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Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain addresses the media Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011, in Scottsdale, Ariz. Cain issued a preemptive denial Nov. 28, 2011, regarding allegations by Georgia businesswoman who Monday she and Herman Cain had a 13-year extramarital affair.
AP Photo/Matt York
RAY HENRY and HENRY C. JACKSON
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) - In an explosive allegation, a Georgia woman
said Monday she and Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain had
a 13-year extramarital affair that lasted nearly until the former
businessman announced his candidacy for the White House several
months ago.
"Here we go again. I didn't do anything wrong," Cain said in a
pre-emptive denial that lumped a detailed claim of a consensual
affair in with earlier allegations of sexual harassment.
But the woman, Ginger White, said in an interview with Fox 5
Atlanta that over the years, Cain bought her airplane tickets so
she could join him in cities as far-flung as Palm Springs, Calif.,
and Atlanta.
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"It was fun," the 46-year-old White said. "It was something
that took me away from my humdrum life at the time. And it was
exciting."
Cain's candidacy was soaring in the polls until he was hit less
than a month ago with accusations that he sexually harassed several
women and groped one while he was a high-ranking official at the
National Restaurant Association. He has since fallen back in the
public opinion surveys, and been eclipsed by former House Speaker
Newt Gingrich in the race to emerge as the principal conservative
alternative to Mitt Romney.
At her apartment in Dunwoody, Ga., White declined to elaborate
on her statements during a brief interview with AP. "I can't make
any comment on this," she said. "We're trying to be slightly
sensitive."
In its report, the television station said White had Cain's name
in her cell phone contacts, and when its reporter sent a text
message to the number, he called right back.
"He told us he knew 'Ginger White' but said he was trying to
help her financially," the station said.
In a written statement released immediately after the story
aired, Cain's campaign said detractors were trying to "derail the
Cain Train with more accusations of past events that never
happened."
Later, at a fundraiser in the Virginia suburbs of Washington,
D.C., Cain avoided reporters' questions.
In his initial denial, televised on CNN, Cain vowed to remain in
the presidential race, as long as he has the support of his wife,
with whom he said he had discussed the most recent allegation.
In her interview, White said she decided to come forward after
seeing Cain attack his other accusers in an appearance on
television.
"It bothered me that they were being demonized, sort of, and
being treated as if they were automatically lying, and the burden
of proof was on them," she said. "I felt bad for them."
White told the Atlanta TV station she expects to be scrutinized
by Cain and the media.
Georgia court records show a series of judgments against White
for not paying rent in Atlanta area apartments, including one filed
about two weeks ago.
In the interview, she said she first met Cain in the late 1990s
in Louisville, Ky., when he was president of the National
Restaurant Association. They had drinks and he invited her to his
hotel room, she recalled.
She quoted Cain as telling her, "You're beautiful to me and I
would love for us to continue this friendship," then produced his
personal calendar and invited her to meet him in Palm Springs.
In this case, unlike the others, Cain took the unorthodox step
of issuing a denial in advance.
"I did not have an affair, and until I see and hear exactly
what's going to be, what accusations are going to be made, let's
move on," he said.
Asked if he suspected his accuser had emails, letters, gifts or
other possible evidence of an affair, he replied,"No."
In a statement provided to AP, Cain's lawyer, Lin Wood, said the
former businessman has no obligation to "discuss these types of
accusations publicly with the media and he will not do so even if
his principled position is viewed unfavorably by members of the
media."
The statement drew a distinction between "private alleged
consensual conduct between adults" and a case of harassment. It
did not include an explicit denial of an affair along the lines
that Cain himself provided in his television interview.
Contacted by AP, Wood added, "If any candidate wants to
publicly discuss his private sex life, that is his or her life. But
I don't believe that there's an obligation on the part of any
political candidate to do so."
White's attorney, Edward Buckley, did not immediately return
messages seeking comment.
--- Ray Henry reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writer Greg
Bluestein contributed to this report from Atlanta.
(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Gallery
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Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain addresses the media Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011, in Scottsdale, Ariz. Cain issued a preemptive denial Nov. 28, 2011, regarding allegations by Georgia businesswoman who Monday she and Herman Cain had a 13-year extramarital affair.
AP Photo/Matt York
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