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Judge Roy Moore on Hannity Radio: ‘These Allegations are Completely False and Misleading’

by MATTHEW BOYLE


AP Photo/Butch Dill
MONTGOMERY, Alabama — Judge Roy Moore, the GOP nominee for the U.S. Senate, again dismissed as false allegations against him in the Washington Post that decades ago he engaged in inappropriate relationships with young women. Appearing on nationally syndicated radio host Sean Hannity’s program on Friday afternoon, Moore blasted the allegations as politically motivated.
“These allegations are completely false and misleading,” Moore said in a lengthy Hannity radio appearance. “But more than that it hurts me personally because I’m a father. I have one daughter. I have five granddaughters. And I have a special concern for the protection of young ladies. This is really hard and I want to talk on radio and explain this: These allegations are completely false.”
Moore specifically said he does not know who Leigh Corfman, who accused him of sexual misconduct against her in the 1970s when she was just 14-years-old in the Washington Post report, is. This is the first time Moore has specifically addressed the individual allegations. Moore added:
I don’t know Ms. Corfman from anybody. I have never talked to her. I’ve never had any contact with her. The allegations of sexual misconduct with her are completely false. I believe they are politically motivated. I believe they are brought on me to stop a very successful campaign. And that’s what they’re doing. I have never known this woman or anything with regard to the other girls. And you understand this is 40 years ago, and after my return from the military I dated a lot of young ladies. I do recognize the names of two of the ladies, however, Debbie Wesson Gibson and Gloria Thacker—that’s their maiden name.
Moore also addressed the cases of two other accusers in the first segment on Hannity: Debbie Wesson Gibson and Gloria Thacker Deason. Moore says he remembers their names—but does not remember anything inappropriate with them.
Here is what the Washington Post reported regarding Gibson:
Debbie Wesson Gibson says that she was 17 in the spring of 1981 when Moore spoke to her Etowah High School civics class about serving as the assistant district attorney. She says that when he asked her out, she asked her mother what she would say if she wanted to date a 34-year-old man. Gibson says her mother asked her who the man was, and when Gibson said “Roy Moore,” her mother said, “I’d say you were the luckiest girl in the world.”
Among locals in Gadsden, a town of about 47,000 back then, Moore “had this godlike, almost deity status — he was a hometown boy made good,” Gibson says, “West Point and so forth.”
Gibson says that they dated for two to three months, and that he took her to his house, read her poetry and played his guitar. She says he kissed her once in his bedroom and once by the pool at a local country club.
“Looking back, I’m glad nothing bad happened,” says Gibson, who now lives in Florida. “As a mother of daughters, I realize that our age difference at that time made our dating inappropriate.”
In Gibson’s case, on Hannity’s radio show, Moore denied any wrongdoing—and said he is not sure on some of the details of the Post report. Moore sai:
I do not remember speaking to a Civics Class. I do not remember that. I do not remember when we—I think I remember knowing her parents, that they were friends. I can’t remember specific dates, because it’s been 40 years. But I can remember her as a great girl, but neither of them have either stated any inappropriate behavior. She didn’t say anything.
He added he does not “remember specific dates.”
“I know her, but I don’t remember going out on dates,” Moore said. “If we did go out on dates, then we did—but I don’t remember that.”
Regarding Deason, here is what the Washington Post wrote about her allegations:
Gloria Thacker Deason says she was 18 and Moore was 32 when they met in 1979 at the Gadsden Mall, where she worked at the jewelry counter of a department store called Pizitz. She says she was attending Gadsden State Community College and still living at home.
“My mom was really, really strict and my curfew was 10:30 but she would let me stay out later with Roy,” says Deason, who is now 57 and lives in North Carolina. “She just felt like I would be safe with him. . . . She thought he was good husband material.”
Deason says that they dated off and on for several months and that he took her to his house at least two times. She says their physical relationship did not go further than kissing and hugging.
“He liked Eddie Rabbitt and I liked Freddie Mercury,” Deason says, referring to the country singer and the British rocker.
She says that Moore would pick her up for dates at the mall or at college basketball games, where she was a cheerleader. She remembers changing out of her uniform before they went out for dinners at a pizzeria called Mater’s, where she says Moore would order bottles of Mateus Rosé, or at a Chinese restaurant, where she says he would order her tropical cocktails at a time when she believes she was younger than 19, the legal drinking age.
“If Mother had known that, she would have had a hissy fit,” says Deason, who says she turned 19 in May 1979, after she and Moore started dating.
