Donald Trump groped me 'like an octopus', woman tells New York Times

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Two women accused Donald Trump of inappropriate touching in a story posted on the New York Times website, accusations his spokesman called 'fiction.'
Jessica Leeds, a businesswoman at a paper company, said Donald Trump touched her on a flight to New York in the early 1980s. PHOTO: NYTIMES
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump addresses supporters during a campaign stop inside a hangar at Lakeland Linder Regional Airport in Lakeland, Florida. PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON (AFP) - Two women have accused Mr Donald Trump of touching them inappropriately in the past, The New York Times reported, with one saying she was groped and another recounting him kissing her on the mouth - charges that the Republican presidential nominee hotly denied.

The report on Wednesday (Oct 12) follows the release of a video from 2005 last Friday in which Mr Trump was caught on a "hot mic" bragging about groping women.

The bombastic billionaire was grilled about those comments during his debate with Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton on Sunday, to which he responded "No... I have not" when asked if he had kissed women without permission or grabbed their genitals.

The Trump campaign denied the New York Times report and called it "character assassination."

Former businesswoman Jessica Leeds, 74, who worked for a paper company, told the Times that Mr Trump groped her on a flight more than three decades ago as they sat next to each other in first class.

About 45 minutes after takeoff, Mr Trump lifted the armrest and began grabbing her breasts and tried to put his hand up her skirt, she said.

"He was like an octopus," she told the newspaper. "His hands were everywhere."

"It was an assault," she said, describing the encounter that occurred when she was 38.

She said a flight attendant had invited her to sit in an empty seat in first class, next to Trump, whom she had never met.

After he groped her, she fled back to her original seat in coach, she said.

Ms Rachel Crooks said she was a 22-year-old receptionist at a real estate company in Trump Tower in 2005 when she encountered the tycoon outside an elevator in the building one morning.

She said she introduced herself and shook his hand, but he would not let go. He began kissing her cheeks and then "kissed me directly on the mouth."

"It was so inappropriate," Ms Crooks told the Times. "I was so upset that he thought I was so insignificant that he could do that."

Mr Trump turned up at her office days later and asked for her phone number, Ms Crooks said. When she asked why he wanted it, he said he was going to pass it along to his modeling agency.

She said she relented because of the business relationship between Mr Trump and her company Bayrock Group. The modeling agency never contacted her.

The rest of her time at Bayrock, Ms Crooks said she slipped out of view whenever she saw Mr Trump, and skipped the Trump Organisation holiday party to avoid bumping into him.

Neither woman reported the incidents to law enforcement.

The New York Times spoke with friends and family of the two women, who corroborated their accounts and knew of the incidents before the "hot mic" video was released last week.

The Trump campaign called the article a political attack.

"This entire article is fiction, and for the New York Times to launch a completely false, coordinated character assassination against Mr Trump on a topic like this is dangerous," senior communicators advisor Jason Miller said in a statement.

"To reach back decades in an attempt to smear Mr Trump trivialises sexual assault, and it sets a new low for where the media is willing to go in its efforts to determine this election."

The newspaper said Mr Trump was highly agitated when questioned about the women's claims, denying them and saying "none of this ever took place."

The paper said he threatened to sue the news organisation if the report was published.

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