Lawyer: Cain accuser alleged 'inappropriate behaviors'

WASHINGTON (AP) - A lawyer for a woman who accused presidential candidate Herman Cain of sexual harassment says she complained about a 'series of inappropriate behaviors' in good faith and accepted a financial agreement...

WASHINGTON (AP) — A lawyer for one of Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain’s accusers said Friday she alleged “several incidents of sexual harassment” in a complaint filed more than a decade ago.

The lawyer, Joel Bennett, said his client accepted a financial settlement as part of an agreement to leave her job at the National Restaurant Association shortly after lodging the complaint. Bennett did not name the woman, whom he said had decided not “to relive the specifics” of the incidents in a public forum.

Cain has denied ever sexually harassing anyone as he tries to overcome the controversy and resume normal campaign activities.

In a statement late in the day, the restaurant association said Cain had disputed the woman’s allegations at the time she made them more than a decade ago. He was CEO of the organization at the time of the alleged incidents.

Bennett’s comments to reporters outside his law office came at a time Cain was making a concerted effort to show he would no longer allow the controversy to dominate his unlikely challenge for the GOP presidential nomination.

Cain drew cheers of support Friday from conservative activists as he delivered a speech focused on the U.S. economy. He is trying to convert his meteoric rise in opinion polls into a campaign organization robust enough to compete with Mitt Romney, Rick Perry and other rivals in early primary and caucus states.

WATCH JOEL BENNETT’S REMARKS ON THE HERMAN CAIN ALLEGATIONS:
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In an appearance before the Americans For Prosperity Foundation, the career businessman pitched his trademark 9-9-9 economic program and referred only elliptically to the controversy that has overshadowed his campaign in recent days. “I’ve been in Washington all week, and I’ve attracted a little bit of attention,” he said to knowing laughter from his audience.

Not everyone sounded ready to let it fade, despite Cain’s repeated denials.

In Georgia, the state party chairwoman, Sue Everhart, said, “I think he has to completely put it behind him or it will continue to be a problem. He’s got to do the housekeeping duties and clean this up.”

She suggested Cain should coax the restaurant trade group to permit one of his accusers to make a public statement. That was before the woman’s lawyer read her statement, with the trade group’s permission.

The accuser, whose identity has not been made public, signed a confidentiality agreement when she left the organization more than a decade ago after accusing Cain, then the trade group’s head, of sexual harassment. At the time of her departure, she received a financial settlement. The lawyer declined to say how much it had been.

At least two other women have made similar allegations, and a former pollster for the restaurant association has said he witnessed yet another episode.

The controversy surfaced as Cain, a black man in a party that draws its support overwhelmingly from white voters, was rising to the top in public opinion polls. His campaign announced Friday that donations so far this week have totaled $1.6 million, described as a fourfold increase over the average take for an entire month.

Official figures won’t be available for weeks, but to judge from Cain’s existing campaign organization, it could hardly come at a better time for him.

In Iowa, where caucuses kick off the campaign year on Jan. 3, Cain has a modest presence at best.

He let more than two months lapse between visits on Aug. 13 and Oct. 22, and aides say they don’t expect him to return to the state until Nov. 19.

He employs four full-time staff in the state, while Perry and Rep. Michel Bachmann of Minnesota each have 10 on their campaign payroll. Romney, who is still evaluating how strenuously to compete in the state, also has a bigger staff than Cain.

Cain also trails his rivals in the endorsement competition in Iowa, an important but hardly foolproof indication of a candidate’s viability.

Lisa Lockwood, a spokesman for Cain’s campaign in Iowa, said he has the support of Dean Kleckner, a former state Farm Bureau president and a party activist, and Pottawattamie County Chairman Jeff Jorgenson.

By contrast, Romney, Perry, Bachmann and former Sen. Rick Santorum have netted endorsements from state lawmakers and local party officials whose own networks could potentially prove beneficial.

So far, Cain has not run television commercials in the state, unlike Bachmann, Perry and Rep. Ron Paul of Texas.

In South Carolina, which hosts the first Southern state caucus, Cain has a staff of four and shows evidence of grassroots support. He won a straw poll of 110 women at a state Federation of Republican Woman meeting last weekend, followed closely by former Speaker Newt Gingrich, Bachmann and Romney.

Perry appears to have the largest organization in the state, and enjoys the support of roughly a dozen state lawmakers as well as one member of the state’s congressional delegation, Rep. Mark Mulvaney.

Nationally, Cain also lags several of his rivals in fundraising, based on reports filed through the end of September, the most recent available.

At the time, Perry, the Texas governor, reported cash on hand of $15 million. Romney, the former Massachusetts governor making his second presidential run, reported $14.6 million in the bank.

Cain’s cash on hand was $1.3 million, and his filing indicated he was more reliant on small donors — those giving $200 or less — than either Romney or Perry.

While polls are notoriously fickle, particularly before the first ballots are cast in a presidential race, Cain shot up rapidly in recent weeks, largely at Perry’s expense, and his aides were eager to circulate the results of a Washington Post survey taken as the sexual harassment controversy was unfolding.

It showed him in a statistical tie for first with Romney, who had 24 percent support to 23 for Cain. Perry had 13, followed by Gingrich with 12.

Seven in 10 Republicans polled said reports of the allegations don’t matter when it comes to picking a candidate.

But in a sign of possible danger ahead, the poll found that Cain slipped to third place among those who see the accusations as serious, and Republican women were significantly more likely than men to say the allegations make them less apt to support the businessman. The survey found that support for Cain was basically steady over the four nights of interviewing, though new accusations were surfacing.

In South Carolina, LaDonna Riggs, chairwoman of the Spartanburg County Republican Party, said she had seen nothing so far that would cause party activists to abandon Cain. “You give me some substance to the questions and then we can talk,” she said.

“If there’s truth to it, then it could hurt him. But right now, it’s just allegations,” said Cyrus Hill, a 67-year-old retiree from Granger, Iowa. “Allegations aren’t going to end him.

Dave Roszak, 51 and a resident of Clive, Iowa, said, “If it turns out he isn’t being honest, it will take him down.”

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Associated Press writers Tom Beaumont and Phil Elliott in Iowa, Steve Peoples in New Hampshire and Jim Davenport in South Carolina contributed to this story.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.

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