MYTH-BUSTED: ALLEGATIONS AGAINST JUDGE ROY MOORE DEBUNKED
All the false allegations of sexual misconduct raised against Judge Moore have been thoroughly debunked and discredited, but the Washington establishment and liberal media have tried to keep the claims alive with four of the women to smear Judge Moore’s name and stop his Senate campaign. Doing the job most of the press has not bothered to do, we have prepared a primer that lists the “fake news” put out by four women followed by some of the evidence and responses that has been uncovered and that show the claims to be entirely false. Links to supporting articles are provided.
Leigh Corfman: Debunked
• Claims Moore twice picked her up near her mother’s house in Gadsden, AL.
FALSE: Court documents show on February 21, 1979, both parents got court approval to transfer custody of Corfman within a few days from her mother to her father, who lived 20 miles from Gadsden in Ohatchee, Alabama.
• Claims Moore called on “her phone in her bedroom” several times before meetings.
FALSE: Corfman’s own mother refuted this and said she had no phone in her bedroom.
• Claims Moore started her on “course of doing other things that were bad.”
FALSE: Corfman’s parents requested custody change because of her existing “disciplinary and behavioral problems” which her father was better suited to handle.
Beverly Nelson: Debunked
• Claims Moore signed her yearbook before Christmas 1977.
FALSE: Nelson’s radical feminist lawyer Gloria Allred refuses to release the yearbook for inspection despite obvious forgeries and alterations in the yearbook writing. When CNN asked Allred if signature was forged, she would not answer directly and said it didn’t matter. She also couldn’t tell NBC whether Nelson saw Moore sign the yearbook.
• Claims Moore ate often at Olde Hickory House counter when she was a 15-year-old waitress.
FALSE: Former employees and customers said restaurant didn’t hire 15-year-olds, and that customers who sat at the counter were served by the bartender or cook, not the servers, and they never saw Moore or Nelson at the restaurant.
• Claims Moore offered her a ride home after restaurant closed at 10, then drove to back where it was dark, near dumpsters, and forcefully groped her.
PAID FOR BY JUDGE ROY MOORE FOR U.S. SENATE
FALSE: Former employees said the restaurant closed at 11:00 or midnight because of shift change at a nearby plant at 10:00, the dumpsters were on side (not back), and the back was well-lit. There were no witnesses and Nelson says she didn’t even tell her then-boyfriend who picked her up shortly after the supposed assault. The former boyfriend and her stepson have each come forward to say she is lying.
Tina Johnson: Debunked
• Claims Moore grabbed her rear as she and her mother walked out of his law office in 1991.
FALSE: Delbra Adams, Moore’s then-secretary and later judicial assistant, said that in her 13 years working for Moore, she never saw any inappropriate conduct toward women. Johnson is not believable, has pled guilty to writing bad checks and third-degree theft of property, and may be retaliating against Moore for representing her mother, Mary Cofield, in the custody dispute over her son that brought them to Moore’s law office.
Debbie Wesson Gibson: Debunked
• Washington Post claimed Gibson (who alleged no misconduct by Moore) is a Republican and did not donate to or work for Democrat Doug Jones.
FALSE: Gibson promotes her sign language interpreting business with pictures of her working for Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden, and she shared on her Facebook page pro-Doug Jones material and announcements of Jones campaign events.
• Further, the Washington Post claimed that Moore stated that he never knew Gibson and that he was lying about not knowing her.
FALSE: Judge Moore went on a national radio show and stated that he did know Gibson and her family but did not recall ever having a date with her. Gibson is doing everything in her power to tear down Judge Moore.
The Mall: Debunked
• MSNBC and CNN have featured local witnesses claiming that Judge Moore was on a ban list at the local Gadsden Mall.
FALSE: The so-called local witnesses have admitted that they were reporting on rumors and hearsay. According to better witnesses, including mall employees and the operations manager for the mall at the time, there was no ban list, and Judge Moore was never a person of concern. As an Assistant District Attorney at the time, had he been on a mall watch list, it would have made major news locally, and his employment as a prosecutor would have been in jeopardy.
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