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SEXUALLY-ASSAULTED WOMEN TO VISIT CLINTON LIBRARY

To Raise Awareness of Mistreatment of Women and to Correct The Clinton Legacy

Kathleen Willey and Juanita Broaddrick, women saying they were sexually assaulted by former president Bill Clinton, have scheduled a joint visit the new Clinton Library October 26 in Little Rock, Arkansas to raise awareness of the Clinton's mistreatment of women and to challenge Bill and Hillary Clinton's carefully sculpted legacy.

Joining them will be Candice Jackson, author of the book, "Their Lives," that details the former President's mistreatment of women. (World Ahead Publishing; hardcover $25.95; ISBN 0974670138)

Broaddrick and Willey, both covered in the book, have both accused Clinton of assaulting them. Broaddrick alleges that then-Governor Clinton raped her during a conference in Little Rock in 1978, and Willey says that Clinton sexually assaulted her when she worked in the White
House in 1993. Both also charge that Clinton's inner circle-including wife Hillary Rodham Clinton-subsequently attempted to pressure and intimidate them into silence.

"Juanita, Kathleen, and I will be touring the Clinton Library to see firsthand how it portrays Bill and Hillary Clinton's treatment of women," says Jackson, an outspoken feminist. "The Clintons have crafted a public image of supporting women's rights, and yet they have both used
their power to intimidate and attack women whom they viewed as politically inconvenient."

Willey claims she was subjected to a series of physical and verbal threats intended to pressure her to keep the assault in the Oval Office secret, and Broaddrick says three weeks after being raped she was approached at an event by a forceful Hillary who thanked her for "everything that you do" for Bill. Jackson notes that many other women have also reported similar treatment at the hands of Bill and Hillary Clinton.


CONTACT: To schedule an interview, call: Special Guests, Christine
Dahlson or Jerry McGlothlin at: 630-848-0750.