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Politico: Two women accused Cain of inappropriate behavior

Posted to: Elections Nation - World News Politico Presidential Election

By Jonathan Martin, Maggie Haberman, Anna Palmer and Kenneth P. Vogel

During Herman Cain’s tenure as the head of the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s, at least two female employees complained to colleagues and senior association officials about inappropriate behavior by Cain, ultimately leaving their jobs at the trade group, multiple sources confirm to POLITICO.

The women complained of sexually suggestive behavior by Cain that made them angry and uncomfortable, the sources said, and they signed agreements with the restaurant group that gave them financial payouts to leave the association. The agreements also included language that bars the women from talking about their departures.

In a series of comments over the past 10 days, Cain and his campaign repeatedly declined to respond directly about whether he ever faced allegations of sexual harassment at the restaurant association. They have also declined to address questions about specific reporting confirming that there were financial settlements in two cases in which women leveled complaints.

POLITICO has confirmed the identities of the two female restaurant association employees who complained about Cain but, for privacy concerns, is not publishing their names.

Cain spokesman J.D. Gordon told POLITICO the candidate indicated to campaign officials that he was “vaguely familiar” with the charges and that the restaurant association’s general counsel had resolved the matter.

The latest statement came from Cain himself. In a tense sidewalk encounter Sunday morning outside the Washington bureau of CBS News — where the Republican contender had just completed an interview on “Face the Nation” — Cain evaded a series of questions about sexual harassment allegations.

Cain said he has “had thousands of people working for me” at different businesses over the years and could not comment “until I see some facts or some concrete evidence.” His campaign staff was given the name of one woman who complained last week, and it was repeated to Cain on Sunday. He responded, “I am not going to comment on that.”

He was then asked, “Have you ever been accused, sir, in your life of harassment by a woman?”

He breathed audibly, glared at the reporter and stayed silent for several seconds. After the question was repeated three times, he responded by asking the reporter, “Have you ever been accused of sexual harassment?”

In a statement to The Associated Press Sunday night, Cain's campaign said the Politico report that Cain was accused of sexual harassment at least twice during his tenure as the head of the National Restaurant Association isn't true and represents unfair attacks.

Cain spokesman J.D. Gordon told The Associated Press the political press was "dredging up thinly sourced allegations" from Cain's tenure leading the trade group in the 1990s. Gordon said the report includes "unsubstantiated personal attacks" and said the press is "casting aspersions on his character and spreading rumors that never stood up to the facts."

Asked by The Associated Press if Cain's campaign was denying the report, Gordon said, "Yes."

Cain was president and CEO of the National Restaurant Association from late 1996 to mid-1999. POLITICO learned of the allegations against him, and over the course of several weeks, has put together accounts of what happened by talking to a lengthy roster of former board members, current and past staff and others familiar with the workings of the trade group at the time Cain was there.

In one case, POLITICO has seen documentation describing the allegations and showing that the restaurant association formally resolved the matter. Both women received separation packages that were in the five-figure range.

On the details of Cain’s allegedly inappropriate behavior with the two women, POLITICO has a half-dozen sources shedding light on different aspects of the complaints.

The sources — which include the recollections of close associates and other documentation — describe episodes that left the women upset and offended. These incidents include conversations allegedly filled with innuendo or personal questions of a sexually suggestive nature, taking place at hotels during conferences, at other officially sanctioned restaurant association events and at the association’s offices. There were also descriptions of physical gestures that were not overtly sexual but that made women who experienced or witnessed them uncomfortable and that they regarded as improper in a professional relationship.

Peter Kilgore, who was the association’s general counsel in the 1990s, and remains in that position today, has declined to comment to POLITICO on whether any settlements existed, saying he cannot discuss personnel matters.

But one source closely familiar with Cain’s tenure in Washington confirmed that the claims related to allegations of sexual harassment – behavior that disturbed members of the board who became aware of it, as well as the source, who otherwise liked Cain.

