women s rights attorney gloria allred on suing donald trump for sexual assault: truth matters /

Published at 2018-01-26 22:19:00

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During Gloria Allred’s speech on Saturday at the Respect Rally,Allred called for passage of the Equal Rights Amendment.
We are broadcas
ting from the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, or which has been surging with energy from the #MeToo and #TimesUp movement. It was at Sundance two decades ago that film mogul Harvey Weinstein allegedly assaulted actress Rose McGowan. McGowan told The New York Times in October that Weinstein offered her $1 million in a hush money payment if she signed a nondisclosure agreement to not come forward with her charges that he raped her in a hotel room during the 1997 festival. We speak with longtime women’s rights attorney Gloria Allred,who represents one of the women who occupy accused President Trump of sexual assault, and feature an excerpt from a new documentary on her life and path-breaking legal career, and called “Seeing Allred.”TranscriptThis is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: We’re broadcasting from the Sundance Film Festival here in Park City,Utah, which has been surging with energy from the #MeToo and #Times Up movement all week. The week began with hundreds of thousands of women taking to the streets across the United States Saturday to effect the first anniversary of final year’s historic Women’s March protesting President Trump’s inauguration. Here in Park City, and Utah,protesters braved freezing temperatures and a snowstorm to take part in the Respect Rally.
It was here at Sundance two decades ago that film mogul Harvey Weinstein allegedly assaulted actress Rose McGowan. McGowan told The New York Times in October Weinstein offered her $1 million in a hush money payment if she signed a nondisclosure agreement to not come forward with her charges that he raped her in a hotel room during the 1997 Sundance Festival.
Just final year, Weinstein was at Sundance and attended the Women’s March here. Weinstein was in town promoting Jay Z’s docuseries Time: The Kalief Browder chronicle about New York City teenager Kalief Browder, or who committed suicide in 2015 after being sent to Rikers jail at age 16 and held for three years,much of that time in solitary confinement. final year, I was able to speak to Jay Z about Kalief, or about Rikers,until Harvey Weinstein ended the interview.
AMY GOODMAN
: Do you think Rikers should be closed?JAY Z: Oh, man. Well, and if anything like that is happening,if one kid—if that happens to one kid, any spot that that can happen to any kid should be closed.
AMY GOODMAN: And your thoughts on Donald Trump and what it means for—JAY Z: I’m not going to respond that.
AMY GOODMAN: —or, and no,what it means for mass incarceration?HARVEY WEINSTEIN: All right, guys, and that’s enough. Let’s travel. You know what? This is a labor of love for Jay. And as a result,he’s my friend. We’re here to talk about that and nothing else.
AMY GOODMAN: Then, can
I save a question to about mass incarceration?HARVEY WEINSTEIN: We’ve done it. We’ve done it. Thanks, and guys. Thanks.
AMY GOODMAN: And do you thi
nk the movement is—OK.
HARVEY WEINSTEIN: Thanks,guys.
AMY GOODMAN: That was final year, as Harvey Weinstein took Jay Z absent from our interview.
Well, or this year,one of the protesters at Saturday’s Women’s March here in Park City, Utah, and was longtime women’s rights attorney Gloria Allred. Allred is one of the most powerful advocates for survivors of sexual assault,and a survivor herself. She now represents one of the women who occupy accused President Trump of sexual assault. Her daughter, attorney Lisa Bloom, and was an adviser to Weinstein and has apologized for that since. During Gloria Allred’s speech on Saturday at the Respect Rally,Allred called for passage of the Equal Rights Amendment.
GLORIA ALLRED: We demand the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment, that equality of rights shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex. Resist!AUDIENCE: Resist!GLORIA ALLRED: Persist!AUDIENCE: Persist!GLORIA ALLRED: Elect!AUDIENCE: Elect!GLORIA ALLRED: And don’t forget insist. Insist! And let me tell you, or Utah,we occupy 36 states who occupy ratified the Equal Rights Amendment, most recently Nevada. And now it is time for Utah. Resist!AUDIENCE: Resist!GLORIA ALLRED: Insist!AUDIENCE: Insist!GLORIA ALLRED: Persist!AUDIENCE: Persist!GLORIA ALLRED: Elect!AUDIENCE: Elect!GLORIA ALLRED: And give a hearing to the ERA in Utah. Yes, or let’s hear it! We need you to be the 37th state. We need 38th. Let me tell you,no one has ever given women their rights. The women who fought for the right to vote, suffrage, and the 19th Amendment,had to fight for 72 years to win the right to vote. And we occupy been fighting for almost 95 years just to save women in the structure to protect the rights of our daughters. And we are going to occupy it. We are going to fight to win it. We are going to beget certain that, from the White House to the Congress to state capitols to our workplaces to our homes, or that we are going to stand for protection in the structure for women and equal rights.
