A former staffer for presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has filed a lawsuit accusing him of sexual assault in 1993.
Tara Reade told the outlet that she told police Biden assaulted her in the U.S. Capitol when she was a staffer for him in the early 1990s. Biden, vice president from 2008 to 2016, was a U.S. senator for decades starting in 1973.
“I filed it because I had been harassed so badly last April,” Reade, 56, said, referring to when she first made the allegation against Biden, 77.
“I also wanted to make it clear that I would be willing to go under oath or cooperate with any law enforcement regarding it, because it did happen. Even if it was 26 years ago,” she said.
“I remember wanting to say stop, but I don’t know if I said it out loud or if I just thought it. I was kind of frozen up,“ she said, adding when she pulled away Biden appeared shocked and told her: ”Come on, man, I heard you liked me.”
“Already I was being threatened and kind of smeared, and I just I wasn’t ready,” Reade told the AP. “So I talked about the sexual harassment and what I was comfortable talking about, but I wasn’t ready to talk about sexual assault.”
No former Biden staffers have corroborated Reade’s story, but a friend said she was told about what happened in 1993. Reade also told Business Insider that she told her mother, who has since died. Reade’s younger brother Collin Moulton said Reade’s mother wanted Reade to speak to the police about the matter. Reade says she did not go to the police at the time but did file a sexual harassment report with a Senate office, which has not been confirmed.
The Biden campaign did not respond to requests for comment. In a statement sent to other outlets, spokeswoman Kate Bedingfield said: “Women have a right to tell their story, and reporters have an obligation to rigorously vet those claims. We encourage them to do so, because these accusations are false.”
Biden in 2018 suggested that women who enter the national spotlight to accuse high-profile men of sexual wrongdoing should be believed.
Reade told Business Insider she felt she had to file a police report even if doesn’t lead to criminal proceedings.
“It’s very imperative that I think, for me, for my voice to be heard. I’ve been silenced and threatened before, in the past, and I feel free now,” she said. “And after I hung up with that detective, I felt a lift, like okay, my voice was heard and law enforcement has this. And I feel safer.”