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The Man Who Helped Expose Harvey Weinstein Just Published a Bombshell Exposé on Donald Trump – the Affairs and the Coverup

“Trump remarked that the friend liked ‘the big black dick’ and began commenting on her attractiveness and breast size.”

Donald Trump has a network of people and pattern of tactics that allow him to hide extramarital affairs and prevent the women involved from exposing him, according to a new article by Ronan Farrow just published in The New Yorker. Farrow, of course, is the former NBC journalist who helped expose the Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse and rape scandal.

Farrow’s latest piece on Donald Trump explores a relationship the man who just ten years later would become president, had with Karen McDougal, a Playboy Playmate of the Year, that began at Hugh Hefner’s well-known Playboy Mansion in 2006.

“At the time of the party, Trump had been married to the Slovenian model Melania Knauss for less than two years; their son, Barron, was a few months old. Trump seemed uninhibited by his new family obligations,” Farrow reveals. “McDougal later wrote that Trump ‘immediately took a liking to me, kept talking to me – telling me how beautiful I was, etc. It was so obvious that a Playmate Promotions exec said, ‘Wow, he was all over you – I think you could be his next wife.’'”

Nine months into the affair, McDougal ended it because she “couldn’t look at herself in the mirror anymore,” a friend of McDougal’s told Farrow.

On the night of the Miss Universe pageant McDougal attended, McDougal and a friend rode with Trump in his limousine and the friend mentioned a relationship she had had with an African-American man. According to multiple sources, Trump remarked that the friend liked “the big black dick” and began commenting on her attractiveness and breast size. The interactions angered the friend and deeply offended McDougal.

McDougal’s “account provides a detailed look at how Trump and his allies used clandestine hotel-room meetings, payoffs, and complex legal agreements to keep affairs—sometimes multiple affairs he carried out simultaneously—out of the press.”

Farrow reports that the publisher of the National Enquirer, David Pecker, according to The Wall Street Journal, “paid a hundred and fifty thousand dollars for exclusive rights to McDougal’s story, which it never ran. Purchasing a story in order to bury it is a practice that many in the tabloid industry call ‘catch and kill.'”

McDougal regrets signing the contract.

“It took my rights away,” McDougal told me. “At this point I feel I can’t talk about anything without getting into trouble, because I don’t know what I’m allowed to talk about. I’m afraid to even mention his name.”

 

 

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