Attorney Gloria Allred introduces Victor Jay Zuckerman, left, the former boyfriend of Allred's client, Sharon Bialek, during a news conference in Shreveport, La., Monday, Nov. 14, 2011. Zuckerman said Monday that he and Bialek met Herman Cain in the late 1990s, directly contradicting Cain's assertions that he had never met Bialek, who has accused the Republican presidential contender of inappropriate sexual behavior. |
SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) -- The former boyfriend of a woman who accused Republican presidential contender Herman Cain of inappropriate sexual behavior said Monday that he and this then-girlfriend met the businessman in the late 1990s.
Victor Jay Zuckerman's account of an evening he, Sharon Bialek and Cain spent together in 1997 directly contradicts the candidate's assertions that he had never met his accuser and did not recognize her name.
"During the National Restaurant Association convention in Chicago, Sharon indeed did meet and spend time with Mr. Cain," Zuckerman said at a news conference, describing an after party Cain had invited them to in a hotel suite after a National Restaurant Association event in Chicago.
Cain was chief executive of the Washington trade group at the time.
"At that party, Mr. Cain engaged both of us in conversation," Zuckerman said.
Zuckerman's spoke just as the firestorm around Cain seemed to be subsiding since the first disclosures on Oct. 30 set off a week of wall-to-wall news coverage. There hadn't been any new information disclosed in the past week about Cain or the accusations, and plans for a joint news conference by his accusers seemed increasingly unlikely.
Cain on Monday stood by his earlier statement that he does not remember Bialek, said his attorney, Lin Wood.
"He doesn't recall Ms. Bialek," Wood told The Associated Press, reiterating that Cain has denied making untoward sexual advances toward anyone.
Wood said Cain met with a large number of people as head of the restaurant group. If someone remembers meeting Cain, Wood said it is possible Cain would not remember them.
Attorney Gloria Allred, who represents Bialek, appeared at Zuckerman's side and called on Cain to acknowledge that he had met his accuser, one of at least four who have alleged that Cain sexually harassed or made unwanted advances toward them.
"Mr. Cain's strategy of blanket denials simply won't work," Allred said. "He needs to come clean with the American people. Now is the time."
Zuckerman said Bialek told him that Cain inappropriately touched her later that year when she met him in Washington to seek employment help after being fired from the association.
Cain said last week that he doesn't remember her and had never seen Bialek until she went public.
"I saw Ms. Allred and her client yesterday in that news conference for the very first time," Cain said after that news conference. "As I sat in my hotel room with a couple of my staff members, as they got to the microphone, my first response in my mind and reaction was, I don't even know who this woman is. Secondly, I didn't recognize the name at all."
Later, Cain added: "I don't even know who this woman is. I tried to remember if I recognized her and I didn't."
Cain has been dogged since late last month by sexual harassment accusations by former association employees. The controversy was entering its third week Monday as the Louisiana pediatrician stepped forward to corroborate some of Bialek's allegations.
Zuckerman did not, however, witness the alleged sexual advances. He could only confirm that they and Cain had met.
"When she returned, she was upset," Zuckerman said. "She said that something had happened and that Mr. Cain had touched her in an inappropriate manner. She said she handled it and didn't want to talk about it any further."
There also was fresh evidence that accusations are causing Cain to lose public support. Some surveys show him dropping from the top of the polls, where he had been in the weeks before the first of the decade-old accusations surfaced.
Cain has defiantly denied any wrongdoing but he also has been unable to put the questions behind him with less than two months until Iowa's leadoff caucuses.
Cain has vowed to stay in the race for the GOP nomination and has deployed his wife of 43 years to defend him. Gloria Cain was appearing in a television interview set to air Monday night after being absent from the campaign trail for much of the year.
"I'm thinking he would have to have a split personality to do the things that were said," she said in excerpts of the Fox News Channel interview that were released Sunday.
She said she cannot believe the claims.
"To hear such graphic allegations and know that that would have been something that was totally disrespectful of her as a woman and I know that's not the person he is," Gloria Cain said. "He totally respects women."
That conflicts with the image Bialek has described.
The Chicago resident last week became the first woman to publicly accuse Cain, a Georgia businessman, of inappropriate sexual conduct in the late 1990s when he was chief executive of the National Restaurant Association.
Bialek had lost her job in the association's Chicago office and had gone to Washington to meet Cain for help finding employment. The two had dinner and afterward, as they sat in a parked car, Bialek said Cain groped her.
At least three other women have claimed that Cain sexually harassed them. Bialek is the only one of the four to go public with their accusations.
Some of Cain's die-hard supporters said they did not believe the sexual harassment charges leveled against the candidate.
"I'm sorry, but it's not in Herman Cain's character," said Stacie Curtis, a volunteer leader for Cain supporters in Alabama, shortly before Zuckerman spoke. "Nobody believes it."
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