“I happen to know there were sealed settlements reached in the plural. I think that anybody who thinks this was a one-time, one-person transgression would be mistaken,” this source said.

The first woman was identified to POLITICO by a former association board member and her identity was confirmed by two additional sources.

The former board member recalled learning of the woman’s departure at a 1999 association board meeting and trade expo in Chicago.

“She was offered a financial package to leave the association and she did,” said the former board member. “What I took offense at was that it was clear that rather than deal with the issue, there was an effort to hush it up. She was offered a way out to keep quiet.”

A second source with close ties to the restaurant association from that period said the woman revealed at the time that she had suffered what the source described as “an unwanted sexual advance” from Cain at a hotel where an event involving the group was taking place.

A third source said that the woman has indicated to her current employer that she received a compensation package from the association and has warned there that she may be the subject of an embarrassing story involving a presidential candidate.

The second woman’s identity was confirmed by a source familiar with the association.

On Oct. 20, POLITICO first approached Gordon, who serves as the campaign’s vice president for communications, about whether Cain had been the subject of complaints of sexual harassment.

After several days of not responding to the question, Gordon emailed on Oct. 24 that any dispute about Cain’s conduct at the restaurant association “was settled amicably among all parties many years ago.”

“These are old and tired allegations that never stood up to the facts,” Gordon said in an email response. “This was settled amicably among all parties many years ago, and dredging this up now is merely part of a smear campaign meant to discredit a true patriot who is shaking up the political status quo.”

Gordon added: “Since critics haven’t had much luck in attacking Mr. Cain’s ideas, they are trying to attack him personally.”

On Wednesday, the response shifted. Gordon telephoned to assert he was not using “settled” in a legal context but rather simply meant the matter was “resolved.”

In that interview, Gordon told POLITICO he had spoken to Cain about the allegations and said Cain was “vaguely familiar” with the situation.

“He was vaguely familiar with it and wanted me to get with the [National Restaurant Association] lawyer who worked the case, Peter Kilgore. He said, ‘Just get with Peter Kilgore at the NRA.’ He remembered there was something vaguely, some allegation, but he wasn’t familiar with it. Our lawyer called Peter Kilgore. Their policy is they don’t discuss personnel. That’s what our lawyer then told me.”

Added Gordon: “When you’re in a leadership position, sometimes people just try to take a shot at you.”

As to whether the association under Cain ever paid a monetary settlement to women who had leveled such accusations against him, Gordon referred the question to the restaurant trade group.

Kilgore told POLITICO in a statement: “Please understand that our corporate policy is not to discuss personnel matters (other than to confirm employment and dates of employment) with outside sources, including media. Thus, I must respectfully decline to comment on your questions or any allegations you may be looking into that concern current or former employees of the Association.”

The revelations come at a time when Cain is riding high in the polls, with a candidacy that relies heavily on Cain’s claims that his experience as a businessman and the former head of Godfather’s Pizza has prepared him to be president.

But the Republican presidential hopeful also has begun to face increasing scrutiny in the press over his management style, presiding over an unorthodox campaign that has seen the departures of several aides and struggled to take advantage of Cain’s sudden vault to the head of the pack.

Cain, who has been married to his wife Gloria for 43 years, did tell at least one campaign staffer this year about the possibility that claims of sexual harassment could surface, according to the aide. Cain, this person said, described a case in which he fired an employee in 1990s and the woman alleged sexual misconduct or harassment. Cain told the campaign staffer he had beaten the case and that the woman had paid for his legal fees. The aide had no further details.

Cain was head of the restaurant trade group after he left the job as CEO of Godfather’s Pizza. He has often referred to his experience running the pizza company but speaks less often about his tenure atop the association. The year before he took the helm, the association represented about 150,000 food service establishments, had roughly 115 employees and a government affairs budget of nearly $20 million. But it was not known as a top lobbying powerhouse.

