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Keith Ellison denies abuse allegations

The son of the Minnesota Democrat’s ex-girlfriend posted claims that Ellison abused his mother on Facebook.

Rep. Keith Ellison addresses a rally outside the US Capitol in July 2017.
Rep. Keith Ellison addresses a rally outside the US Capitol in July 2017.
Rep. Keith Ellison addresses a rally outside the US Capitol in July 2017.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Emily Stewart
Emily Stewart covered business and economics for Vox and wrote the newsletter The Big Squeeze, examining the ways ordinary people are being squeezed under capitalism. Before joining Vox, she worked for TheStreet.

Minnesota Democratic Rep. Keith Ellison, vice chair of the Democratic National Committee and current candidate for Minnesota attorney general, denied allegations that he abused and mistreated his ex-girlfriend Karen Monahan.

Monahan’s son, Austin Aslim Monahan, 25, made the allegations in a Facebook post on Saturday and claimed there is video of the abuse, though he said in an interview later he did not have the tape. His mother tweeted that he is telling the truth.

“Karen and I were in a long-term relationship which ended in 2016, and I still care deeply for her well-being,” Ellison said in a statement. “This video does not exist because I never behaved in this way, and any characterization otherwise is false.”

In a lengthy statement posted over the weekend, Austin Monahan said he and his brother had watched their mother “come out of pure hell” after ending her relationship with Ellison. He alleges that in mid-2017, he found more than 100 text and Twitter messages between his mother and Ellison as well as the two-minute video showing Ellison dragging her from a bed, calling her a “fucking bitch,” and asking her to leave his home. He wrote that his mother asked her children to keep the alleged abuse under wraps but was now planning to share her story.

“My mom has always tried to protect me and my brother,” he wrote. “She doesn’t have to protect us anymore and we aren’t letting her stand alone.”

Washington Post reporter Dave Weigel posted Ellison’s statement denying the accusations, and noted that the story has been circulating for some time in Minnesota but hadn’t been published because it didn’t stand up to media scrutiny.

A Twitter account that appears to belong to Monahan tweeted that she is “so proud” of her son for his courage and asked people to leave him alone. She also said her son’s statements were true.

The account also posted purported text messages sent between Monahan and Ellison from December 2017, some of which appear to have contained Ellison’s phone number.

Ellison’s spokesperson did not respond to my inquiry as to whether the phone number shown indeed belongs to Ellison. I called the number and it rang and went to voicemail, with a message that appears to be from Ellison saying it’s him. The phone number can also be tied to him online.

Others have him listed as “Dc” and are allegedly from April 2018. Some of the messages appear to be intentionally cut off.

Briana Bierschbach at MPR News reports that Monahan shared more than 100 text and Twitter messages between her and Ellison with the outlet. The communications show them discussing their breakup, some of which were positive, some of which were not, but “there is no evidence in the messages reviewed by MPR News of the alleged physical abuse.” In one exchange, Monahan told Ellison she wanted to write about their “journey” in a chapter of her book, which he called a “horrible attack on my privacy.”

Monahan’s son told the Star Tribune that he wasn’t in possession of the alleged video showing abuse but stood by his post. “I only know what I saw and I know what’s true,” he said.

Debra Hilstrom, who is running against Ellison to be Minnesota’s Democratic nominee for state attorney general in Tuesday’s primary there, tweeted Monahan’s son’s post. Ellison is the biggest name in Tuesday’s primary election for Minnesota attorney general.

Monahan told MPR News that she and Ellison met the night before he announced his attorney general run because he was worried she would discuss their relationship.

This is not the first time Ellison has faced misconduct allegations. In 2006, a woman named Amy Alexandar claimed that Ellison ostracized her and smeared her name after having an extramarital affair with her in the 1990s and then again in the 2000s. In 2005, Ellison filed a restraining order against her after what he described as phone and email harassment. She subsequently tried to get a restraining order against him, which a judge denied, ordering her to stop repeating allegations of an affair or intimidation. Ellison subsequently agreed to dismiss his restraining order against her if she no longer contacted him.

Ellison’s spokesperson did not return a request for comment on those allegations.

The Democratic National Committee has not yet commented on the allegations against Ellison. His Minnesota attorney general primary race is on Tuesday.

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