my statement was a direct answer to what steelerVol stated......
maybe i am wrong for thinking more happened, maybe you are wrong for thinking nothing did, regardless my statement was a direct response to that...we cant make blanket statements like you can expect this or that because there may be naked bodies around in your workplace....
even if that is just mooning, if the mooning is unwanted.....fair or no?
I never said "nothing" happened, clearly something did. All I'm doing is looking at the full story and timeline of what she said happened ..... and it's clearly documented that she changed her story, from him "exposing himself"/mooning her, to something much more graphic and involved seven years later when she directly sued him for damages due to defamation. And since she's had another case(s) where she's sued for damages, she's been referred to as a "serial litigant"....to me that's relevant to whether or not she was being honest about what happened.
Here....this is an excerpt from an article by Clay Travis that pieces together what likely happened based on her original affidavit....
The trainer signed an affidavit that mentioned no physical contact from Peyton Manning in 1996.
She also didn't mention any contact in the interview with Tennessee, which was conducted after her sexual harassment claim. Here is a link to that document. And here's what she said then.
"She (the trainer) was working on (redacted, but it's Peyton Manning's) foot when she heard laughter and looked up to see his exposed rear end. She stated that she then pushed (Peyton Manning) and said, "You're an ass."
So this woman is on record under penalty of perjury saying that Manning never touched her back in 1996. Isn't that kind of an important detail to include in any story about this incident? She suddenly changes her story in 2003 after having made statements that don't mention him touching her seven years ago. The law generally favors the most contemporary version of events possible since it's the one least likely to be altered by memory. So it's important to note that in this trainer's original statement to the University of Tennessee as part of her sexual harassment investigation she made no mention of Manning touching her.
Who's more believable, the person telling the same story for twenty years or the person who abruptly changes her story seven years later?
Let's talk the physics of this mooning.
If Manning isn't facing her and drops his pants, wouldn't she, since she's working on his foot, have seen his pants around his ankles? I don't know about you, but when I drop my pants or shorts they end up around my ankles. She says she noticed his actions because she heard "laughter and looked up to see his exposed rear end" from others in the training room, not because his pants appeared around his ankles. That means Manning didn't even drop his pants, he just pulled them down. Which is, you know, exactly what you do when you moon someone. You just pull down your pants in the back.
It also makes it harder to see how Manning's scrotal region could ever come in contact with her -- as she has claimed since 2003 -- unless he has superhuman clinching ability, it's hard to see how Manning could keep his pants from falling down once his pants and underwear passed his ass. (Yes, this is why i went to law school, to analyze the physics of mooning.)