The road to Donald Trumpâs coronation in Cleveland this week is littered with the bodies of #NeverTrumpers and their failed attempts to snatch the nomination from his tiny hands. Behind the scenes of one such effort, in the shape of a federal lawsuit charging Donald Trump with allegedly raping an underage girl, things have gotten weird.
The accuserâwho used the name Katie Johnson to file a lawsuit in Manhattan Federal Courtâalleges the Republican presidential nominee raped her in the summer of 1994, when she was 13, while attending a sex party at the New York City mansion of notorious pedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein. The claim was basically a repeat of her earlier lawsuit, filed in California in May without legal representation, which was dismissed on procedural grounds for failing to make a claim under an applicable statute.
This time around, Johnson had a team of supporters behind herâa motley crew that included anti-abortion conservative donor Steve Baer and a man who calls himself âAl Taylor,â a mysterious foul-mouthed ex-producer of The Jerry Springer Show, the two unified by one common passion: a blinding hatred for Donald Trump.
For a time, it seemed like a perfect marriage between a #NeverTrump Republican with money to spend and a penniless woman and her handler who allegedly had the ammunition to sink the Republican nominee.
But in less than a month, the strange alliance has ended.
Baer and Taylor, both eccentric in their own right, have turned on each other in a war of escalating all-caps emails. Baer now claims he is withholding additional financial support for Johnson. He and Taylor are threatening to sue one another. And Baerâs anticsâwhich include delivering an unpixelated tape, of a woman he claims to be Katie Johnson, to GOP presidential hopefuls and House Speaker Paul Ryanâallegedly brought the FBI and the police to his door.
Far from derailing the Trump train, Katie Johnson and her supporters seem to be in an out-of-control clown car whose wheels just came off.
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Taylor says he met Katie Johnson a few years ago at a party, where she allegedly told him that she had been raped as a teen by Trump. (The Guardian has convincingly reported that âTaylorâ is actually a publicity-loving conspiracy peddler named Norm Lubow, a theory that Taylor has fervently denied: âAL TAYLOR, BORN AL TAYLOR, ALWAYS BEEN AL TAYLOR AND ALWAYS WILL BE AL TAYLOR,â he signed a recent email.)
In February 2016, when it seemed possible that Trump could clinch the GOP nomination, Johnson, with Taylorâs help, decided to make what Taylor called a âmurder insuranceâ video where sheâdisguised in a wigâwould offer details of her alleged attack. They hired a videographer, Jonathann Launer, and agreed to pay him with a 20 percent stake in whatever money the tape might bring in from tabloids willing to purchase it.
In May, Johnson filed her civil suit, driven mainly, as her current attorney Tom Meagher explained in one of several interviews with The Daily Beast, to keep her rapist from winning the White House.
âOf course, she does not want her rapist to be president,â Meagher said.
According to the New York complaint, Trump allegedly âinitiated sexual contactâ with a 13-year-old Johnson at four different parties. During the fourth encounter, Johnson alleges, âTrump tied Plaintiff to a bed, exposed himself to Plaintiff, and then proceeded to forcibly rape Plaintiff. During the course of this savage sexual attack, Plaintiff loudly pleaded with Defendant Trump to stop but with no effect. Defendant Trump responded to Plaintiffâs pleas by violently striking Plaintiff in the face with his open hand and screaming that he would do whatever he wanted.â
Multiple requests by The Daily Beast for comment regarding these allegations have gone unreturned, but Trumpâs team has roundly denied them in other publications. In June, Alan Garten, an attorney for the Trump Organization, told the blog LawNewz that the allegations were âunequivocally falseâ and âpolitically motivated.â
Despite numerous attempts to meet with Katie Johnsonâand repeated promises from Meagher to produce her for an interviewâThe Daily Beast has never spoken with Trumpâs accuser.
About a week after Johnson filed the California suit, Taylor says Steve Baer texted the burner phone used to file the complaint, offering his âno strings attachedâ helpâassistance which came, both men said, in the form of cash.
Though a stranger to Taylor and Johnson, Baer was well known in conservative circles as a professional rabble rouser who delighted in taking aim at Republicans whom he thinks are less conservative than his Grand Old Party deserves. As a former head of the Illinois United Republican Fund, which supported conservative campaigns in his home state, a then-30-year-old Baer ran and lost a bid for governor of Illinois in 1990 on a platform of anti-abortion and lower taxes.
