Storm Clouds Gathering: Sex Assault Accuser Lobs Fresh Charges At Clinton Duo

Warning that American voters risk returning a sexual predator to the White House in 2008, the woman who accused President Bill Clinton of fondling her in the Oval Office nearly 15 years ago is renewing her allegations and making new ones in a tell-all book.
Kathleen Willey, whose husband was found dead in the Virginia woods in 1993 of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound — the same day Willey claims the then-president made an unwanted sexual pass at her, now suggests that the Clintons may have had something to do with Ed Willey’s death.
But the former White House volunteer said that’s not her primary purpose in writing the book.
"One of the other reasons that I wrote the book is that … I would hope that women especially would read this story because statistics show that one in three women today have to deal with sexual harassment and that’s way too many women in this world today in the year 2007," Willey told FOX News on Thursday.
"I’m speaking for women out there who were afraid to come and talk and speak up," Willey said.
In a broad array of charges, Willey’s latest claim is that someone tried over Labor Day to steal from her house the manuscript for her new book, "Target: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill and Hillary Clinton."
In the book, she rehashes several charges first made at the end of the Clinton administration — including that her cat Bullseye went missing and on the day she was supposed to testify for another Clinton accuser, Paula Jones, a would-be jogger approached her and cryptically suggested that Bullseye was dead. Jones, who sued the president for sexual harassment, received an out of court settlement from Clinton for $875,000 in 1998. In the settlement, he never admitted to any improprieties.
Willey claims Hillary Clinton, now a Democratic presidential candidate, had “enabled” her husband’s alleged sexual indiscretions by coercing and intimidating the women who made claims against him. She said the then-first lady orchestrated smear campaigns against her and other women and hired public investigators and lawyers to protect the Clinton’s political interests.
“Through no fault of our own, we were smeared in the media, terrorized by thugs, audited by the IRS, followed by strangers and victimized by threats,” Willey wrote in her book. “Our homes were broken into and our pets were killed. And we know that Hillary and her minions were behind the terror.”
"She’s behind the secret police. She’s the one who sets up the war room when he goes out and he does what he does and he zeroes in on women," Willey told FOX News, noting that her book offers considerable details on that charge.
Willey’s is the latest in a series of books recently released that casts aspersions on the former first lady ahead of the competitive Democratic presidential primary and general 2008 election, and it makes the boldest accusations in terms of Hillary Clinton’s political ambitions and the former president’s reputation as a womanizer.
Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign has not responded to numerous requests for comments. At the time the accusations were first made, Bill Clinton denied making unwanted advances to Willey and testified as such to White House investigators.
Meanwhile, Willey’s own credibility has been questioned on several occasions, and her book glosses over discrepancies found in her deposition in the Paula Jones suit and testimony she later gave to the independent counsel investigating the Monica Lewinsky case. (The House of Representatives approved impeachment articles in 1998 against Clinton for lying about his affair with the White House intern, but the Senate voted not to impeach the president.)
Noting the discrepancies, Independent Counsel Robert Ray concluded in his final report in 2002 that “in short, there was insufficient evidence to prove to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that President Clinton’s testimony regarding Kathleen Willey was false.”

Impeachment chief counsel tells Kathleen Willey of similar attempt to steal copy of book manuscript


By Tom Kuiper at World Net Daily














