nymag | Tara Reade’s mother may have called in to the Larry King Show to discuss problems her daughter had experienced while working for “a prominent senator,” the Intercept reported
on Friday. Reade has accused former Vice-President Joe Biden, the
Democratic Party’s presumptive presidential nominee, of sexually
assaulting her when she worked for his Senate office. The Intercept
report, which includes a partial transcript of the call in question,
provides new corroborative evidence for Reade’s story.
In
the call, a woman asks King, “what a staffer would do besides go to the
press in Washington?” Her daughter, she added, “has just left there,
after working for a prominent senator, and could not get through with
her problems at all, and the only thing she could have done was go to
the press, and she chose not to do it out of respect for him.”
Though
the Intercept story doesn’t confirm that the Larry King caller was
indeed Reade’s mother, some biographical details do match up. The caller
and Reade’s mother, who died in 2016, lived in San Luis Obispo County
in August 1993, and Reade would have just left Biden’s office around the
time of the call. Reade told the Intercept in previous interviews that
her mother had called into the Larry King Show, though she couldn’t recall the date.
Hours
after the Intercept published its report, the conservative Media
Research Group published a clip of the episode in question; Reade
confirmed to Holly Otterbein of Politico that she could hear her mother’s voice.
Reade
has said that in 1993, Biden pushed her up against a wall in the Senate
complex, kissed her, and then digitally penetrated her underneath her
skirt. In 2019, she told reporters that the former vice president had
touched her neck and ran his fingers through her hair on several
occasions, which made her one of over a half dozen women to say that Biden had kissed or touched them in ways that made them uncomfortable.
Through
representatives, Biden has consistently denied assaulting Reade, and it
is generally difficult for journalists to prove that a sexual assault
definitively occurred. Deficiencies in the criminal-justice system and
the fear and stigma associated with public identification as a victim of
sexual abuse can also prevent a person from reporting an attack to the
police, let alone the press. But key aspects of Reade’s account —
namely, that she told friends and relatives about the incident — have
proven true. The New York Times previously confirmed that
Reade told a friend about the attack when it allegedly occurred.
“Another friend and a brother of Ms. Reade’s said she told them over the
years about a traumatic sexual incident involving Mr. Biden,” the Times reported.
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