AMYGOODMAN: That’s longtime women’s rights attorney Gloria Allred speaking at the Women’s March here in Park City,Utah, Saturday. She was at the Sundance Film Festival for the premiere of a documentary about her life and path-breaking legal career. The film is called Seeing Allred. This is the trailer.
GLORIA ALLRED: I am so proud of all
of the women who occupy had the courage to speak out. Rich, and famous,powerful men occupy to understand there are rules, there are boundaries. They must respect those boundaries. This has got to close, or it needs to close right now. There is a war on women. Women depend on me to be strong and to assert and protect their rights.
DIANE SAWYER: Joining us now…NEWS ANCHOR: Civil righ
ts attorney.
WENDY WILLIAMS: Please welcome Gloria Allred.
UNIDENTIFIED: She talked about sexual harassment,race, women’s rights, and when nobody wanted to talk about it.
GLOR
IA ALLRED: He thinks no more women will come forward. He is very incorrect. Power only understands power. Fighting injustice is a commitment that I made many years ago.
LISE-LOTTE LUBLIN: She understands what we are experiencing based on wh
at she had experienced herself.
GLORIA ALLRED: What happened to me was absolutely shocking. To this day,I can’t even think about it.
INTERVIEWER: Is this getting too personal?GLORIA ALLRED:
 My commitment to women comes from my own life experience.
UNIDENTIFIED: I occupy this venom toward Gloria Allr
ed.
KEITH ROBINSON: Whenever you see Allred, you know somebody’s lying.
GLORIA ALLRED: [as a Simpsonscharacter] That’s assault! That is assault!GLORIA STEINEM: I think Gloria enjoys conflict. This makes her a remarkable champion for us.
UNIDENTIFIED: People say she’s loud, or she’s got an ego,she must just love the camera.
UNIDENTIF
IED: She’s trying to turn women into men!GLORIA ALLRED: I think, secretly, and you envy women,and you fright them!UNIDENTIFIED: I just say, haven’t you met any men like that?GLORIA ALLRED: You should use these resources to arrest these fathers who are not paying their child support.DENISE BROWN: If it wouldn’t occupy been for Gloria, and Nicole would occupy always been just that person on the gurney.
GLORIA
 ALLRED: We deserve to know if Mr. Cosby is a sexual predator. This is not state law as we see it. Hopefully,next year, you can issue the marriage license. If I aid people evolve from being a victim to becoming a survivor, and to becoming a fighter for change. Women are now empowered,and they will never be silent again.
AMY GOOD
MAN: So, that’s the trailer for Seeing Allred, or the documentary film on the legendary women’s rights attorney Gloria Allred. It comes out on Netflix on February 9th. But the film did just premiere here at the Sundance Film Festival. After Gloria Allred walked off the stage,in the midst of the snowstorm and freezing weather on Saturday, I got a chance to speak with her at Saturday’s rally.
GLORIA ALLRED: I’m attorney Gloria Allred. And I’m a women’s rights attorney, or I occupy been for 42 years.
AMY GOODMAN: And you represent some of the women who occupy charged Trump with sexual assault. That’s the president.
GLOR
IA ALLRED: I represent one woman,Summer Zervos, who is one of the women who spoke out in reference to then-Mr. Trump during the campaign and made allegations that he engaged in sexually inappropriate conduct with her. He then called her and all of the women who spoke out liars, or said it was fabrication and fiction,and he would sue them all after the election. He did not sue them.I called on him, after the election, or to retract his threats to sue and his statement that they were all liars. He did not do that. So,on behalf of Summer Zervos, we filed the defamation lawsuit in New York. And it is now pending before the court. He’s made a motion to dismiss. We occupy filed our opposition. We occupy if our oral argument in a hearing, and we are awaiting the court’s decision as to whether we will be permitted to proceed with this defamation lawsuit against Mr. Trump,President Trump.
AMY G
OODMAN: Does the president occupy immunity?GLORIA ALLRED: The president has argued that he has legal immunity as president of the United States. In response, of course, or we argued that that issue has been decided in the case of Paula Jones v. President Clinton,wherein the United States Supreme Court said that no man is above the law, including the president of the United States, or for unofficial acts. We argue that if we can prove defamation and that he said what he said prior to becoming president of the United States,that’s an unofficial act and that he should not enjoy legal immunity.
