She is very credible and it has nothing to do with Coulter, that's your dishonorable spin.
Broaddrick later said of the affidavit, "I didn’t want to be forced to testify about one of the most horrific events in my life. I didn't want to go through it again." David P. Schippers, chief investigator for the House Judiciary Committee Republicans, said that his staffers interviewed Broaddrick more than once and "have assured me that she is the most credible witness that either one of them have ever talked to." Schippers believes she filed the affadavit because of intimidation from Clinton: "She was so terrified. And the reason she was terrified was because she saw what had happened to Kathleen Willey, Gennifer Flowers and all the rest of them." Although Broaddrick said no one had pressured her to file a false affidavit, she complained that she was being watched from parked cars, her home had been broken into, her pets released and her answering machine tape stolen while she and her husband were away briefly during the House impeachment probe.
In 1984, Broaddrick's nursing facility was judged the best in the state, which brought a congratulatory official letter from the governor. On the bottom was a handwritten note from Clinton: "I admire you very much." She interpreted it as a "thank you" for her silence.[2] Broaddrick said that Clinton tried to apologize to her in 1991 and said he was a changed man. "I told him to go to hell, and I walked off," she said.
Five people have stated that Broaddrick told them about a rape shortly after it allegedly occurred.
Broaddrick filed a lawsuit against Clinton in the summer of 1999 to obtain documents the White House may have gathered about her, claiming its refusal to accede to her demand for such documents violated the Privacy Act of 1974. The case was dismissed in 2001. During the lawsuit, Broadrick's business was audited by the IRS which she charged was retaliation: "I do not believe this was coincidence," Broaddrick declared, "I do not think our number just came up." |