Moore denies having bought her alcohol because, he says, Etowah County in Alabama was a dry county at the time. Moore said when Hannity asked about Deason’s allegations in the Post:
No, because in this county it was a dry county. We never would have had liquor. Believe this, she said she believed she was underage. As I recall, she was 19 or older. That just never happened. I never provided alcohol, beer or intoxicating liquor to a minor. That would be against the law to give anything—it was never done. I remember her as a good girl. I had some sort of knowledge of her parents, or her mother very in particular.
Moore also addressed questions about dating young girls in general.
Here’s a relevant exchange from that portion of the interview:
HANNITY: At that time in your life—you do remember these girls—let me ask you this. Would it be unusual for you as a 32-year-old guy to have dated a woman as young as 17, that would be what a 15 year difference? Or 18? Do you remember dating girls that young at that time?”
MOORE: “Not generally, no. And if I did I’m not going to dispute anything or anything like that.”
HANNITY: “But you don’t specifically remember having any girlfriend that was in her teens even at that time?”
MOORE: “No, I don’t remember that and I don’t remember dating any girl without the permission of her mother. And I think in her statement, she said her mother actually encouraged her to go out with me.”
Moore also specifically denied outright the alleged incidents with Corfman, saying they never happened.
Here is what the Washington Post story accuses Moore of regarding Corfman:
Leigh Corfman says she was 14-years-old when an older man approached her outside a courtroom in Etowah County, Ala. She was sitting on a wooden bench with her mother, they both recall, when the man introduced himself as Roy Moore.
It was early 1979 and Moore — now the Republican nominee in Alabama for a U.S. Senate seat — was a 32-year-old assistant district attorney. He struck up a conversation, Corfman and her mother say, and offered to watch the girl while her mother went inside for a child custody hearing.
“He said, ‘Oh, you don’t want her to go in there and hear all that. I’ll stay out here with her,’ ” says Corfman’s mother, Nancy Wells, 71. “I thought, how nice for him to want to take care of my little girl.”
Alone with Corfman, Moore chatted with her and asked for her phone number, she says. Days later, she says, he picked her up around the corner from her house in Gadsden, drove her about 30 minutes to his home in the woods, told her how pretty she was and kissed her. On a second visit, she says, he took off her shirt and pants and removed his clothes. He touched her over her bra and underpants, she says, and guided her hand to touch him over his underwear.
“I wanted it over with — I wanted out,” she remembers thinking. “Please just get this over with. Whatever this is, just get it over.” Corfman says she asked Moore to take her home, and he did.
Two of Corfman’s childhood friends say she told them at the time that she was seeing an older man, and one says Corfman identified the man as Moore. Wells says her daughter told her about the encounter more than a decade later, as Moore was becoming more prominent as a local judge.
Here is the relevant transcript of that part of the interview with Hannity in which Moore denies it again outright:
HANNITY: “…Let me go back to Corfman for a minute here, because this is the issue here. She gives specific instances where you met her at the courthouse, you got her phone number, you talked to her on the phone, and that you drove her 30 minutes from her house to the woods where you lived and you kissed her and on a second visit you took her shirt, pants, removed her clothes, touched her bra, underpants and guided her hand to touch him over your underwear. Now, those are specific charges she’s making. And I think, obviously, it’s about a month away from this election campaign.”
CROSSTALK
HANNITY: “Is it your position that never happened?”
MOORE: “It never happened, and i don’t even like hearing it because it never happened. They’re doing this because we’re a month away, four weeks away, after 40 years in public service. I’ve run five successful campaigns, statewide campaigns, three in the county. This has never been brought up or even mentioned. And all of a sudden four weeks out, they’re bringing it up. They’re bringing it up because it’s political, because it’s a direct attack on this campaign and it involves a 14-year-old girl which I would have never had any contact with. Nothing with her mother or in the courthouse or nothing would I have done that. In fact, her allegations contradict the whole behavior pattern that the other—the two other ladies even witnessed herself.”
HANNITY: “You mentioned you never would go out with any young girl—I assume, you meant you were 32 at that time in your life. Would you always ask the permission of the parent before you would take a girl out?”
MOORE: “Well, I’m saying in their statements that they made, these two young girls they said their mothers actually encouraged them to be friends with me. That’s what they said. I don’t remember—I was not privy to their conversation. But obviously we never had any sexual activity, there was never anything like that. The behavior was always appropriate, according to them.”
All of this was in the first portion of Hannity’s multi-part interview with Judge Moore. More to come. See following item below...

