PORTLAND, Ore. | Former Vice President Al Gore welcomes a Portland police decision to reopen an investigation into a massage specialist’s allegations that he groped her at a hotel four years ago, his spokeswoman said.
Kalee Kreider said that Mr. Gore “unequivocally and emphatically” denies making unwanted sexual advances. She added that “further investigation into this matter will only benefit Mr. Gore.”
Portland police did not say why it was reopening the investigation in its brief statement Wednesday.
“It’s now an open investigation and I can’t comment,” police spokeswoman Mary Wheat said.
Police earlier said they considered the case closed because there was no evidence. They said last week that the woman’s lawyer came to them with the allegations in 2006 but that the woman canceled appointments with detectives. The case was reopened in January 2009, when detectives interviewed the woman but determined there was insufficient evidence to support her accusations.
The AP does not generally identify people who say they are victims of sex crimes.
The woman alleges that Mr. Gore made unwanted sexual advances during a massage appointment on Oct. 24, 2006, at the downtown Hotel Lucia, where Mr. Gore was reportedly registered as “Mr. Stone.” He was in Portland to make a speech on climate change.
The story first broke when the National Enquirer supermarket tabloid reported the allegations a week ago.
Miss Kreider also said “the Gores cannot comment on every defamatory, misleading and inaccurate story generated by tabloids.”
Mr. Gore and wife Tipper announced June 1 they are separating in an e-mail to friends.
According to transcripts of the 2009 interview, the masseuse described the allegations at length. She said Mr. Gore groped, kissed and pinned her down on a bed. She recounted telling Mr. Gore he was acting like a “crazed sex poodle.”
The woman said she felt there would be consequences if she didn’t cooperate.
“I feared that if I ran for the door to get out, I could or would be violently accosted by some security detail,” she said. “I felt certain that any, even the smallest complaint from him to the hotel, could also destroy my work reputation.”
While trying to pack up, she said, Mr. Gore “wrapped me in an inescapable embrace,” looked her in the eyes and touched her back, buttocks and breasts. She said she asked Mr. Gore to stop several times.
“I finally told him and said, you’re being a crazed sex poodle, hoping he’d realize how weird he was being, yet he persisted,” she told Detective Molly Daul.
She said Mr. Gore demanded she drink cognac, though she told him she doesn’t drink alcohol. She said Mr. Gore became enraged when she refused his advances.
After the alleged incident, the woman said she was dissuaded from contacting the police by liberal friends, whom she refers to as “the Birkenstock tribe,” and of which she counts herself a member.
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