MIAMI — A former worker on President Donald Trump's 2016 campaign claims in a lawsuit filed Monday that he abruptly grabbed her by the hand and planted an unwanted kiss on her face during a Florida meeting with staff and volunteers.
Alva Johnson, who lives in the Huntsville, Alabama area, contends in the federal lawsuit that Trump made the nonconsensual advance in August 2016 in Tampa, Florida. She says he "grasped her hand and did not let go" and kissed her on the corner of her mouth as she turned slightly away.
"The forced and unwanted kiss was deeply offensive to Ms. Johnson," the lawsuit says, adding that she suffered "emotional distress, psychological trauma, humiliation, embarrassment, loss of dignity, invasion of privacy and other damages."
The lawsuit, also reported earlier Monday by The Washington Post and The New Yorker , seeks unspecified money damages and an order preventing the president from "grabbing, kissing or otherwise assaulting or harassing women without prior express consent."
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders called Johnson's allegations fabricated and said other people who were there say it did not take place.
"This accusation is absurd on its face. This never happened and is directly contradicted by multiple highly credible eye witness accounts," Sanders said.
At the time, Johnson's main job with the Trump campaign was to manage a fleet of recreational vehicles that served as traveling offices throughout Florida. According to the lawsuit, Trump visited one of these RVs in Tampa before a rally there when the unwanted kiss took place.
"He told her he knew she had been on the road for a long time and that she had been doing a great job. He also told Ms. Johnson that he would not forget about her, and that he was going to take care of her," Johnson claims in the lawsuit.