BUSTED: Mother of Roy Moore Accuser Contradicts Key Detail of Daughter’s Sexual Advancement Claim

I liked the one woman who said he bought her a drink in the restaurant. Considering it was a dry county at the time, how could that have happened. I think this was the big Democrat woman who is campaigning for Moore's opponent.
You got a link for that?
 
Oh what a tangled web we weave when we first practice to decieve:


They say if you want to catch a liar, merely let them talk. In the case of Judge Roy Moore accuser Leigh Corfman, just let her mother talk.

In an interview with Breitbart News, Corfman’s mother Nancy Wells contradicted a key detail of her daughter’s sexual advancement claim against the Alabama GOP Senate candidate. As Breitbart News reporter Aaron Klein noted on Sunday, “Wells, 71, says that her daughter did not have a phone in her bedroom during the period that Moore is reported to have allegedly called Corfman – purportedly on Corfman’s bedroom phone – to arrange at least one encounter.” Breitbart News reports: Citing Corfman, the Postreported: After her mother went into the courtroom, Corfman says, Moore asked her where she went to school, what she liked to do and whether he could call her sometime. She remembers giving him her number and says he called not long after. She says she talked to Moore on her phone in her bedroom, and they made plans for him to pick her up at Alcott Road and Riley Street, around the corner from her house.
Wells, Corfman’s mother, was asked by Breitbart News: “Back then did she have her own phone in her room or something?”
“No,” she replied matter-of-factly. “But the phone in the house could get through to her easily.

What did Corfman's mom mean by that? Do you remember that some lucky teens had their own phone line so the rest of the family could occasionally make calls themselves? Do you think perhaps that is what she meant?

You gotta watch Breitbart. They're sneaky and hope their readers will miss it.

No, it doesn't mean she had her own phone line. It means precisely the opposite.
I know. Is that why the mom said "No"? Read that whole thing again more slowly and see if the light dawns.

She either had her own line or she didn't. The mother says she didn't. What "light" are you referring to?
 
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So, is this Roy Moore's defense?
 
Oh what a tangled web we weave when we first practice to decieve:


They say if you want to catch a liar, merely let them talk. In the case of Judge Roy Moore accuser Leigh Corfman, just let her mother talk.

In an interview with Breitbart News, Corfman’s mother Nancy Wells contradicted a key detail of her daughter’s sexual advancement claim against the Alabama GOP Senate candidate. As Breitbart News reporter Aaron Klein noted on Sunday, “Wells, 71, says that her daughter did not have a phone in her bedroom during the period that Moore is reported to have allegedly called Corfman – purportedly on Corfman’s bedroom phone – to arrange at least one encounter.” Breitbart News reports: Citing Corfman, the Postreported: After her mother went into the courtroom, Corfman says, Moore asked her where she went to school, what she liked to do and whether he could call her sometime. She remembers giving him her number and says he called not long after. She says she talked to Moore on her phone in her bedroom, and they made plans for him to pick her up at Alcott Road and Riley Street, around the corner from her house.
2 of three are now exposed as liars...WaPo caught slandering and lying once again...
 
She did not say the phone was on her bedroom, she said she talked to him on the phone in her bedroom. If you recall those days we all had like 30 foot long handset cords so you could walk away from where the phone was jacked to the wall. I didn't have a phone in my bedroom but I talked on the phone a lot while sitting in my bedroom. And I am the same age as this woman.

Not even a good try.

Beat me to it - i did the same thing in high school
 
She did not say the phone was on her bedroom, she said she talked to him on the phone in her bedroom. If you recall those days we all had like 30 foot long handset cords so you could walk away from where the phone was jacked to the wall. I didn't have a phone in my bedroom but I talked on the phone a lot while sitting in my bedroom. And I am the same age as this woman.

Not even a good try.

We never had any 30 foot cord on our phone. In those days, most parents wouldn't allow their kids to yak on the phone in their bedrooms where they couldn't hear what was being said. Why would her mother point out that she didn't have a phone if it was still possible that she could use the family phone in her bedroom?

Furthermore:

"She says she talked to Moore on her phone in her bedroom, and they made plans for him to pick her up at Alcott Road and Riley Street, around the corner from her house."​
Oh...so because YOU didn't have one.....no one had one. This is so enlightening watching the trumpanzees jump back and forth between denial and approval.

At that time I don't think the phone company even allowed you to have a longer phone line. The phone company used to control what you could do with your phone very tightly. It wasn't even your phone, actually. You rented it from the phone company. It wasn't until the later half of the 70s that the phone company started giving you more choices. That's when those push button trimeline phones appeared. I recall very distinctly that previously only the rotary dial kind were available. If you wanted a phone in another room you had to pay the phone company for another line. That's why AT&T was such an oppressive monopoly.
 
