Herschel Walker, a Trump-endorsed Republican nominee for the US Senate in Georgia who has opposed abortion rights, has denied a report claiming he paid for an abortion for a former girlfriend in 2009.
The Daily Beast published claims from a woman who said the former NFL star paid for her abortion when they were dating.
She said Mr Walker encouraged her to end the pregnancy, saying that the time wasn’t right for a baby, the news outlet reported.
The woman, who was not named, claimed her allegations were supported by a receipt showing her $575 payment for the procedure, along with a get-well card from Mr Walker.
The Daily Beast reported her bank deposit records showed the image of a $700 personal cheque from Mr Walker dated five days after the abortion receipt.
Mr Walker, 60, rejected the claims as a “flat-out lie” and a “repugnant hatchet job”.
In a statement posted on Twitter, he said he would file a lawsuit against the news outlet on Tuesday morning.
More on Georgia
Related Topics:
‘I never paid for an abortion’
“This is a flat-out lie – and I deny this in the strongest terms possible,” he wrote.
Advertisement
Mr Walker later addressed the allegations on Fox News.
“I can tell you right now, I never asked anyone to get an abortion. I never paid for an abortion,” he told host Sean Hannity.
Asked about the cheque, Mr Walker said: “Well, I send money to a lot of people. I give money to people all the time, because I’m always helping people, because I believe in being generous.”
The allegation against him is the latest in a series of reports about the football legend’s past that has rocked the first-time candidate’s campaign.
Earlier this year, he acknowledged reports that he had three children he had not previously talked about publicly.
The Associated Press news agency reported that a review of public records detailed accusations that Mr Walker repeatedly threatened his ex-wife’s life, exaggerated claims of financial success and alarmed business associates with unpredictable behaviour.
Walker himself has at times discussed his long struggle with mental illness.
Walker’s ‘no excuses’ stance
As a Senate hopeful, Mr Walker has supported a national ban on abortions with no exceptions for cases involving rape, incest, or a woman’s health being at risk.
“I’m for life,” Walker has said repeatedly, and when asked about whether he would allow for any exceptions, he has said there are “no excuses” for the procedure.
The former University of Georgia running back is pitted against incumbent Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock, who supports abortion rights.
Walker has often characterised abortion as “a woman killing her baby” and has said he doesn’t understand how Mr Warnock, a Baptist pastor, can support the procedure being legal.
Asked whether the latest allegations might affect the outcome in Georgia, Mr Warnock replied: “I’ll let the pundits decide.”
A motion has been filed to drop the charges against Donald Trump of plotting to overturn the 2020 US presidential election result.
Mr Trump was first indicted on four felonies in August 2023: Conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding, obstruction of and an attempt to obstruct an official proceeding, and conspiracy against rights.
The president-elect pleaded not guilty to all charges and the case was then put on hold for months as Mr Trump’s team argued he could not be prosecuted.
On Monday, prosecutors working with special counsel Jack Smith, who had led the investigation, asked a federal judge to dismiss the case over long-standing US justice department policy, dating back to the 1970s, that presidents cannot be prosecuted while in office.
It marks the end of the department’s landmark effort to hold Mr Trump accountable for the attack on the US Capitol on 6 January 2021 when thousands of Trump supporters assaulted police, broke through barricades, and swarmed the Capitol in a bid to prevent the US Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory.
Mr Smith’s team had been assessing how to wind down both the election interference case and the separate classified documents case in the wake of Mr Trump’s election victory over vice president Kamala Harris earlier this month, effectively killing any chance of success for the case.
In court papers, prosecutors said “the [US] Constitution requires that this case be dismissed before the defendant is inaugurated”.
They said the ban [on prosecuting sitting presidents] “is categorical and does not turn on the gravity of the crimes charged, the strength of the government’s proof, or the merits of the prosecution, which the government stands fully behind”.
Mr Trump, who has said he would sack Mr Smith as soon as he takes office in January, and promised to pardon some convicted rioters, has long dismissed both the 2020 election interference case and the separate classified documents case as politically motivated.
He was accused of illegally keeping classified papers after leaving office in 2021, some of which were allegedly found in his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida.
The election interference case stalled after the US Supreme Court ruled in July that former presidents have broad immunity from prosecution, which Mr Trump’s lawyers exploited to demand the charges against him be dismissed.
Mr Smith’s request to drop the case still needs to be approved by US District Judge Tanya Chutkan.
At least 1,500 cases have been brought against those accused of trying to overthrow the election result on 6 January 2021, resulting in more than 1,100 convictions, the Associated Press said.
More than 950 defendants have been sentenced and 600 of them jailed for terms ranging from a few days to 22 years.
A man has been charged with a bomb hoax after an incident outside the US embassy last week.
Police were called to the embassy in Nine Elms, south London, at 8.40am on Friday 22 November, to reports of a suspicious package.
Officers attended and a controlled explosion was carried out.
Daniel Parmenter, 43, was arrested on Sunday after a search of his home address.
Parmenter, of Kildare Terrace, Bayswater, in west London, appeared at Ealing Magistrates’ Court on Monday.
He is next due to appear in court at the Old Bailey on 23 December.
There are no current links between this investigation and any similar incidents of reported suspicious packages in recent days, the Metropolitan Police said.
It was the first time a US president had been convicted of or charged with a criminal offence.
Trump had tried to cover up “hush money” payments to a porn star in the days before the 2016 election.
When Stormy Daniels‘ claimsof a sexual liaison threatened to upend his presidential campaign, Trump directed his lawyer to pay $130,000 (£102,000) to keep her quiet.
The payment buried the story and he later won the presidency.
Trump denied the charges and said the case was politically motivated. He also denied the sexual encounter took place.
New York State Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan today delayed the sentencing, which had been due to take place on Tuesday.
Advertisement
The office of district attorney Alvin Bragg had asked the judge to postpone all proceedings until Trump finishes his four-year presidency, which starts on 20 January.
Trump’s lawyers say the case should be dismissed because it will create “unconstitutional impediments” to his ability to govern.
Responding to Friday’s decision, a Trump campaign spokesman said: “The American People have issued a mandate to return him to office and dispose of all remnants of the Witch Hunt cases.”
The judge set a 2 December deadline for Trump’s lawyers to file their motion, while prosecutors have until 9 December to respond.
He did not set a new date for sentencing or indicate when he would rule on any motion to throw out the case.
Even before Trump’s win in this month’s election, experts said a jail term was unlikely and a fine or probation more probable.
But his resounding victory over Kamala Harris made the prospect of time behind bars or probation even less likely.
Trump, 78, was also charged last year in three other cases.
One involved him keeping classified documents after he left office and the other two centre on alleged efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss.
A Florida judge dismissed the documents case in July, the Georgia election case is in limbo, and the Justice Department is expected to wind down the federal election case as it has a policy of not prosecuting a sitting president.
Trump last week nominated his lawyers in the hush money case, Todd Blanche and Emil Bove, for senior roles in the Justice department.
When he re-enters the White House, Trump will also have the power to shut down the Georgia and New York cases.