âBaer fancies himself as a foot soldier of the Republican Right. But his self-satisfied smirk and preoccupation with political pranks and hijinks are irrepressible,â wrote a reporter at the Chicago Tribune in 1994, describing Baerâs antics of staging news conferences with fake lawmakers dressed as pigs or a vampiric "Count Tax-a-Lot."
In more recent years, Baer earned a living selling reverse mortgages to senior citizens, and made a name for himself by filling the inboxes of Washington, D.C.âs power brokers with sometimes insulting, often entertaining, and incessant email campaigns outing RINOs. A 2013 report from the National Review described his rolodex as including âDavid and Charles Koch, Foster Friess, Matt Kibbe, Tony Perkins, Grover Norquist, Erick Erickson, Rick Santorum, and a host of Republican congressmen.â
Baerâs most recent claim to fame, in 2015, was a mass email peddling the Chuck Johnson-reported rumor of House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthyâs alleged affair with a colleagueâan effort that ended, victoriously in Bearâs estimation, with McCarthy withdrawing his candidacy for Speaker of the House.
Though Baer says he has never actually seen Katie Johnson, he claims he has spoken to her on the phone and watched her 48-minute video. And with sworn affidavits and a pending federal case, Bear viewed Johnsonâs allegations against Trump as a âslam dunk.â
âI believe her,â Baer told The Daily Beast.
So on May 20, Baer says, he wired $19,000 to California.
A portion of that money, $13,000, was sent to Taylor, ostensibly for Johnson, to cover a move to her own apartment, where only Taylor would know her whereabouts. âWell, thatâs what I was told,â Baer said, âThey could have gone and partied.â
The remaining cash was sent to Jonathann Launer, in exchange for his stake in the videoâs potential earnings. (Launer did not return a request for comment, but both Taylor and Baer confirmed this account.) Meanwhile, Taylor was shopping the video of Johnson to outlets like Gawker, with a suggested price tag of $1 million, and a promise to spend any funds on Johnsonâs protectionâto keep her safe from Trump and Epstein, whom Taylor contends will have her killed if they can find her. As of this writing, no one has purchased it.
That video, it seems, is the cause of the current rift.
Driven by an extreme distaste for Donald J. TrumpââHeâs a liar, a letch, a pornographer, and possibly a child rapist,â Baer saidâthe Riverside, Illinois father of 10 has couriered unpixelated versions of the film (thereby exposing Katie Johnsonâs face) to Ted Cruz, Charles Koch, Paul Ryan, John Kasich, and other conservatives and journalists, in the hope that the allegations would gain national attention.
When little response came, Baer sent follow-up emails. Lots and lots of follow-up emails.
It was, in fact, some 1,200 emails to Speaker Ryan and his staffers that Baer says brought an FBI special agent and a police officer to his door. (The FBI would not confirm that any agent had visited Baer.)
In a July 15 email to Ryan, copied to hundreds of Republican congressmen and conservative journalists, Baer wrote: âWe had a very nice visit on our front porch this morning with a great guy ... a local FBI Special Agent...who came over with a friendly policeman, each well-armed, to ask me and my brideâtoday on our 33rd wedding anniversaryâto stop sending you emails and visiting Janesville.â
Baer continues, âI have been writing you a lot about ever since, and from long before.â An email to Ryanâs office from The Daily Beast was not returned.
According to Johnsonâs attorney, Meagher, a patent lawyer who took Johnsonâs case on after reading about her hunt for representation in an online tabloid, Baer shouldnât have sent the video to anyone. âDissemination without effective blurring and voice alteration has already put her life at risk,â he wrote in an email.
Apart from his sometimes multiple daily emails, where he admonishes the mainstream media for failing to report on Johnsonâs claims and likens Paul Ryan to Joe Paterno and Donald Trump to the perverted Roman emperor Caligula, Baer also maintains the website JusticeforKatie.org, a repository for documents related to Johnsonâs case and a place to donate to the Justice for Katie Legal Fund and Trust. âArmed personal security, private detectives, researchers, transport, safe housing, lawyers, polygraph experts and paralegals are needed now,â the website claims. Baer says that so far, he has been the only contributor to the trust, which technically owns Launerâs share of Johnsonâs video, and that the fund holds $4.50.
