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![]() Arnold Schwarzenegger at a San Diego rally to kicking off his bus tour on Thursday: "To those people that I offended I want to say that I am deeply sorry and I apologize." Story Tools RELATED Schwarzenegger lays out his 100-day plan The Morning Grind: Davis campaign: Our ads speak no evil SPECIAL REPORT .. Gallery: Who's running .. Map: Petition signatures .. Davis faces recall vote .. Special Report YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS Arnold Schwarzenegger California Recall or Create your own Manage alerts | What is this? SAN DIEGO (CNN) -- Facing allegations of sexual impropriety in the final stretch of California's gubernatorial recall campaign, Republican front-runner Arnold Schwarzenegger said Thursday he had "behaved badly" in the past and apologized to anyone he offended. "Yes, it is true that I was on rowdy movie sets, and I have done things that were not right, which I thought then was playful," he said. "But now I recognize that I have offended people, and to those people that I have offended, I want to say to them I am deeply sorry about that, and I apologize, because this is not what I tried to do. "When I am governor, I want to prove to the women that I will be ... a champion of the women," he said. "And I hope that you will give me the chance to prove that." The allegations were published Thursday in a front-page article in the Los Angeles Time and come just five days before the October 7 recall election. Voters will decide whether to toss Democratic Gov. Gray Davis out of office and, in a second part of the ballot, pick a replacement from 135 names in case the recall is approved. Asked about the allegations against Schwarzenegger during an appearance in Santa Monica, Davis refused to give his personal reaction. He said he would leave it up to the voters of California to decide how much weight to give the allegations. "Anything I would say would be superfluous," said Davis, who in recent days has cast the recall race as a battle between himself and Schwarzenegger. But Democratic Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, slipping behind Schwarzenegger in recent polls, was much less reticent in embracing the controversy. Speaking to reporters, he even read aloud the California Penal Code's definition of sexual battery. "It is more than just boorish behavior," he said. "These multiple allegations by these women, I believe, will dog Arnold and make him less effective in dealing with the issues that are confronting California. ... "Women cannot be approached like that in the workplace. It's absolutely wrong," he said. "If there are women who are coming forward with these allegations, they should be resolved." Despite his apology, Schwarzenegger characterized the charges as an effort to derail his campaign, which is leading in the polls. "As you know, this morning, they have begun with the tearing down," he said. "But I know that the people of California can see through this trash politics." Earlier in the day, Schwarzenegger said some of the accusations made against him were not true, but he was not specific. His campaign issued a statement saying the story represented "a desperate attempt by Democrats so close to the election" to smear him. However, the Los Angeles Times said its report was not prompted by information from rival campaigns. ABC's Good Morning America also reported Thursday that it had learned similar information without the help of any campaign operatives. When asked if Davis would make use of the allegations against Schwarzenegger in the final stretch of the campaign, spokesman Peter Ragone said, "It's not something that we are talking about. It's something for the voters to decide about." Six women alleged that Schwarzenegger touched them in a sexual manner without their consent, according to the newspaper. The alleged acts date back to the 1970s, and the latest was in 2000. The newspaper contacted the women in the course of a seven-week investigation; none of them approached the newspaper, the Times said. Schwarzenegger has been dogged throughout the campaign by allegations that he mistreats women, prompting some women's groups to protest at his appearances. He has denied being a misogynist, and his wife, TV newswoman Maria Shriver, also has defended him against charges that he treats women badly. A spokeswoman for Shriver said she would not comment on the latest allegations. She planned to continue campaigning for her husband, though she was not planning to join him on a four-day bus tour that started Thursday, the spokeswoman said. Earlier comments Fueling the controversy were comments Schwarzenegger made in a 1977 magazine article describing a sexual encounter that he and other bodybuilders had with a woman in a gym, as well as a comments he made in a book published the same year about treating women as sex objects. Schwarzenegger now says his comments back then were exaggerations -- deliberately designed to be "outrageous" to draw attention to the fledgling sport of bodybuilding. Schwarzenegger's apology was made in front of supporters in San Diego, at the kick-off of his bus tour, which will take him up and down the state to rally voters in the campaign's final days. He left the hall smiling and waving from the steps of a bus festooned with a huge portrait of himself, christened the "California Comeback Express." The song, "We're Not Going to Take It," from the heavy metal band Twisted Sister, played in the background as the bus rolled slowly outside. "We are now in the last few days. It is hand-to-hand combat. We are in the trenches now. We have to fight every inch of the way until we get there," he said. Two of the six women in the Times report were identified; the other four spoke on the condition of anonymity, saying they feared retaliation. None of the six has filed legal action against Schwarzenegger. None alleged that they were raped. Three of the women said Schwarzenegger grabbed their breasts; another said he reached under her skirt and grabbed her buttocks. The fifth woman said he groped her and tried to remove her bathing suit in an elevator, and the sixth charged that he pulled her on his lap and asked whether anyone had performed a certain sexual act on her. "I was just shocked -- shocked to the point where I almost didn't how to react, because it was so out of the blue and so unexpected," said E. Laine Stockton, who told the Times that Schwarzenegger reached under her T-shirt and touched her breast at the famed Gold's Gym in Santa Monica in 1975. One of the unidentified women told the newspaper that after Schwarzenegger touched her breast on a Santa Monica street in 1980, she made it clear that she didn't consider it playful. She told the Times that she told him, "If I was a man, I would bust your jaw." Schwarzenegger, she said, just laughed. --CNN Correspondents Frank Buckley and Kelly Wallace contributed to this report |
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