What did they say? Roy Moore camp finally speaks
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — With barely an hour’s notice, the Roy Moore campaign announced it would hold a news conference Wednesday afternoon.
There was intense speculation about what the embattled Republican Senate candidate would say as he faced the media for the first time since allegations of sexual conduct transformed what was supposed to be an easy win for his party on Dec. 12 into a national GOP nightmare. In the end, Moore didn’t show. His attorney, Phillip L. Jauregui, did most of the talking in an appearance with Moore’s campaign chairman that spanned less than eight minutes.
WHAT DID THEY SAY?
Like a courtroom attorney before a judge, Jauregui focused on two key points in an attempt to undermine the credibility of Moore’s latest accuser. On Monday, a tearful Beverly Young Nelson said Moore aggressively groped her in a locked car when she was 16 years old. Jauregui seized on one detail in Nelson’s account: that she hadn’t had any contact with Moore since the alleged incident. It turns out, the lawyer said, that Moore was the judge assigned to her divorce case more than 20 years after the alleged assault. Jauregui handed out copies of a court filing from the divorce proceeding signed by Moore, but they do not reflect whether Moore ever saw the woman in court during the proceeding. “There was contact,” Jauregui insisted.