OaktownBear said:
When she cites in her lawsuit:
Walton suddenly pinned her to the bed, placing his hips and legs over her body. Walton began forcing kisses on her neck, face and chest. She claims she screamed for him to stop and tried to free herself, but he held her down, groped her breasts and groin, and rubbed his erection on her leg.
Absolutely. No disagreement here. If true -- mainly the part about her rejecting the advance, not the advance itself -- this is a crime. The plausibility of him actively subduing her for a period of time after explicit screams just to get a few moments of pleasure is very low here. But he supposedly stops some time after -- imagine how awkward it would be at this point -- and then pins her against the wall for a second time on her way out after she just screamed in a hotel room where people could hear.
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I don't know who is telling the truth
Precisely. And perhaps -- wait for it -- some of the incident's details actually happened but one found it consensual, and therefore appropriate, and the other didn't?
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And actually you misrepresented the nature of the incident she claimed happened in May 2017. She said he greeted her by uttering vulgar, guttural sounds at her and said "mmmmm...you're killing me in that dress" and forced an aggressive hug on her and rubbed his body against hers." Again no idea if she is telling the truth but that is not the same as hugging someone hello and saying "nice suit". If true it would be entirely inappropriate.
Inappropriate, arguably yes. Crime? No. I mean women have said "oh you look nice/handsome/good" and made flattering innuendos in ways that were certainly cringe (to me anyways). I smiled, said thank you and moved on. I don't have an axe to grind. If somebody acted inappropriately in a way that I wanted to stop it, I'd SAY IT TO THEM.
I'd take them aside and be like "Hey ma'am, btw, I didn't appreciate the way you touched my love handle. I'm sure you didn't mean anything by it, just wanted to give you a heads up. Thank you so much for understanding."
That's how normal people deal with that stuff. Unless you have an ulterior motive. Or unless you're not actually bothered by the behavior, and only much time afterwards decide to employ it to conjure up victim status worthy of monetary damages.
The hotel incident, if true, is enough. The dinner party is suggestive to me that a contrived pattern is trying to be established.