Judge Roy Moore on Sean Hannity Show: ‘We Have Some Evidence of Some Collusion’ Against Me in WaPo Smear

by MATTHEW BOYLE

Brynn Anderson/AP

MONTGOMERY, Alabama — Judge Roy Moore, the GOP nominee for the U.S. Senate in Alabama, told nationally syndicated radio host Sean Hannity on Friday afternoon that his campaign is conducting its own investigation into the allegations against him and has “some evidence of some collusion” against him.

Moore said when Hannity asked him to respond to the dozens of establishment Republicans demanding he step down from his race for the U.S. Senate:
If you step aside for any allegation, then you might as well not run because when you run you’re going to get allegations. First, I would tell these individuals they wouldn’t make good judges. They wouldn’t make good people in the judicial system because you are innocent until proven guilty. In this case, this woman has waited over 40 years to bring a complaint four weeks out of an election? It’s obvious to the casual observer that something is up. We’re also doing an investigation and we have some evidence of some collusion here but we’re not ready to put that to the public just yet.
Hannity, in response, asked Moore whether that means he is “trying to prove” his innocence—to which Moore affirmed that he was:
Well, just like you said, they’re doing it to defeat this senate campaign. They’re bringing something, they’re trying to mix something up from other girls that never said anything about sexual impropriety and they’re all labeling it on this 14-year-old. I had nothing to do with this. This is a completely manufactured story meant to defraud this campaign. They’re losing. They’re 11 points behind. They don’t like my acknowledgment there is a God. We’ve refused to debate them because of their very liberal stance on transgenderism and transgenderism in the military and bathrooms. They’re desperate. Sean, they’re simply desperate.
Next, Hannity pressed Moore on specifically on what he thinks about the idea of a Senate candidate dating young girls:
HANNITY: “Well, let me ask you a general question.”
MOORE: “Yes.”
HANNITY: “Let’s take you out of this for a second. Let’s say, if any Senate candidate who was 32 at the time had done this to a 14-year-old girl, to me it’s disgusting. To me, it would be despicable. To me, that is a predator.”
MOORE: “Yeah.”
HANNITY: “Do you agree with me, that no such person who ever does that should ever be in the United States Senate?”
MOORE: “Of course. Nobody who abuses a 14-year-old at age 32 or age 17—it doesn’t matter—if you abuse a 14-year-old you shouldn’t be a Senate candidate. I agree with that. But I did not do that.”
HANNITY: “Let’s go back to it one more question, because I didn’t understand this. If you were 32, and you do date a 17 or 18 year old—that’s a pretty big gap for a pretty young girl—is that something that you did when you were dating? I’m not talking about the 14-year-old in that specific allegation. Would it be normal behavior back in those days for you to date a girl that’s 17 or 18?”
MOORE: “No. Not normal.”
HANNITY: “My daughter is 16 years old. If she’s 17 or 18, I don’t want her dating a 32-year-old.”
MOORE: “I wouldn’t either.”
HANNITY: “And you can say unequivocally that you never dated anybody that was in their late teens like that when you were 32?”
MOORE: “It would have been out of my customary behavior, that’s right.”
HANNITY: “In other words, you don’t recall dating any girl that young when you were that old?”
MOORE: “I’ve said no.”
HANNITY: “And you think that’s inappropriate, too, that’s what you’re saying?”
MOORE: “Yes.”
Hannity wrapped the segment, the second of three total, by noting that he believes there is certainly the possibility that Judge Moore is being wrongly accused. Hannity said:
A lot of things come up in elections. This is not my first rodeo, Judge. I’ve covered a lot of big topics over the years and I know a lot of people rush to judgment and in my life I try not to do that. This is such a serious allegation at such a significant point in this race. My only goal is not ideological here, my goal is to get to truth. Richard Jewell, I was in Atlanta, and then an article comes out that he fits the profile of a lone bomber because he lives with his mother. We saw what happened in the Duke Lacrosse case—those three kids were falsely accused. We saw that the whole nation and the president was wrong on issues like Ferguson, Missouri—hands up don’t shoot never happened. George Zimmerman was found not guilty by a jury of his peers. Darren Wilson was exonerated by a grand jury because of eyewitnesses that saw the Michael Brown incident. Then you have the case of Freddie Gray, everybody thought those policemen did horrible things and there were all not guilty. There was no evidence on any of those case so there are instances where—Clarence Thomas, I would argue is a case. Herman Cain is a case.
Hannity then cut to commercial, before the Judge joined him for a third segment. More to come.



