Washington Examiner  home delivery | classifieds | autos | jobs | real estate | home listings | advertise
   
Arts on Foot
View today's E-Dition

Thursday, September 2, 2010 | Last Update 12:43 EDT
click for forecast
Untitled Document
Home News Politics Local Opinion Economy Sports Lifestyle Classified Cars Homes Rentals Remodel
Nation World Beltway Confidential Yeas & Nays Opinion Zone Capital Land Mobile Site Contact
Nation World Science Education Video Technology
Beltway Confidential Yeas & Nays White House Congress Michael Barone Byron York Timothy P. Carney
Capital Land DC Virginia Maryland Local Opinion Zone Crime Transportation People Education Real Estate
Editorials Beltway Confidential OpinionZone Nate Beeler Columnists Mark Tapscott Dave Freddoso Mark Hemingway
Your Money Real Estate Technology K-Street
Cheers & Jeers Redskins/NFL Wizards/NBA Caps/NHL Nationals/MLB United/MLS Colleges Golf
Yeas & Nays Art Movies Television Health Food Music Scoop Theater Wheels Video Events Calendar
Jobs Buy Stuff Post Free Ad Personals Events
Automotive News New Used Certified Pre-Owned
Real Estate News Rent a Home Buy a Home Home Makeover

Politics
[Print]  [Email]         Share    

Sex complaint against Gore is detailed, credible

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
June 29, 2010

(AP File)

The allegation that Al Gore sexually assaulted a woman in a Portland, Ore., hotel room nearly four years ago has dealt a serious blow to the former vice president's story that he and wife Tipper simply "grew apart" after 40 years of marriage.

The police report of the masseuse's complaint is 73 pages long and extremely detailed. According to the document, she got a call from the front desk of the trendy Hotel Lucia on the night of Oct. 24, 2006. The hotel had a special guest. Could she come at 10:30 p.m.?

She went to Gore's room carrying a folding massage table and other equipment. Gore, whom she had never met, greeted her with a warm embrace. "The hug went on a bit long, and I was taken just a bit aback by it," the masseuse told police. But she went along because Gore "was a VIP and a powerful individual and the Hotel Lucia had made it clear to me by inference that they were giving him 'the royal treatment.'"

Gore said he was tired from travel and described in detail the massage he wanted. It included work on the adductor muscles, which are on the inside of the thighs. "I mentally noted that a request for adductor work is a bit unusual," the masseuse told police, because it can be "a precursor to inappropriate behavior by a male client."

Gore also requested work on his abdomen. When that began, "He became somewhat vocal with muffled moans, etc.," the masseuse recounted. Gore then "demand[ed] that I go lower." When she remained focused on a "safe, nonsexual" area, Gore grew "angry, becoming verbally sharp and loud."

The masseuse asked Gore what he wanted. "He grabbed my right hand, shoved it down under the sheet to his pubic hair area, my fingers brushing against his penis," she recalled, "and said to me, 'There!' in a very sharp, loud, angry-sounding tone." When she pulled back, Gore "angrily raged" and "bellowed" at her.

Then, abruptly, the former vice president changed tone. It was "as though he had very suddenly switched personalities," she recalled, "and began in a pleading tone, pleading for release of his second chakra there."

"Chakra," in Gore's new-agey jargon, refers to the body's "energy centers," which the masseuse interpreted as having a specific meaning. "This was yet another euphemism for sexual activity he was requesting," she told police, "put cleverly as though it were a spiritual request or something."

She wanted to end the session, but Gore "wrapped me in an inescapable embrace" and "caressed my back and buttocks and breasts." She tried to get away -- in the process calling Gore a "crazed sex poodle" -- but the former vice president was too strong for her.

A little later, she said, Gore produced a bottle of brandy and mentioned there were condoms in the "treat box" provided by the hotel. "He then forced an open mouth kiss on me," she said.

At that moment, the masseuse brought up Gore's long marriage. "How do you rectify this with your wife?" she asked. That brought on another "quick shift" in Gore's mood. "I never saw anybody's moods just go like this," the masseuse told police, snapping her fingers.

