Donald Trump Accuses Joe Scarborough Of Been Involved In Death Of A District Office Aide
It looks like Donald Trump is bent on linking former Florida congressman Joe Scarborough to the death of his district office aide in 2001. In an attempt to promote these allegations, the president resorted to Twitter, posting numerous tweets including one that claims opening a cold case against Scarborough wasn't originally his idea.
According to the president's tweets, opening a case against the MSNBC anchor is a thought that has been considered for years, even before he joined the chorus in 2016 when Joe Biden and his ex-wife Mika would interview him. Trump said he couldn't help thinking whether or not Joe could be involved in such a horrible thing.
While he claims he wasn't sure about Biden's involvement, but he thought the former vice president was an overenthusiastic person. The president wrote that he knew Biden well, which is why he has a slew of unanswered questions that he will refrain from bringing up now, adding that Law enforcement eventually will demand answers from him.
While no proof shows these accusations are true, Trump is referring to the demise of Lori Klausutis 19 years ago. Back in 2017, a Washington Post report debunked these unfounded allegations against Scarborough.
According to authorities, Klausutis lost her consciousness due to abnormal heart rhythm, collapsed, and struck her head. She was found dead lying on her back, with her head near a desk in Scarborough's Fort Walton Beach-based office 16 years ago. Police didn't hint at any sort of suspicious activity in its 2001 report.
The Post says Klausutis' death was deemed an accident by the medical examiner, adding that the president is wrong about it been a cold case. In reality, there weren't a myriad of unanswered and obvious questions as Trump claims, because it was a simple case of a 28-year-old woman succumbing to an undiagnosed heart condition, making it a tragedy and not a murder.
According to the Post, Trump is simply focused on scoring points with his political base regardless of who it damages. Klausutis' widower T.J. Klausutis decided to take action last week and wrote a letter to Twitter chief executive Jack Dorsey, urging him to remove the president's tweets, CNN Business reported.
Timothy pointed out that Trump is telling his nearly 80 million Twitter followers that his wife was murdered by her boss, Scarborough. The president's son followed in the footstep of his father and directly attacked his wife by tweeting to his followers in a bid to spread this lie about her been killed by the former U.S. Rep.