Locals Were Troubled by Roy Moores Interactions with Teen Girls at the Gadsden Mall
Source: The New Yorker
Roy Moore, the Republican Senate candidate and former chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, was born in Gadsden, a small city flanked by Interstate 59 and the Coosa River, an hour northeast of Birmingham. Gadsden is hilly, woodsy, blue-collar, and religious. LEGAL OR NOT, SIN IS SIN, a sign in front of a church announced yesterday. I saw it as I drove around, crisscrossing George Wallace Drive. I also saw Trump posters, Confederate flags, and dozens of signs for Doug Jones, the Democrat tied with Moore in recent Senate-race polls. Gadsden is the seat of Etowah County, which is a conservative place; Donald Trump received three times as many votes in the county as Hillary Clinton did. (Statewide, he received twice as many.) But I didnt, in all my driving, see a single yard sign for Moore, the home-town son. Even the parking lot of the one mall in town had more bumper stickers for Luther Strange (four), Moores opponent in the Republican primary, than for Moore himself (one).
The Gadsden Mall opened in 1974. It has two department stores, Belk and Sears, one on each end. Between them, on Sunday night, I walked past Books-A-Million, Cellular Solutions, a Japanese steak house, Great American Cookies, Blacklight Mini-Golf, KnockerBall Gadsden, an eyebrow-styling kiosk, and a clothing store for young girls, called Justice. A diverse assortment of families wandered around the place, which felt trapped in time. Two young security guards made their rounds. It gets rough in here on Saturday nights, one of them told me, mentioning fighting, stealing, and gun-toting. We still have an active ban list, the other said, referencing a list of chronic rule-breakers not allowed on mall property. But it doesnt go back that far.
He meant back to the early eighties, when Roy Moore was, many people say, a regular visitor to the mall. On Thursday, the Washington Post reported that, when Moore was a thirty-two-year-old assistant district attorney in Etowah County, he brought Leigh Corfman, who was fourteen years old at the time, to his home and sexually molested her. Three additional women told the Post that Moore had pursued them when they were in their teens and he was in his early thirties. (On Monday, another woman, Beverly Young Nelson, said that Moore assaulted her when she was sixteen years old. At a press conference, she held up a high-school yearbook that she said Moore signed before the alleged assault.) Two of the women say that they first met Moore at the Gadsden Mall, and the Post reports that several other women who used to work there remembered Moores frequent presenceusually alone and well-dressed in slacks and a button-down shirt.
This past weekend, I spoke or messaged with more than a dozen peopleincluding a major political figure in the statewho told me that they had heard, over the years, that Moore had been banned from the mall because he repeatedly badgered teen-age girls. Some say that they heard this at the time, others in the years since. These people include five members of the local legal community, two cops who worked in the town, several people who hung out at the mall in the early eighties, and a number of former mall employees. (A request for comment from the Moore campaign was not answered.) Several of them asked that I leave their names out of this piece. The stories that they say theyve heard for years have been swirling online in the days since the Post published its report. Sources tell me Moore was actually banned from the Gadsden Mall and the YMCA for his inappropriate behavior of soliciting sex from young girls, the independent Alabama journalist Glynn Wilson wrote on his Web site on Sunday. (Wilson declined to divulge his sources.) Teresa Jones, a deputy district attorney for Etowah County in the early eighties, told CNN last week that it was common knowledge that Roy dated high-school girls. Jones told me that she couldnt confirm the alleged mall banning, but said, Its a rumor Ive heard for years.
Read more: https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/locals-were-troubled-by-roy-moores-interactions-with-teen-girls-at-the-gadsden-mall?mbid=social_twitter
Be honest: you thought this was a Borowitz Report satire when you started reading it, didn't you.
guillaumeb
(42,641 posts)Will the values voters of Alabama elect a probable molester to the Senate?
liberal N proud
(60,344 posts)Making them accomplices
roamer65
(36,747 posts)1. He will utterly decimate the Repuke party.
2. The election itself will tell us what percent of AL are the deplorables.
oberliner
(58,724 posts)Then the Republicans will come around and support him.
chelsea0011
(10,115 posts)Irish_Dem
(47,382 posts)Owl
(3,643 posts)iluvtennis
(19,871 posts)tblue37
(65,487 posts)SunSeeker
(51,694 posts)Moore's conduct is beyond creepy. It's criminal.
IronLionZion
(45,528 posts)bucolic_frolic
(43,281 posts)Is the media focusing on Roy Moore so they don't focus on this?
https://patribotics.blog/2017/08/15/pimpotus-trump-models-and-russias-human-traffickers/amp/
keithbvadu2
(36,906 posts)snark
sarcasm thingie goes here.
Geechie
(865 posts)for talking inappropriately to white women.
A rich, white Republican adult gets banned from the mall.