Cain tried to change that, hiring more lobbyists and taking a much more public role in advocating for the industry than did his predecessor. Boasting of the shift in his book, Cain noted that during his tenure, the restaurant association made its first appearance on Fortune magazine’s list of Washington’s 25 most influential interest groups (it rose as high as 15th).

Information about the incidents was apparently closely held, even among association board members. But one woman’s complaint apparently did make its way to at least some figures on the governing board when, at an association event, one board member got word that a female employee had complained about Cain’s advances, according to a source who was at the event.

The source said the board member asked the woman directly about the episode and was told that Cain had invited her up to his suite at a prior association event.

Ron Magruder, Denise Marie Fugo and Joseph Fassler, the chair, vice chair and immediate past chairman of the National Restaurant Association board of directors at the time of Cain’s departure, said they hadn’t heard about any complaints regarding Cain making unwanted advances.

“I have never heard that. It would be news to me,” said Fugo, who runs a Cleveland, Ohio, catering company, adding such behavior would be totally out of character for the Cain she knew. “He’s very gracious.”

Fassler, who helped bring Cain on board as CEO of the restaurant association, said that any inappropriate behavior was not brought to his attention and that he would be upset to learn it had gone on and he was not made aware of it.

“That’s a shock to me,” Fassler said. “As an officer during all of Herman’s years there as a paid executive… none of that stuff ever surfaced to me. Nobody ever called me, complained about this, nor did I ever hear that from Peter Kilgore, nor did I ever hear that from Herman Cain.”

Fassler – who ran a Phoenix food-service company and finished his term as chairman the month before Cain’s June 1999 departure but remained on the board’s executive committee – described Cain as treating men and women identically and asserted it was “not within his character” to make unwanted advances. “It’s not what I know of him,” Fassler said.

Much like Fassler, almost all board members remember Cain fondly and say he left on good terms.

Cain was “extremely professional” and “fair” to female staffers at the restaurant association, recalled Lee Ellen Hayes, who said she “worked fairly closely with” Cain in the late 1990s, when she was an executive at the National Restaurant Association Education Fund, a Chicago-based offshoot of the group.

Cain’s treatment of women was “the same as his treatment of men. Herman treated everyone great,” said Mary Ann Cricchio, who was elected to the board of the restaurant group in 1998. She said Cain left such a good impression on the organization that when he spoke at a group event in January of this year, as he was considering a presidential bid, “he had unanimous support in the room.”

Revelations about the settlements come as members of the association’s board planned to meet this month to talk about ways to use the organization’s clout to boost Cain’s campaign.

Ideas to be discussed included making a donation to Cain from the organization’s political action committee, which typically doesn’t contribute to presidential campaigns, and, more significantly, organizing a fundraiser for his campaign.

Juana Summers and Emily Schultheis contributed to this report.

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What does Bubba have to say about Hermie's problems?

Saw former President Clinton all over the morning shows this AM promoting his new book. Found it interesting that not one of these curious, inquiring, people-need-to-know, chips-fall-where-they-may journalists asked Bubba what he thought about Herman Cain's recent string of "bimbo eruptions". They asked him about other current events that applied to presidential candidates and president, so it seems like a logical question to ask. Hmmm. Wonder why? Who better to speak about what this ordeal does to a candidate and a sitting president. Does he think Cain is still viable to be president, even without a blue dress? (At one point I thought Ann Curry was going to lean over and plant a big sloppy kiss on 'ol Bill on TODAY this morning.)

my turn to take care of the sick kids

I watched Cain on C-Span of the live broadcast of the National Press Club which the host asked Cain about the Politico report. Cain denied the story. He said that he recused himself to allow the org's general counsel to deal with an investigation which Cain said revealed zero sexual harrassment. He also said that he knew of no settlement.

Deviant behavior or unacceptable behavior is not isolated. It would seem the Politico could have waded through the millions and millions of sexual harrassment - except they did not. And why not?

What could have been considered sexual harrassment in the mid 90s? Opening the door for a woman; "Sweetie"; nice outfit you have; my wife is out of town, let's celebrate; I love big .... on women; could all be.

