreciated our Sergeants-at-Arms more than today," she said.

Pictures show another senator, Sylvia Santana, appearing to be wearing a vest under her jacket.

More from US

Photos show protesters ignoring social distancing and yelling at police to let them in the chamber.

Protesters shouted at police to let them in the chamber
Image: Protesters yelled at police to allow them into the chamber
Armed protesters
Image: The governor ignored the protests and extended lockdown until 28 May

They were demonstrating over a request by Michigan's governor to extend emergency powers to deal with the COVID-19 crisis.

The protesters want businesses to be allowed to reopen to get the economy going again.

But Gretchen Whitmer defied the state's Republican legislature and extended the lockdown to 28 May.

Armed protest
Image: Guns are allowed to be carried in the open in Michigan

More than 3,700 people have died after being diagnosed with coronavirus in the state - the majority in the Detroit area - only New York and New Jersey have recorded more deaths.

The protest appeared to be the biggest in Michigan since thousands of Trump supporters jammed the streets around the capitol building two weeks ago for "Operation Gridlock".

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2020-05-01 13:01:00Z
CBMifmh0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L2Nvcm9uYXZpcnVzLXBvbGl0aWNpYW5zLWluLWJ1bGxldHByb29mLXZlc3RzLWFzLXByb3Rlc3RlcnMtd2l0aC1yaWZsZXMtZW50ZXItc3RhdGUtY2FwaXRvbC0xMTk4MTY5NNIBggFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9hbXAvY29yb25hdmlydXMtcG9saXRpY2lhbnMtaW4tYnVsbGV0cHJvb2YtdmVzdHMtYXMtcHJvdGVzdGVycy13aXRoLXJpZmxlcy1lbnRlci1zdGF0ZS1jYXBpdG9sLTExOTgxNjk0

Joe Biden denies sexually assaulting staff assistant Tara Reade - BBC News

US Democratic candidate Joe Biden has flatly denied sexually assaulting a former staff assistant, Tara Reade, nearly 30 years ago.

"I'm saying unequivocally: it never, never happened," he said of the allegations during a TV interview on Friday.

He asked for a search of the Senate archives for any record of a complaint Ms Reade allegedly filed at the time.

Ms Reade made a criminal complaint to police last month.

She said she was a victim of sexual assault without naming Mr Biden. The police complaint, she said, was filed "for safety reasons only" as the statute of limitations for her claim had expired.

Mr Biden is running against Republican incumbent President Donald Trump, who has been accused of sexual misconduct by some 25 women.

The Democrat put out his statement before speaking on Morning Joe, a show on US cable channel MSNBC.

What are Reade's accusations?

She was working as a staff assistant to Mr Biden from 1992-93, when he was a senator for the US state of Delaware.

Ms Reade, now 56, says that in 1993 he forced her up against a wall in the halls of Congress, and put his hands under her shirt and skirt, penetrating her with a finger.

"I remember him saying, first, as he was doing it 'Do you want to go somewhere else?' and then him saying to me, when I pulled away... he said 'Come on man, I heard you liked me,'" she told podcast host Katie Halper in March. "That phrase stayed with me."

Ms Reade says records of Mr Biden's 36-year career as a US senator will contain evidence that she complained to her superiors about him.

The records are being held at the University of Delaware, which has said it will not release any papers until two years after Mr Biden leaves public life.

It appears there were no witnesses to the alleged assault but three people have backed Ms Reade's account.

Her brother, a former neighbour and a former colleague have all said that they heard her give it shortly after the alleged incident.

Former neighbour Lynda LaCasse told Business Insider: "This happened, and I know it did because I remember talking about it."

"I remember her saying, here was this person that she was working for and she idolised him," Ms LaCasse said. "I remember the skirt. I remember the fingers. I remember she was devastated."

Ms Reade is one of more than half a dozen women who have forward over the last year to accuse him of inappropriate touching, hugging or kissing, though none described his actions as sexual assault at the time.

What did Biden say?

Speaking to MSNBC's Mika Brezezinski on Friday, the former vice-president denied any sexual misconduct against Tara Reade outright.

"It did not happen. Period," he said.

Brezezinski pressed Mr Biden on his former statements suggesting that women should be believed when coming forward with their stories of sexual violence.

In 2018, when now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh was accused of sexual assault by Christine Blasey Ford, Mr Biden was joined by a chorus of top Democrats in supporting Dr Ford's claims, and insisting that she be heard.