Money is a complicating factor behind the scenes of Johnsonâs case. Johnson, who attempted to file her California lawsuit as an indigent plaintiff, seemingly has none. Meanwhile Baer seems to have plenty. Besides the $19,000 upfront, Baer said he was asked for $100,000 in exchange for Johnson agreeing to meet with detectives in New York, but instead counteroffered $30,000 âto aid with security, private investigators, and polygraph expertsâ if Johnson would just agree to go to New York before the Republican National convention in Cleveland.
She didnât go, Baer didnât send any more money, and at that point, the tenuous bond holding Baer and Taylor together apparently broke.
The two began trading insulting emailsâcopied to journalists, of course. Though many of the initial emails were labeled âoff the record,â as the barbs began to fly, that proviso was left off.
An email purportedly from Katie Johnsonâwith random words and letters capitalizedâread, âagain sorry about my KEYboard sticking I spilled some coffee on it yESTERday while reading SOME of the INAne emails YOU send out to everyone IN POlitics and the media.â In a follow-up email, Johnson referred to her herself in the third person.
In a later email, Johnsonâs attorney pointed out the letterâs strange point of view, and wrote that the emails were obviously not from his client.
âAlso, I repeat, please stop emailing me,â Meagher added.
In further emails, Taylor calls Baer a âJudas,â âBaernedict Arnold,â and says Baer should hang himself. (Taylorâs well-documented habit of verbal abuse includes instructing female reporters to âSuck his dick.â)
â[Baer] is a reckless spoiled brat who freaks out when any one questions what he is doing and we are so glad to finally have kicked him off Team Katie,â Taylor said in an email to The Daily Beast, before sending another email demanding Baer take down the Justice for Katie website and destroy all copies of the video he may hold.
Baer responded to one of Taylorâs all-caps salvos by questioning his mental state. âNorm, get some sleep. Then some help,â he wrote.
They both told The Daily Beast of their intent to sue each other.
Regardless of the love lost with Taylor, Baer doesnât fault Johnson for Trumpâs ascension.
âIt made me sick,â Baer said of Trumpâs Tuesday nomination. âWe all knew we lost, and I realized I never sent [Tom] Coburn the 48 minutes,â referring to the Johnson tape.
Coburn, the former U.S. senator from Oklahoma, was Baerâs hope for president. An anti-abortion obstetrician, Coburn reportedly said he would go along with a Hail Mary play to wrest the nomination from Donald Trump on the convention floor. But that didnât happen, and on Tuesday, Coburn told The Hill, âI have concerns for the country for both nominees. Given the choice, Iâll vote for Trump.â
Baer is convinced all Coburn needs to do is see the tape. âCoburn is going to get the 48 minutes and I donât think heâll will be able to vote for Trump,â Baer said. And regardless of Johnsonâs lawyersâ pleas, Baer doesnât plan to stop sending out the tape to anyone he believes can stop Trump.
âThey can ask but it's not going to stop me,â Baer said. âIâm going to continue to send it to whom I please. Look, she recorded the 48 minutes with her face visible and a wig. But she did it for the purpose of stopping Trump, so we all make our choices.
âIâve got the entire thing, the pixelated, non-, and watermarked. And everybody who helps run America right now, they've gotta knowâand the press has to helpâthat there is a woman named Katie Johnson who says Donald Trump raped her.â
Several of the clips from that video, with Katieâs face pixelated, are available online, posted by one âBianca Manix.â A person using the same name has posted the videos along with a âTrump Victims Uniteâ Facebook page, to other anti-Trump Facebook pages. And a Twitter account belonging to Bianca Manix has six tweets, all bearing the hashtag, #DraftCoburn.
Though he has no intention of taking down the fundraising website or burning his copies of the Johnson video, itâs unclear just how Baer will fit into Johnsonâs lawsuit going forward, if at all. But heâs done worrying about it this week.
âWe are tonight and tomorrow and the next day, at the beach,â Baer said. âWhere thereâs plenty of sandâwhich the right wing wants to stick their heads in...Iâm just going to keep telling the truth.â