The accuser said Gore maneuvered her into the bedroom. His iPod docking station was there, he told her, and he wanted her to listen to "Dear Mr. President," a lachrymose attack on George W. Bush by the singer Pink.

"As soon as he had it playing, he turned to me and immediately flipped me flat on my back and threw his whole body face down over atop of me," she said. "I was just shocked at his craziness."

"He pleaded, grabbed me, engulfed me in embrace, tongue kissed me, massaged me, groped by breasts and painfully squeezed my nipples through my clothing, pressed his pelvis against mine, rubbed my buttocks with his hands and fingers and rubbed himself against my crotch, saying, 'You know you want to do it.'"

Finally she got away. Later, she talked to friends, liberals like herself, who advised against telling police. One asked her "to just suck it up; otherwise, the world's going to be destroyed from global warming."

She got a lawyer and made an appointment to talk with authorities. She canceled and did not tell police until January 2009 and even then did not press charges.

In 2007, a Portland paper learned what had happened. Gore's lawyers called the story "absolutely false," and it wasn't published.

Now the National Enquirer has made the police report public. And Gore's family-man image will never be the same.

Byron York, The Examiner's chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts appears on ExaminerPolitics.com


More from Byron York

  • How Democratic Congress threw away advantage over GOP
  • Previewing Obama Iraq speech, Gibbs won't credit surge
  • For Obamacare supporters, judgment day approaches
  • Bush confidante Hughes calls on Ground Zero organizers to 'locate their mosque elsewhere'
  • Obama has himself to blame for Muslim problem

Topics

House , Senate , President , White House , Conservatives , Liberals , Barack Obama , President , Democrats , Republicans , Libertarians , Byron York

beltway confidential
New York imam’s nonexistent mosque

Feisal Abdul Rauf, the New York imam and State Department envoy who wants to build a controversial new mosque at Ground Zero, applied for – and received – tax-exempt...

—Barbara Hollingsworth

Virginia schools: just average on transparency

Sunshine Review, a non-profit public interest group based in Alexandria, gives school districts in Virginia a mediocre “C” average for making public information easily available...

—Barbara Hollingsworth

Rove-linked group makes nearly $3 million ad buy attacking Obamacare, federal spending in Kent., Mo., Nev., Colo.

Crossroads GPS, a grassroots issue advocacy group that was formed under the auspices of Republican heavyweights Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie, has made another big ad buy in some...

—Mark Hemingway

Free parking is welfare

When D.C. recently doubled its parking meter rates, many folks called it a tax hike. But it’s not. It’s a price hike — on a product already being subsidized by...

—Timothy P. Carney

More Beltway Confidential posts...




Today’s Featured Writers
Cal Thomas
Obama can't turn the page on Iraq
Mark Tapscott
Rasmussen: 61 percent say finding new energy sources is more important than conservation
David Freddoso
Why Newsweek sold for $1: 'People think Obama is a Muslim because of ‘celebrations about being white'
Gregory Kane
No surprise that Miss Mexico won Miss Universe
Meghan Cox Gurdon
A wall against dogs is breached by gerbils and rats


To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines
  1. How Democratic Congress threw away advantage over GOP
  2. Down with Big Government, Big Business, Big Labor
  3. Savetheplanetprotest.com: The demands of the Discovery Channel gunman?
  4. Bad news for Democrats: Ohio voters long for Bush
  5. Will the media call the Silver Spring/Discovery Channel gunman an environmental terrorist?
  6. Education secretary urged his employees to attend Sharpton's rally
  7. Why is it even close in West Virginia? Two words: ‘Barack Obama’
  8. Left's double standard on Kochs and Soros
  9. Suspected Discovery Channel gunman James Jay Lee’s MySpace page: It’s time for REVOLUTION!!!
  10. Hugh Hewitt: Seventy percent of Americans know they've been conned





 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 200 words. Comments that advocate violence, racism, or libel as well as comments written in ALL CAPS are not permitted.


blog comments powered by Disqus

RSS | Twitter | Facebook | Intern | Video | Maps | Mobile | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Rack Locations | Advertise