ANTI-TRUMP 'RESISTANCE'
LEADER FACES CHILD-RAPE ACCUSATION, 2
others made similar claims against 'gay' mayor of Seattle, by Art Moor,
4/10/17, WND
SEATTLE — Only three days before a
46-year-old man filed a lawsuit accusing him of child rape and “molestation,”
Seattle Mayor Ed Murray was featured in a national interview story as one of
the faces of the Democratic Party’s resistance to President Trump.
The
Politico story April 3 said Murray
was “positioning himself at the forefront of the pushback” to Trump. His city
had sued
the federal government to stop the crackdown on “sanctuary cities,” and he had teamed with Washington’s governor and
attorney general to oppose Trump’s temporary travel ban, resulting in a ruling
by a federal judge in Seattle to temporarily halt the president’s executive
order.
Murray, who is running for
re-election this year, told Politico he was “beginning to think we’re dealing
with America’s first authoritarian administration.”
But last Thursday, a local man filed
a lawsuit
against the 61-year-old mayor,
claiming Murray raped and molested him when the man was a teenager.
The
Seattle Times broke the story with
a thorough, multi-reporter examination of the charges, including interviews
with two other men with similar profiles who told similar stories and provided
matching intimate physical details of Murray and the apartment he lived in at
the time.
In
a brief appearance before reporters at City Hall Friday, Murray, who is in a
same-sex marriage, vehemently denied the allegations and he said he felt sad for the “troubled” individual
making the claims.
“I have never backed down,” he said.
“And I will not back down now.” “Let me be clear: These allegations, dating
back to a period of more than 30 years, are simply not true,” the
mayor said.
The mayor’s personal spokesman Jeff
Reading said: “These false accusations are intended to damage a prominent
elected official who has been a defender of vulnerable populations for decades.
It is not a coincidence that this shakedown effort comes within weeks of the
campaign filing deadline. These unsubstantiated assertions, dating back three decades,
are categorically false. Mayor Murray has never engaged in an inappropriate
relationship with any minor. Mayor Murray will vigorously fight these
allegations in court.”
However, the
Times later explained it rationale for deciding
to investigate and report the allegations, noting it had interviewed two other
accusers and sought “documentation or witnesses to corroborate their
accounts.”
The Times knew of two other accusers
in March 2008, Jeff Simpson and Lloyd Anderson, but chose not to report their
claims at the time, because, among other things, the attorney for Simpson
withdrew a potential lawsuit.
“Ultimately, we felt we did not have
enough information to publish these very serious accusations,” the Times said. But the paper “decided we
needed to take another look when we learned recently that a Kent man was
preparing to sue now-Mayor Murray.”
“We found no connection between the
new accuser, identified in the lawsuit as D.H., and the other men. Our
reporting revealed similarities among the three accounts, including some
graphic details. We felt readers should know,” the Times said.
“We don’t take these decisions
lightly, and make them only after lengthy discussions. We know this is a
disturbing story. But we cannot shy away from important stories simply because
they make us uncomfortable.”
After Murray’s statement Friday, the
lawyer for D.H., Lincoln
Beauregard, asserted in a statement that Murray was lying, arguing the mayor’s representatives have never asked
for his client’s identity, so if Murray is being truthful “he should have no
idea who my client is” and would have no basis to “paint him as ‘troubled,'”
unless he knew him.
Epicenter of resistance
Murray was named in a Feb. 5
Washington Post article headlined “How
Washington state became the epicenter of resistance to Trump’s agenda” noting the mayor had vowed to protect illegal-alien
residents, even asking the city to rework budgets in anticipation of the loss
of federal funds. “This city will not be bullied by
this administration,” Murray told
the Associated Press.
Politico reported Murray’s path to
City Hall in Seattle began as an AIDS activist in the 1980s. Later, he managed
a friend’s campaign for state representative. Murray was appointed to that seat
himself after the friend died. He then won a seat in the state Senate before
defeating an incumbent in a 2013 mayoral primary.
Under Murray, Seattle led the nation
in imposing a $15 minimum wage and has initiated controversial, tax-hiking
programs to combat homelessness that have included tent cities and
encampments deploying run-down RVs. Days before the lawsuit against him
was filed, Murray
scrapped a multimillion-dollar proposed city property tax hike to combat
homelessness in favor of pursuing a county
sales tax increase to pay for services in the region.
Seattle and King County rank third
behind Los Angeles and New York City among 50 major cities and counties in the
number of homeless people, with nearly 11,000, according to a November 2016
federal government report.