"For a woman to come forward in the glaring light of focus, nationally, you've got to start off with the presumption that at least the essence of what she's talking about is real, whether or not she forgets the facts, whether or not it's been made worse or better over time," Mr Biden told reporters at the time.

"Are women to be believed unless it pertains to you?" Brezezinski asked Mr Biden on Friday.

"Women are to be believed, given the benefit of the doubt," Mr Biden said. "Then you have to look at the circumstances and the facts."

"The truth matters."

Mr Biden refused to speculate on Ms Reade's motives, saying she had a right to come forward "and say whatever she wants to say. But I have a right to say: 'Look at the facts.'"

But the former vice-president would not move to open his files at the University of Delaware for a search of documents pertaining to Ms Reade. Despite repeated questioning from Brezezinski, Mr Biden insisted those 1,800 boxes of documents did not contain any personnel files and would be used as political "fodder" for his ongoing presidential campaign.

Could the allegations hurt Biden's election chances?

Some Republicans are seizing on the Reade allegations to portray the Democrats as hypocrites who only defend women who allege wrongdoing against conservatives, the Associated Press reports.

But given the long-standing allegations against Donald Trump, a man who once boasted of grabbing women by the genitals, the Republican camp may struggle to make political capital from Mr Biden's troubles.

At the same time, the Democrats have set themselves up as the party of moral purity, on gender as well as race. The party's politicians are inevitably held to a different standard.

And women are a core constituency for the party, traditionally giving more votes to Democratic candidates than Republicans.

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2020-05-01 12:13:24Z
52780746637079

Joe Biden denies sexually assaulting staff assistant Tara Reade - BBC News

US Democratic candidate Joe Biden has flatly denied sexually assaulting a former staff assistant, Tara Reade, nearly 30 years ago.

In a statement released before a TV interview on Friday, he said of the allegations: "They aren't true. This never happened."

He asked for a search of the Senate archives for any record of a complaint Ms Reade allegedly filed at the time.

Ms Reade made a criminal complaint to police last month.

She said she was a victim of sexual assault without naming Mr Biden. The police complaint, she said, was filed "for safety reasons only" as the statute of limitations for her claim had expired.

Mr Biden is running against Republican incumbent President Donald Trump, who has been accused of sexual misconduct by some 25 women.

The Democrat put out his statement before speaking on Morning Joe, a show on US cable channel MSNBC.

What are Reade's accusations?

She was working as a staff assistant to Mr Biden from 1992-93, when he was a senator for the US state of Delaware.

Ms Reade, now 56, says that in 1993 he forced her up against a wall in the halls of Congress, and put his hands under her shirt and skirt, penetrating her with a finger.

"I remember him saying, first, as he was doing it 'Do you want to go somewhere else?' and then him saying to me, when I pulled away... he said 'Come on man, I heard you liked me,'" she told podcast host Katie Halper in March. "That phrase stayed with me."

Ms Reade says records of Mr Biden's 36-year career as a US senator will contain evidence that she complained to her superiors about him.

The records are being held at the University of Delaware, which has said it will not release any papers until two years after Mr Biden leaves public life.

It appears there were no witnesses to the alleged assault but three people have backed Ms Reade's account.

Her brother, a former neighbour and a former colleague have all said that they heard her give it shortly after the alleged incident.

Former neighbour Lynda LaCasse told Business Insider: "This happened, and I know it did because I remember talking about it."

"I remember her saying, here was this person that she was working for and she idolised him," Ms LaCasse said. "I remember the skirt. I remember the fingers. I remember she was devastated."

Ms Reade is one of more than half a dozen women who have forward over the last year to accuse him of inappropriate touching, hugging or kissing, though none described his actions as sexual assault at the time.

Could the allegations hurt Biden's election chances?

Some Republicans are seizing on the Reade allegations to portray the Democrats as hypocrites who only defend women who allege wrongdoing against conservatives, the Associated Press reports.

But given the long-standing allegations against Donald Trump, a man who once boasted of grabbing women by the genitals, the Republican camp may struggle to make political capital from Mr Biden's troubles.

At the same time, the Democrats have set themselves up as the party of moral purity, on gender as well as race. The party's politicians are inevitably held to a different standard.

And women are a core constituency for the party, traditionally giving more votes to Democratic candidates than Republicans.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiM2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLXVzLWNhbmFkYS01MjQ5OTkwMNIBN2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FtcC93b3JsZC11cy1jYW5hZGEtNTI0OTk5MDA?oc=5

2020-05-01 12:11:43Z
52780746637079