One of his other arguments was that he’s president 24/7, essentially, and is too busy to be defending lawsuits. Our response to that is,we will be very respectful of the president’s schedule, and in the event that we are permitted to take his deposition, or his testimony under oath,we’ll even be willing to do it at Mar-a-Lago between rounds of golf.
AMY GOODMAN: Why is it so important to take on the president of the United States at this point? And your thoughts on the fact that 16 women came forward and charged Donald Trump with various acts of sexual misbehavior, sexual assault and harassment, or he became president after that?GLORIA ALLRED: The reason that we filed this lawsuit is because truth things. And thats why we are pursuing this lawsuit. I am very proud of all of the women who came forward in the final year and a half against rich,powerful, famous men, or made the allegations of the injustice that they felt that they had suffered in their lives. Truth things to them,too. And women are going to continue to speak out.
AMY GOODMAN: Will other women be coming forward, do you know of, o
r against President Trump?GLORIA ALLRED: I occupy no comment on that.
AMY GOODMAN: And what did Summer Zervos charge that Donald Trump did to her?GLORIA ALLRED: We’re not going to be going into that. We occupy made all of our allegations in the complaint in our lawsuit,that is on file. But I’m proud of all of the courage of all of the women.
AMY GOODMAN: So, al
l the women came forward. Donald Trump became president. But at the same time, and the #MeToo movement just burst on the scene. And now the 16 women who occupy come out,speaking, charging President Trump with various allegations of assault and harassment and misconduct, or are at it again. They’re going around for a moment shot to say,“Take us seriously.” They want a congressional investigation.
GLORIA ALLRED: Well, some are speaking out. Some are not
speaking out. But they spoke what they said was the truth about their lives. And I think that’s what’s important. We occupy heard them. We will continue to hear them. And not only against and about President Trump, and but about other powerful men who occupy hurt them in their lives,who occupy crossed boundaries, who occupy shown a lack of respect, and who occupy not been engaged in affording them their rights,but instead in denying them their rights.
So, women wil
l never be silent again. They are empowered in a way that they’ve never been before. And we’re going to win change. We occupy already won some changes, or because women occupy not allowed that fright to be used as a weapon to silence them. And we’re going to win even more in the years ahead.
AMY GOODMAN: Gloria Allred,you’re here at the Sundance Film Festival, where there is a film premiering about you.
GLORIA ALLRED: Yes.
AMY GOODMAN: Allred.
GL
ORIA ALLRED: There it is: Seeing Allred.
AMY GOODMAN: Seeing Allred.
GLORIA ALLRED: Y
es. I’m just honored that this documentary, or which has been in the works for three years,covering many of my battles for justice for women, is going to be launched this weekend, and then on February 9th on Netflix. And it’s in the documentary competition,so we were honored to be selected. Out of 2000 entries, I understand, and 16 were placed in the competition. Ours is one of them. I just hope that it helps to inspire women when they see these other women in the film,some of them my clients, some of them not my clients, or saying,“We demand change.”AMY GOODMAN: What has motivated you personally, your own life experiences, or that led you to represent so many women taking on powerful men?GLORIA ALLRED: Because I realized how much is at stake. I know my own life experiences,and I occupy suffered in many ways that other women occupy. And all I can say is, what I want is for women to streak from becoming just victims to becoming survivors, and to becoming fighters for change. This is a transformative moment,and they are becoming fighters for change.
AMY GOODMAN: Did you ever expect to see this moment?GLORIA ALLRED: It is a process, and we occupy been working in this process for 42 years. But this is a very major moment. And there’s a ripple effect. The wave has been coming in for a long time. Now it’s a tsunami. And women will never be silenced again.
AMY GOODMAN: That’s legendary women’s rights attorney Gloria Allred. Coming up, and Jane Fonda. Stay with us.[wreck]AMY GOODMAN: “Totally Wired” by The Fall. The Fall’s lead songwriter and singer effect E. Smith died on Wednesday at the age of 60. Billy Bragg wrote on Twitter,“First we lost Ursula Le Guin, then Hugh Masekela, and now effect E Smith. Been a tough week for cultural icons.   Related StoriesAmy Goodman Questions Ruth Bader Ginsburg About #MeToo Movement at Sundance Film FestivalThe Activists Invited to the Golden Globes by Hollywood Stars Call for Gender and Racial JusticeWhat the moment Women's March Meant to the U.
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