She did not say the phone was on her bedroom, she said she talked to him on the phone in her bedroom. If you recall those days we all had like 30 foot long handset cords so you could walk away from where the phone was jacked to the wall. I didn't have a phone in my bedroom but I talked on the phone a lot while sitting in my bedroom. And I am the same age as this woman.

Not even a good try.

Beat me to it - i did the same thing in high school

How old are you?
 
Rotary phone. No cell phones.

Perhaps it was a portable phone? I graduated HS in 79 and we had one.. Before that, I dragged the phone in my parents room that had around a 25 foot cord into mine.

Gateway Pundit? LoL

The world's first mobile phone call was made on April 3, 1973, when Martin Cooper, a senior engineer at Motorola, called a rival telecommunications company and informed them he was speaking via a mobile phone.​
 
She did not say the phone was on her bedroom, she said she talked to him on the phone in her bedroom. If you recall those days we all had like 30 foot long handset cords so you could walk away from where the phone was jacked to the wall. I didn't have a phone in my bedroom but I talked on the phone a lot while sitting in my bedroom. And I am the same age as this woman.

Not even a good try.

We never had any 30 foot cord on our phone. In those days, most parents wouldn't allow their kids to yak on the phone in their bedrooms where they couldn't hear what was being said. Why would her mother point out that she didn't have a phone if it was still possible that she could use the family phone in her bedroom?

Furthermore:

"She says she talked to Moore on her phone in her bedroom, and they made plans for him to pick her up at Alcott Road and Riley Street, around the corner from her house."​
Oh...so because YOU didn't have one.....no one had one. This is so enlightening watching the trumpanzees jump back and forth between denial and approval.

At that time I don't think the phone company even allowed you to have a longer phone line. The phone company used to control what you could do with your phone very tightly. It wasn't even your phone, actually. You rented it from the phone company. It wasn't until the later half of the 70s that the phone company started giving you more choices. That's when those push button trimeline phones appeared. I recall very distinctly that previously only the rotary dial kind were available. If you wanted a phone in another room you had to pay the phone company for another line. That's why AT&T was such an oppressive monopoly.
This DID happen in the later half of the 70's--'79 to be exact. And you could buy your 30 foot handset cord from the Phone Store. That's where I got mine.
 
Oh what a tangled web we weave when we first practice to decieve:


They say if you want to catch a liar, merely let them talk. In the case of Judge Roy Moore accuser Leigh Corfman, just let her mother talk.

In an interview with Breitbart News, Corfman’s mother Nancy Wells contradicted a key detail of her daughter’s sexual advancement claim against the Alabama GOP Senate candidate. As Breitbart News reporter Aaron Klein noted on Sunday, “Wells, 71, says that her daughter did not have a phone in her bedroom during the period that Moore is reported to have allegedly called Corfman – purportedly on Corfman’s bedroom phone – to arrange at least one encounter.” Breitbart News reports: Citing Corfman, the Postreported: After her mother went into the courtroom, Corfman says, Moore asked her where she went to school, what she liked to do and whether he could call her sometime. She remembers giving him her number and says he called not long after. She says she talked to Moore on her phone in her bedroom, and they made plans for him to pick her up at Alcott Road and Riley Street, around the corner from her house.


Haha, oh man...better move to Alabama and vote repeatedly, because this garbage isnt going to save the crazy man.
 
Rotary phone. No cell phones.

Perhaps it was a portable phone? I graduated HS in 79 and we had one.. Before that, I dragged the phone in my parents room that had around a 25 foot cord into mine.

Gateway Pundit? LoL

The world's first mobile phone call was made on April 3, 1973, when Martin Cooper, a senior engineer at Motorola, called a rival telecommunications company and informed them he was speaking via a mobile phone.​

In those days a "mobile phone" was the size of a brick and cost $5000.

I think you mean a cordless phone. I don't recall those being around before AT&T was broken up. That didn't happen until 1982.
 
Oh what a tangled web we weave when we first practice to decieve:


They say if you want to catch a liar, merely let them talk. In the case of Judge Roy Moore accuser Leigh Corfman, just let her mother talk.