Nolte — Another CNN Race Problem: Employees Directed to Destroy Donna Brazile’s Credibility
by JOHN NOLTE

Rex Features via AP Imagesx Features via AP Images

A very bad week for CNN just got a whole lot worse. Tucker Carlson of Fox News addressed the explosive allegation that CNN is doing what it has done so many times before to protect the Clintons and the Democrat Party: destroy a black person. Carlson says CNN management directed employees to destroy Donna Brazile’s credibility.
Carlson said:
According to highly informed sources we spoke to – highly informed – top management at CNN directed its employees to undermine Brazile’s credibility. Anchors and producers were vocally offended — many of them — by Brazile’s attacks on their friends, the Clintons. If you’ve been watching that channel, you may have noticed CNN’s anchors suggesting that Donna Brazile cannot be trusted, precisely because she took part in efforts to rig the primaries for Clinton. Watch.
As the video illustrates, CNN’s left-wing anchors, Anderson Cooper and Brooke Baldwin, are using the exact same talking points to smear Brazile — the fact that while working for CNN, she slipped some debate questions to Hillary.
For those not already familiar with the controversy, Brazile ran the Democrat National Committee during the closing five months of the 2016 presidential election, and in a new book, this faithful Democrat and 25-year confidante of the Clintons, alleges that these very same Clintons grabbed control of the DNC and rigged the primary process to steal the nomination from Bernie Sanders.
Moreover, Brazile also claims that, due to sexism from the Clinton campaign, she was never taken seriously.
CNN’s connections to the Clintons go above and beyond a shared progressive worldview. CNN’s struggling afternoon anchor, Jake Tapper, has been connected to the Clinton Foundation. In the early 90s, the left-wing Tapper served as press secretary for Democrat Congresswoman Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky, whose son is now married to none other than Chelsea Clinton.
Primetime CNN anchor Anderson Cooper was a member of the Clinton Global Initiative, as was CNN’s Fareed Zakaria and Christiane Amanpour.
Through WikiLeaks (thank God for WikiLeaks), we learned that in 2015, two days before Hillary launched her presidential campaign, among others, CNN’s Brianna Keilar, Gloria Borger, John Berman, and Kate Bolduan all attended an exclusive and secret dinner at the New York home of Joel Benenson, Hillary’s chief campaign strategist.
And who will ever forget this?
Ever since the Clintons arrived on the national scene some 25 years ago, CNN has been appropriately called the Clinton News Network, for the network is nothing less than a well-oiled propaganda machine funded with billions of corporate dollars devoted to promoting and protecting the Clintons.
But that is just part of CNN’s motive to destroy Brazile. The other part is, arguably, racial…
Time and again and again and again, CNN has been the media’s chief overseer of the Democrat Plantation, a mercenary and merciless destroyer of any black person who strays, who thinks freely, who does not behave in the way CNN demands black people behave. Understanding that might help to explain the apparent command from on-high to destroy Donna Brazile.
As I write these very words, CNN is facing a class-action racial discrimination suit. More than 175 people claim that “among other things that African-Americans receive lower performance ratings in evaluations, that there are dramatic differences in pay between similarly situated employees of different races and that the promotion of African-American employees is blocked by a ‘glass ceiling.’”
Worse still, to further its unholy cause, as a means to spur race riots, CNN has poured rhetorical gasoline all over predominantly black neighborhoods in Ferguson and Baltimore. In both of these vulnerable communities, CNN treated black homes and businesses as nothing more than kindling for its social justice fire.
And then there was CNN’s dishonest attack on Dr. Ben Carson’s biography during the 2016 Republican nomination process. There is simply no question this was a racially motivated attack on a free-thinking black man. And here is an appalling CNN segment questioning black Republican Herman Cain’s blackness.
And now it is racial-apostate Donna Brazile’s turn to spend time in CNN’s barrel of hate. While she might not break under CNN’s punishment, the exercise is still useful to CNN because making an example of Brazile sends a stark and terrifying message to the rest of the Democrat plantation.
Tucker Carlson, however, appears to have caught CNN red-handed and at the worst possible time, just as CNN is having a terrible run of scandals.
First, there was Jake Tapper misinforming viewers about what “Allahu Akbar” really means. This was followed by Tapper’s humiliating meltdown over the subsequent criticism. Then, in the space of two hours, CNN was caught using fake video and selective quotes to embarrass President Trump.
CNN is a fake news factory driven only by its left-wing social justice need to foment the division and violence needed to justify further empowering a centralized government. Wednesday marks the one-year anniversary of CNN’s labeling Trump’s victory a “whitelash,” which was a lie. Trump did better with blacks and Hispanics than Mitt Romney.
All the more reason for CNN to keep black people “in line.”



