EVERY DETAIL Of Roy Moore Attacker DEBUNKED!
Throw Her In Prison NOW!
Now it's finally starting to become apparent that the so-called "sexual assault victim"
that ambulance-chasing attorney Gloria Allred dug up from the swamp might actually be an
outright liar who is simply trying to get back at the judge for his decision on her
1999 divorce case which he presided over.
The attorney for the Alabama Senate GOP nominee Judge Roy Moore last week suggested a yearbook
signature presented by a woman as proof accusing Moore of sexual assault could, in fact, be
a fake.
Jauregui repeatedly noted Nelson's association with the famous lawyer Gloria Allred from
California, who always seems to pop up to represent women who accuse Republicans of
"sexual misconduct" and called on them to release the yearbook for handwriting analysis
to which the accuser has refused.
The message in question read in the yearbook read, "To a sweeter more beautiful girl
I could not say Merry Christmas.
Christmas 1977.
Love, Roy Moore, D.A." Jauregui made clear that the message couldn't have been written
by Roy Moore because it was signed "DA," which couldn't have been Moore because back
in 1977 he wasn't even District attorney yet.
Alabama's Christian conservatives see Roy Moore as their champion.
He has battled federal judges and castigated liberals, big government, gun control, Muslims,
homosexuality and anything else that doesn't fit the evangelical mold.
The Republican Senate candidate has long stood with them, and now, as he faces accusations
of sexual impropriety including the molestation of a 14-year-old girl, they are standing with
him.
That steadfastness is shocking to many outside Alabama who wonder how any voter who claims
to be Christian can stand with a man accused of such acts.
The answer is both complicated and deeply rooted in the DNA of a state that prides itself
on bucking norms.
The state's motto — "We dare defend our rights" — is an upfront acknowledgement
of a fighting spirit that has put Alabamians at odds with the rest of the nation for generations.
Perhaps more importantly, there is a deep-seated trust that leaves many willing to accept Moore's
denials and discount the word of women speaking out weeks before the Dec. 12 election after
decades of public silence.
For some, Moore is more like a biblical prophet speaking out for God than a politician.
Introducing Moore during a "God Save America" rally at a south Alabama church this week,
pastor Mike Allison said his support wasn't wavering because Moore never has.
"He has staunchly defended the Constitution of the United States, he has stood for the
word of God … he is against the murder of the unborn by abortion.
He is for the defunding of Planned Parenthood.
He is against a redefinition of marriage and believes firmly that it is only between a
man and a woman.
And he is against all threats against the traditional family," Allison said.
"He is a fighter and a champion for right …."
Since the allegations of sexual misconduct surfaced, leading Washington Republicans – though
not President Donald Trump – have abandoned him.
At home, polls have shown a tightening race as some otherwise loyal GOP voters publicly
disavow Moore on social media; GOP Sen. Richard Shelby has said he will write-in someone rather
than vote for Moore.
Yet Moore still holds almost magical appeal for many.
Fearful of angering Moore's supporters, the Alabama GOP has stuck with him, and voters
like Larry Gibbs are putting their confidence in the Vietnam veteran long known as the "Ten
Commandments judge," for putting shrines to the commandments in his courtroom and then
in the Supreme Court rotunda.
"He comes up here to the church and he's quoting scripture and he relates to us,"
said Gibbs, who attended the pro-Moore rally where Allison spoke.
Even a relative of one of Moore's accusers is publicly siding with Moore.
"He fought like hell to keep the Ten Commandments in the damn courthouse," said a Facebook
live video by Darrel Nelson.
Nelson said his father, John Alan Nelson, is married to Beverly Young Nelson, who publicly
accused Moore of sexually assaulting her as a teen.
Nelson's lawyer, Gloria Allred, refused comment on any relationship between her client
and Darrel Nelson.
But Beverly Nelson's son Spencer Harris has referred to Darrel Nelson as his stepbrother
in his own Facebook posts supporting his mother.
Moore is polarizing — a big reason his fans like him — and local opponents see him as
a Bible-thumping opportunist playing on peoples' religion.
Moore lost badly in bids for the Republican gubernatorial nomination in 2006 and 2010.
Moore was considered an odd loner by fellow members of his cadet company at West Point.
A yearbook passage from the academy referred to Moore as an "individualist by nature"
who was worthy of respect "among those who really know him."
That reputation carried over to Etowah County, where Moore was an assistant prosecutor and
circuit judge.
He didn't typically join in the banter common in so many small-town, Southern courtrooms.
With a conservative view of religion at his core, Moore instead fought the American Civil
Liberties Union over courtroom prayer and the wooden Ten Commandments plaque in his
courtroom and rode the publicity to election as Alabama's chief justice.
He was removed from the job twice for violating state judicial ethics — once for ignoring
a federal court order to remove a Ten Commandments monument from the state's judicial building
and again over opposing gay marriage after the U.S. Supreme Court effectively legalized
it.
Conservative backers view those ousters as badges of honor.
Longtime Moore supporter John Giles said Moore doesn't bend or change, and his voters value
that.
"Every election cycle there's this tendency among the electorate to say 'Let's get
rid of these rascals.
They say one thing and govern another way,'" said Giles, who runs a super PAC that supports
Moore.
"The one thing about this man is what he says he means, and at all cost."
In his role as an outsider and fighter, Moore is a bit like George C. Wallace, the one-time
segregationist who served four terms as Alabama's governor.
But the closest any of Alabama's previous populist politicians might have come to the
current allegations against Moore might have been those made against Gov. Jim Folsom in
the 40s, said retired University of Alabama historian William H. Stewart.
"Kissing Jim" was alleged to have had a son out of wedlock and was known for kissing
women on the campaign trail.
"But we haven't had any instances of a candidate dating or making sexual overtures
to a girl as young as 14," said Stewart.
The proof states that The Olde Hickory House required employees to be at least 16 years
of age although the accuser, Beverly Nelson, claims to have been 15 when she was working
there.
The restaurant's dumpsters were on the side of the building and not in the back as Nelson
had previously claimed.
A former employee says the restaurant NEVER closed at 11 PM as Nelson claimed, but would
instead close at midnight on most nights.
Customers at the counter were served by the bartender or cook and not by any waitress.
And lastly, the witnesses claimed they have shared this information with several news
outlets but they have refused to report the truth because Moore is a Conservative.
Rhonda Ledbetter who used to work at the restaurant at the time this allegedly took place stated
she hesitated to come forward but she said, "As a moral and ethical person," she had
to come forward.
Rhonda said she never remembered ANYONE coming into the restaurant in a suit and that Roy
Moore never came into the restaurant at all.
If all this is indeed true then Beverly Nelson needs to be charged with fraud and Gloria
Allred needs to lose her license to practice law.
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