Your post is impossible to follow.

"Politico could have waded through the millions of sexual harrassment - except they did not. And why not?"

Say Wut? This makes zero sense.

In Cain's case, the allegations actually came 5 years before he ran for any office, 12 years ago now. There was no way they were politically motivated, because Cain had never been a candidate for anything. Furthermore, the allegations came not just from one disgruntled employee, but from 2 separate women. 1 allegation can be a misunderstanding, or an oversensitivity, or a case of job-related payback. 2 allegations, separate & distinct from each other, are at least the beginning of a pattern.

if you try that hard to not understand then what else

I still support Cain because he is the best candidate on both parties.

Is there a pattern of sexual harrassment - it would seeem there is not since Politico did not dig up a continued history, just two anonymous sources of the same time.
Unless Politico was waiting for an absolute denial before serving the "gotcha" then the dice were rolled and Politico bet the house and lost.

In the immortal words - move on. The politics of personal destruction was attempted but the ideas and ideals that Cain presents survive and are stronger with NO PATTERN from anonymous sources.

So go out and find the personal destruction if that will make your candidate stronger.

"Politico bet the house and lost" ??? The right-leaning Politico

... reported that the Cain-led NRA paid 2 diff women 5 figure amt$ & had them sign non-disclosure agreements. Pattern forming.

Of Cain's claim not to know of settlement:

For that to be true, many things would also have to be true: Cain never asked the NRA how the claim got resolved; Cain never had to sign a settlement agreement or any other document; He trusted the NRA to obtain a complete release on his behalf, the women never demanded that Cain release potential counterclaims (e.g., for defamation); He never agreed to keep the matter confidential — for example, after he left the NRA. in his role as CEO, Cain never had to approve a settlement, was never told the cost of the settlement & never saw a budget entry confirming a settlement.

the term recuse does have meaning

Cain during the National Press Club meeting today said that he recused himself. Would you want someone who recuses themselves to be involved?

Still, where are the others?

I'll continue to support Cain. He is the best candidate of both parties.

This looks like the political gotcha of "when did you stop beating your wife?".

Vote for Cain. He is someone to vote FOR.

I'm not surprised you back Cain, since Cain is a ...

... train wreck.

- 2 payouts to women while heading the NRA
- the infamous muslim slander and sharia fearmongering (teaps love this)
- his shredded 999 plan
- his bizarre DEFENSE of abortion while claiming to be against it
- not-for-profit run by campaign mgr was paying for Cain's campaign expenses earlier this year after Cain had already set up his official presidential campaign committee
- Cain campaign funds used for buying Cain books from Cain Inc.
- no campaign apparatus in primary states (read: Grifting for book sales, pump up the name recognition for speaking engagements, & fauxnews job)

Palin, Bachmann, Trump, now Cain. You can pick em.

You have to suspend reality to believe Cain's "i dont know" resolution denial. Puhlease.

I guess when a family-values party candidate presses the ...

... flesh, the phrase takes on a different meaning.

Why the Evil Libruls made him harass these women needs to be explained!

This is Cain's 969 plan.

It's cool how libruls traveled back in time to get those two women to resign after payment & nondisclosure agreement. Just like time travel back to Hawaii 50 years ago to plant a birth certificate & story in the newspaper.

Clarence Thomas thought: "Payoffs! Why didn’t I think of that?"

This is how Cain plans to unleash his privates sector.

The GOP establishment did this because they are perfectly happy to have Tea Party votes, but they don't want their sister to marry one.

Nananana nananana hey hey goodbye

There's also another story on the news about improper campaign financing; Cain's employees used company money to start his political action committee. This flavor-of-the month notRomney is history. Who will it be this month: the Newtster, TPawl?

gosh...

I sure wish Politico had dug this deep with BHO. Birth cerificate, radical CLOSE associates, preacher preaching hate, etc. etc... Hillary wouldn't be Sec of State AND President...

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