Bannon compares Moore report to Trump Access Hollywood tape
By JACQUELINE ALEMANY, KATHRYN WATSON CBS NEWS

MANCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE—At a speech in New Hampshire Thursday night, GOP strategist Steve Bannon compared the accusations against Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore to the release of President Trump's infamous "Access Hollywood" video during the 2016 election.
"But it's interesting," Bannon told the audience. "The Bezos-Amazon-Washington Post that dropped that dime on Donald Trump, is the same Bezos-Amazon-Washington Post that dropped the dime this afternoon on Judge Roy Moore. Now is that a coincidence? That's what I mean when I say opposition party, right? It's purely part of the apparatus of the Democratic Party. They don't make any bones about it. By the way, I don't mind it. I'll call them out every day."
Bannon called out the media saying, "it's not a free and fair media anymore."
Bannon New Hampshire Steve Bannon, the former chief strategist to President Donald Trump, speaks during an event in Manchester, N.H., Thursday, Nov. 9, 2017.
MARY SCHWALM / AP

"You know, I run Breitbart, we're kind of an advocacy group in our own way, in the way we present grassroots and present working class people and economic nationalism, we're not shy about it," Bannon said. "Guys come to me for jobs and I say I'm not looking to hire people who want to win Pulitzers, I'm looking for people who want to be Pulitzer. Right? So I don't mind it, but I think it's a strange coincidence."
Bannon called it the accusations "politics of self-destruction," as he headlined the 603 Alliance's "Taking On The Establishment" fundraiser benefiting candidates running for the statehouse. Bannon's defense — that the Washington Post report was an orchestrated political attack — echoed Moore's campaign statement calling the Washington Post report the "very definition of fake news and intentional defamation."
The Washington Post report, which CBS News has confirmed, disclosed that not only did their reporters speak with more than 30 people who knew Moore between 1977 and 1982, but also that none of the women accusers in the story sought out the Post.
"All were initially reluctant to speak publicly but chose to do so after multiple interviews, saying that they thought it was important for people to know about their interactions with Moore," the Washington Post report says.
Bannon backed the insurgent conservative who made headlines for his far-right beliefs – Moore has said that homosexuality should be illegal and that Muslims should be banned from serving in Congress — over sitting Senator Luther Strange, who was endorsed by Mr. Trump. In a radio appearance after Moore's primary win over Strange in September, Bannon sought credit for Moore's victory, bragging that he was "6-0" with special election candidates. He mocked the President for being "5-1."
"Do not get on the wrong side of the football of your base. Listen to the people, please," Bannon added on Sirius XM's "Breitbart News Daily."
On Thursday, Bannon also went into some of the backstory of what happened in the Trump campaign when the "Access Hollywood" tape broke, describing how Mr. Trump "blew up," and Bannon said it was time to "double down."
"But when Billy Bush Saturday, we got you know kind of the high command and the war council and everybody went around the room, and Trump once again is asking for percentages," Bannon said. "I think the highest percentage was 40 percent. Right? They were telling him some guy's gotta go on 60 Minutes and cry on Ivanka's shoulder, and other people do this and do that and apologize, and apologize, apologize. He came to me and said what's the chance? I said 100 percent."
Bannon then laughed and continued "he goes don't look at me, and I said 100 percent. And he said I don't want to hear it now. I mean he really blew up, he was not happy. And I said no, I mean it, right? They don't care about this, they don't care about locker room talk. They care about their country, right? I said, we double down now, right? You're Donald Trump and they're not, right?"
Bannon's speech Thursday comes after he reminisced about Mr. Trump's win on the one-year anniversary of the 2016 election, or as he calls it, "the high holy day of MAGA." Bannon — unprompted and before the Moore story broke — also mentioned the "Access Hollywood" tape then.
"The people don't care about locker room talk,"Bannon said of the tape, adding that instead people care about the "destruction" of the greatest country on earth.
Bannon, who left the White House this summer to return to Breitbart News, has pledged to wage war on the establishment GOP.