In his interview with Politico April
3, Murray discussed his Catholic faith; he once studied to be a priest before
changing direction and the divisions among Democrats who are trying to mount a
resistance to Trump.
“On the national level, at times, I
feel like we are becoming like the tea party on the far right, that we have
purity tests,” he said. “If we are starting to have purity tests amongst
ourselves, then we’re never going to gain back those working-class and
lower-income people that we are building a progressive movement for.”
‘Healing process’
The three accusers interviewed by
the Times said they knew Murray when they were growing up in Portland in the
1980s.
In his legal complaint, D.H. alleges
Murray “raped and molested him” over several years, beginning in 1986 when the
man was a 15-year-old high-school dropout and crack-cocaine addict. “I have been dealing with this for
over 30 years,” the man, now sober for a year, told the Times.
He said he was coming forward as
part of a “healing process” after years of “the shame, the embarrassment, the
guilt, the humiliation that I put myself through and that he put me through.”
The two other accusers, Simpson and
Anderson, also described themselves as troubled teens in the 1980s when they
knew Murray. Simpson told the Times he spoke to a
detective and a social worker in 1984 about his claim, but no charges were
filed. A decade ago, they both raised the
allegations to media and Washington state lawmakers. Simpson, in 2008, said he
spoke on the phone with the Rev. Ken Hutcherson, the late local pastor who was
an outspoken activist for traditional marriage. Anderson and Simpson told the Times
they would testify in court if needed. Murray’s spokesman, Reading, addressed
the previous claims.
“The two older accusations were
promoted by extreme right-wing anti-gay activists in the midst of the marriage
equality campaign, and were thoroughly investigated and dismissed by both law
enforcement authorities and the media,” he said. The Times pointed out all three of
Murray’s accusers have “substantial criminal records.”
Simpson said he understands why
people didn’t believe him then. “I get it. I understand, my past is less than
stellar,” he said. “… People did think I was nuts and nobody wanted to believe
it. But I felt I needed to tell the truth, finally tell the truth.”
D.H. told the Times he didn’t see
how Murray could deny the claims. The paper said attorneys want to question the
mayor under oath within 90 days.
The accuser wants Murray held
accountable for treating him “like I was just nothing, like I was worthless.” His
lawsuit said he “is disturbed that Mr. Murray maintains a position of trust and
authority, and believes that the public has a right to full information when a
trusted official exploits a child.”
‘Potential land mines’
The Seattle Time’s Nina Shapiro
cited the
director of transgender advocacy group’s reaction to the allegations against
Murray.
Danni Askini of the Gender Justice
League said it’s “too soon” to take sides but said she felt emotional about the
allegations. “The news has been unbelievably triggering for survivors of DV
(domestic violence), sexual assault and childhood sexual assault,” she wrote in
a Facebook post. But she is also concerned, Shapiro
said, about how “accusations like these can feed homophobic stereotypes.” “I see so many potential land mines
here,” Askini wrote.
Shapiro said that while the mayor
and his spokesmen have accused the men of having political motivations, “the
allegations — though unproven and still fresh — had an all-too-familiar ring.”
“It’s the pattern,” said Richard
Sipe, a former priest who has written and testified about sexual abuse in the
Catholic church. “All the elements are there.” Sipe noted the alleged victims were
vulnerable people, and Murray is accused of developing a relationship with them
by offering help.
In Catholic church abuse cases he
has studied, Sipe told the Times, priests often chose children who had
lost a father, then drew close and said, “I’ll be your father now.” Mary
Dispenza, Northwest leader of Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests,
didn’t want to jump to conclusions, recalling Murray was a leader in supporting
homosexuals in the church. But she told Shapiro the allegations
stirred memories. Dispenza said he was abused at age 7
but didn’t disclose it until she was 52. “I know what holds us back,” she said,
referring to shame.
On
Monday, the Times reported members of
the Seattle City Council were remaining silent about the allegations. Council
President Bruce Harrell said in a written statement he and the council’s other
members “have no intention of commenting on matters of pending or potential
litigation. We believe that it is critically important that, together, we
remain committed to the business of governing.”
If Murray were to resign, Harrell
would be called upon to serve as acting mayor. “Our city cannot afford to be
distracted,” Harrell said. “There is a judicial process that will address the
serious allegations that this situation has presented, and we will respect that
process and the rights of all parties involved.
All accusations of abuse require a
thorough investigation. It is in our human nature to immediately want answers,
but I ask we not cast aspersions to the parties involved before we have all the
facts through the legal process. I am confident that through this process,
truth and justice will prevail.”
http://www.wnd.com/2017/04/anti-trump-resistance-leader-faces-child-rape-accusation/
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