Two irate women who accused former President Bill Clinton of sexual assault have unleashed a tirade over the married womanizer’s selfish claims in his new memoir in which he “apologized” to all the girls he “wronged” over the years, RadarOnline. com can reveal.
Paula Jones and Juanita Broaddrick say the infamous Commander in Cheat is “full of it” and is trying to rewrite history to pompously preserve his legacy with new book Residentin which the impact of his illicit affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky is conveniently downplayed.
The 78-year-old former president wrote: “I had apologized to (Lewinsky) and to all others I have wronged.”
Clinton recalled a 2018 barbecue Today Craig Melvin, who challenged his version of events.
He wrote: “I have publicly said I was sorry more than once.”
Still simmering with anger, Jones — who accused then-Arkansas Gov. Clinton of exposing himself and making verbal demands on her in a Little Rock hotel room — mocked his words.
The 58-year-old former civil servant said angrily: ‘I’ve never heard of him. He should apologize to me personally on the phone or in public. Nobody is perfect. But if he wants to be apologetic and sincerely means it, of course I would listen to him.”
Jones ultimately accepted an $850,000 settlement from Clinton after he sued the ex-president for sexual harassment in 1994.
At the time, Robert S. Bennett, the politician’s attorney, claimed that Jones’ claim was baseless and that his client was merely coughing up the money to move on with his life.
In a deposition for Jones’ lawsuit, former White House volunteer Kathleen Willey alleged that Clinton kissed and groped her — and pushed her hand on his lower part in the Oval Office in November 1993.
Clinton’s testimony in the case also exposed his relationship with the then 22-year-old Lewinsky in 1995 – and led to his presidential impeachment, which ended in a controversial acquittal.
Controversial politician Roger Stone estimates that Clinton, who has been married to failed presidential candidate Hillary since 1975, molested or had one-nighters at least 2,000 women – including prostitutes.
Bristling Broaddrick, who accused Clinton of raping her in an Arkansas hotel room in 1978 while she was a volunteer for his gubernatorial campaign, said The researcher: “Until Clinton apologizes to all the women he abused, raped and sexually assaulted, I don’t think he deserves to write another book.”
Decades ago, Clinton’s attorney David Kendall called Broaddrick, 81, and said Clinton had apologized to her — to protect his political skin.
The nursing home operator says then-Governor Clinton showed up unannounced at one of its facilities in 1991, accompanied by a security detail from state troopers.
In her 2017 book You Better Put Some Ice On That: How I Survived Being R—- by Bill ClintonBroaddrick said: “I stopped in my tracks and he came up to me, reached out to grab my hand and I backed away.
“He kept saying, ‘I just want you to know how sorry I am. I’m a changed man. I’m a family man now and I would never do anything like that again.'”
She wrote, “I just stood there, looked at him and I said, ‘You can go to h—,’ and I walked away.”
Two weeks later, Broaddrick learned that Clinton was running for president.
Now, she rages, “I was so angry that he apologized to me, not in a serious and sincere way, but because he was trying to cover up bad publicity.”