Roy Moore accuser worked for Clinton campaign as interpreter, reports say
Fox News


One of the women accusing Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore of sexual impropriety reportedly worked as a sign language interpreter for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, a new report claims.

Deborah Wesson Gibson, who told The Washington Post that she briefly dated Moore when she was 17 and he was 34, founded the language interpreting company, Signs of Excellence, and has worked for a number of democratic campaigns, according to Alabama Local News.

The company’s Facebook page shows Gibson working for and posing with several democratic candidates at political rallies including 2016 presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, former Vice President Joe Biden, former Sen. Patrick Murphy, D-Fla., and Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla.

In the expose published by The Washington Post, Gibson said she first met Moore in 1981 when he spoke to her high school civics class. He reportedly asked her out and the pair went on to date for a few months.
She recalled her mother saying she was “the luckiest girl in the world” that Moore wanted to date her, noting that he “had this godlike, almost deity status” in Gadsen, Ala., The Post reported.
Gibson alleged that she and Moore only kissed twice and said in retrospect, she’s “glad nothing bad happened.”

“As a mother of daughters, I realize that our age difference at that time made our dating inappropriate,” Gibson told The Washington Post.
Three other women in the report also accused Moore of sexually inappropriate behavior when they were teenagers, including one woman who alleges she was 14 at the time.
Moore’s campaign labeled the allegations “baseless” and “the very definition of fake news.”


Photos: Melania Trump Brings Luxury Fashion to Great Wall of China

by JOHN BINDER


U.S. first lady Melania Trump walks along the Mutianyu Great Wall section in Beijing Friday, Nov. 10, 2017. Mrs. Trump toured China’s famed Great Wall at Mutianyu, where she rode a cable car to a watchtower, signed a guestbook and strolled along a stretch of the wall for about half an hour with a small group of aides and security officers. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
First Lady Melania Trump brought high fashion to the Great Wall of China as she toured the historic monument Friday while President Donald Trump visits Vietnam.
For her trip to see the Great Wall, Melania chose an array of luxury fashion, starting with a black turtleneck and double face cashmere wheat-colored wrap skirt from Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen’s “The Row” label.
Over her shoulders, Melania draped a black Dolce & Gabbana coat and on her feet, the Slovenian-born former model chose beige pointed flats. But the most exquisite portion of the ensemble was the scalloped-edged nude-toned wide leather Azzedine Alaïa belt. The Alaïa accessory retails at Barney’s for more than $1,400.
U.S. first lady Melania Trump walks along the Mutianyu Great Wall section in Beijing Friday, Nov. 10, 2017. Mrs. Trump toured China’s famed Great Wall at Mutianyu, where she rode a cable car to a watchtower, signed a guestbook and strolled along a stretch of the wall for about half an hour with a small group of aides and security officers. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
U.S. first lady Melania Trump visits the Mutianyu Great Wall section n Beijing Friday, Nov. 10, 2017. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
U.S. first lady Melania Trump, right, walks along the Mutianyu Great Wall section in Beijing, China, Friday, Nov. 10, 2017. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
U.S. first lady Melania Trump reacts to photographers as she walks along the Mutianyu Great Wall section in Beijing, China, Friday, Nov. 10, 2017. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Melania stunned during a state dinner in China the day before in an embellished Asia-inspired Gucci dress that featured giant puff fur sleeves and a side-slit that revealed the First Lady’s long legs and pale pink stilettos, as Breitbart News reported. The ensemble was easily Melania’s most high fashion outfit while on the overseas trip across Asia.
U.S. President Donald Trump talks with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping as first lady Melania Trump stands at left at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Thursday, Nov. 9, 2017. (Thomas Peter/Pool Photo via AP)
U.S. President Donald Trump, accompanied by U.S. first lady Melania Trump, second from right, and Chinese first lady Peng Liyuan, right, arrives for a state dinner at the Great Hall of the People, Thursday, Nov. 9, 2017, in Beijing. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder.
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Helen and Moe Lauzier



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