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Ex-intern says she had 1992 fling with Indiana house speaker

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ASSOCIATED PRESS / 2017

In this 2017 photo, Speaker of the House Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, speaks to legislators at the Statehouse, in Indianapolis. A woman alleges that when she was an Indiana legislative intern in 1992, she performed oral sex on Bosma while he was married. The former Democratic intern told The Indianapolis Star for a story published today that the sexual act with Bosma was consensual, but that she felt pressured into it.

INDIANAPOLIS >> A woman alleges that when she was an Indiana legislative intern in 1992, she performed oral sex on a married Republican lawmaker who has since become the speaker of the state House of Representatives, a published report today said.

The former Democratic intern told The Indianapolis Star that the sexual act with Brian Bosma was consensual, but that she felt pressured into it. Bosma at the time was in the Republican minority in the House.

Bosma, who first became Indiana House speaker in 2004, issued a statement today denying the woman’s claims and saying he’s hired attorney Linda Pence to protect his reputation.

“This unsubstantiated story from over 26 years ago is unequivocally false,” Bosma said.

The newspaper also reported that Bosma paid Pence’s law firm more than $40,000 in campaign funds this year, in part, to gather unflattering information about the former intern, and that the woman’s family members said Pence threatened to reveal her name and unfavorable information about her if her account became public.

Pence said in a written statement to the Star that she ran a professional investigation and “witnesses/sources were not threatened or harassed.” She had no immediate comment today. She is not related to Vice President Mike Pence, Indiana’s former governor.

The Associated Press could not reach the former intern for comment.

Bosma played a leading role in investigating allegations that Republican Attorney General Curtis Hill inappropriately touched a lawmaker and several legislative staffers earlier this year. Bosma is among the state GOP leaders who have called on Hill to resign.

A law passed by the General Assembly this year requires Bosma and other legislative leaders to implement a new sexual harassment policy for lawmakers by Nov. 20. Lawmakers currently are not subject to a sexual harassment policy. Bosma initially questioned the need for the new law, but Democrats forced the issue and the General Assembly approved it.

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