In an interview with Breitbart News, Corfman’s mother Nancy Wells contradicted a key detail of her daughter’s sexual advancement claim against the Alabama GOP Senate candidate. As Breitbart News reporter Aaron Klein noted on Sunday, “Wells, 71, says that her daughter did not have a phone in her bedroom during the period that Moore is reported to have allegedly called Corfman – purportedly on Corfman’s bedroom phone – to arrange at least one encounter.” Breitbart News reports: Citing Corfman, the Postreported: After her mother went into the courtroom, Corfman says, Moore asked her where she went to school, what she liked to do and whether he could call her sometime. She remembers giving him her number and says he called not long after. She says she talked to Moore on her phone in her bedroom, and they made plans for him to pick her up at Alcott Road and Riley Street, around the corner from her house.


Haha, oh man...better move to Alabama and vote repeatedly, because this garbage isnt going to save the crazy man.

Facts are not going to save him? It's enlightening to understand that you believe facts don't matter.
 
Rotary phone. No cell phones.

Perhaps it was a portable phone? I graduated HS in 79 and we had one.. Before that, I dragged the phone in my parents room that had around a 25 foot cord into mine.

Gateway Pundit? LoL

The world's first mobile phone call was made on April 3, 1973, when Martin Cooper, a senior engineer at Motorola, called a rival telecommunications company and informed them he was speaking via a mobile phone.​

In those days a "mobile phone" was the size of a brick and cost $5000.

I think you mean a cordless phone. I don't recall those being around before AT&T was broken up. That didn't happen until 1982.
My goodness, you are certainly investing a lot in this............hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
 
In those days a "mobile phone" was the size of a brick and cost $5000.

I think you mean a cordless phone. I don't recall those being around before AT&T was broken up. That didn't happen until 1982.

Thanks for the correction, - I STILL win ... but more bigly :)

A jazz musician named Teri Pall invented a version of the cordless phone in 1965 but could not market her invention, as its 2-mile (3.2 km) range caused its radio signals to interfere with aircraft communications. In 1968, she sold her rights to the cordless phone to a manufacturer who modified it for practical use.​
 
Oh what a tangled web we weave when we first practice to decieve:


They say if you want to catch a liar, merely let them talk. In the case of Judge Roy Moore accuser Leigh Corfman, just let her mother talk.

In an interview with Breitbart News, Corfman’s mother Nancy Wells contradicted a key detail of her daughter’s sexual advancement claim against the Alabama GOP Senate candidate. As Breitbart News reporter Aaron Klein noted on Sunday, “Wells, 71, says that her daughter did not have a phone in her bedroom during the period that Moore is reported to have allegedly called Corfman – purportedly on Corfman’s bedroom phone – to arrange at least one encounter.” Breitbart News reports: Citing Corfman, the Postreported: After her mother went into the courtroom, Corfman says, Moore asked her where she went to school, what she liked to do and whether he could call her sometime. She remembers giving him her number and says he called not long after. She says she talked to Moore on her phone in her bedroom, and they made plans for him to pick her up at Alcott Road and Riley Street, around the corner from her house.


Haha, oh man...better move to Alabama and vote repeatedly, because this garbage isnt going to save the crazy man.

Facts are not going to save him? It's enlightening to understand that you believe facts don't matter.

See, this is a demonstration of your terribly biased unlogic. You hear ONE thing that suits you, and suddenly it's a fact. While, of course , everything else that doesn't suit you is a lie. Which, of course, you are claiming about just about everything else this same person says.

And no, this "factoid" is not going to save him. Are you delusional? The testimony to his character is piling up. Like I said, better move to Alabama....
 
In those days a "mobile phone" was the size of a brick and cost $5000.

I think you mean a cordless phone. I don't recall those being around before AT&T was broken up. That didn't happen until 1982.

Thanks for the correction, but i STILL win ... but more bigly :)

A jazz musician named Teri Pall invented a version of the cordless phone in 1965 but could not market her invention, as its 2-mile (3.2 km) range caused its radio signals to interfere with aircraft communications. In 1968, she sold her rights to the cordless phone to a manufacturer who modified it for practical use.​

They may have been invented before that, but AT&T didn't allow you to use phones made by other manufacturers until it was broken up.
 
She did not say the phone was on her bedroom, she said she talked to him on the phone in her bedroom. If you recall those days we all had like 30 foot long handset cords so you could walk away from where the phone was jacked to the wall. I didn't have a phone in my bedroom but I talked on the phone a lot while sitting in my bedroom. And I am the same age as this woman.

Not even a good try.

On her phone in her bedroom means the kitchen phone with a long cord.

Well, her bedroom was upstairs and across the house...well over 60feet from the kitchen.

You can’t prove it wrong.

Unless you have a certified floor plan of the house, you can't prove it right.
 

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