Herschel Walker accuser reveals slew of damning evidence, including love letters, photos, and audio

A woman who said she had a decadelong relationship with Georgia GOP Senate hopeful Herschel Walker claimed Wednesday that the football star pressured her to get an abortion in 1993.

“He encouraged me to have an abortion and gave me the money to do so,” said the woman, who was identified only as “Jane Doe,” in a Zoom call with reporters.

She added, “Herschel Walker is a hypocrite and not fit to be a U.S. senator.”

The accuser, who met the football legend in the 1980s and says the two continued an affair into the 1990s, had voice recordings, hotel receipts, and a handwritten poem in which he allegedly declared his love.

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The woman provided evidence of the romantic relationship and Walker’s knowledge that the woman was about to terminate her pregnancy.

“We don’t need people in the U.S. Senate who profess one thing and do another,” she said. “Herschel Walker says he is against women having abortions, but he pressured me to have one.”

Doe said she came forward because she heard Walker “deny the allegations by another woman who claimed he had paid for her abortion, and, particularly, I saw him state that the woman’s claims were not true because he never signed any card using the letter ‘H.’ I knew that was not true because he had often signed letters to me using ‘H.'”

Doe said she met Walker in the 1980s. They apparently started off as friends speaking on the phone for hours at a time, several times a week.

“He told me he had problems with his marriage, and wanted to end his marriage,” she said. “Quite frankly, we fell in love.”

The two allegedly began a romantic relationship when he was playing with the Dallas Cowboys in November 1987.

Doe was living in Dallas a few miles from where Walker lived.

“He came to my home several times a week to engage in an intimate relationship,” she said.

When the Cowboys traded Walker to the Minnesota Vikings in 1989, Doe said she “felt as though I had been traded as well.”

The couple continued their romantic relationship, the woman said.

Doe said she stayed in his house and was “very devoted to Herschel, and he gave me the impression he was very devoted as well.”

“He repeatedly told me how much he loved me, often in writing, and reiterated he wanted to end his marriage,” she said, adding that he often came up with excuses why he didn’t file for divorce.

She said that Walker met with her parents on multiple occasions.

In June 1992, when Walker was traded to the Philadelphia Eagles, Doe said the pattern continued. She would meet him at his games.

In April 1993, Doe found out that she was pregnant.

“I was surprised because I had been on birth control during my entire relationship with Herschel,” she said. “I really didn’t know what to do. I was confused, uncertain, and scared.”

Doe said she discussed the pregnancy with Walker several times and that he “encouraged me to have an abortion and gave me the money to do so.”

She went to a clinic in Dallas but couldn’t go through with it.

“I left the clinic in tears,” she said. “When I told Herschel what had happened, he was upset and said he was going to go back to the clinic with me the next day for me to have the abortion. He then drove me to the clinic the following day and waited for hours in the parking lot until I came out. He then drove me to get medications and supplies as prescribed and drove me home.”

“I was devastated because I felt that I had been pressured into having an abortion,” she said. After the abortion, Doe said Walker began distancing himself from her. She added that she left Dallas the following day and did not go back for the next 15 years because she was “so traumatized by what Herschel had put me through.”

Walker responded to the allegations at a campaign event Wednesday, saying, “I’m done with this foolishness. I’ve already told people this is a lie and I’m not going to entertain.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham, standing alongside Walker at the event, added, “I’ve seen this movie before,” referencing the sexual misconduct allegations leveled at Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh during his confirmation hearings. He criticized Doe’s attorney, Gloria Allred, as a “celebrity lawyer from California.”

Walker has voiced strict anti-abortion policies, but a bombshell report released earlier this month by the Daily Beast accused Walker of paying for another woman’s abortion and then sending her a get-well card. The woman, whom Walker claimed not to know but is allegedly the mother of one of his children, prompted Walker’s son Christian to go on a scathing social media rant about his father.

The younger Walker claimed his famous father purposely misled voters by orchestrating a false narrative about having a happy home life. 

“I’ve stayed silent for nearly two years as my whole life has been lied about publicly,” Christian Walker said in the first of two videos posted to Twitter. “I did one campaign event, then said I didn’t want involvement.”

He added in a subsequent post that he had stayed quiet through a litany of scandals involving his father, including claims he had “all these random kids across the country, none of whom he raised.”

During a debate in Savannah earlier this month, Walker flatly denied the first abortion allegation.

“I said that was a lie, and I’m not backing down,” he said.

Walker and his Democratic opponent, Sen. Raphael Warnock, are in a high-stakes contest that could determine which political party controls the upper chamber of Congress next year. Despite the scandals, the Republican Party, both local and national, has continued to support Walker. Gov. Brian Kemp told the Washington Examiner he would vote for Walker in the Nov. 8 election.

Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL), the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, and Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) have both stumped for Walker in Georgia. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Georgia Rep. Mike Collins will be hitting the campaign trail for Walker in Georgia on Thursday.

A Walker win would be a major coup for Republicans who saw Georgia, once a reliably red state, break for Democrats in the 2020 presidential election as well as two Senate runoffs.

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Following the Daily Beast report, Walker’s Senate campaign raised over $500,000.

Calls to Walker by the Washington Examiner seeking comment were not returned.

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