I was looking at Wikipedia's listing for the trump sexual allegations, and they've re-arranged it slightly:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Trump_sexual_misconduct_allegations

 Quote:
1 Accusations filed in court against Trump
1.1 Ivana Trump (1989)
1.2 Jill Harth (1992)
1.3 Summer Zervos (2007)
1.4 Alva Johnson (2019)

2 May 2016 New York Times story
3 Recording controversy and second 2016 presidential debate

4 Public allegations of unwanted physical contact since 2016
4.1 Jessica Leeds (1980s)
4.2 Kristin Anderson (1990s)
4.3 Cathy Heller (1997)
4.4 Temple Taggart McDowell (1997)
4.5 Karena Virginia (1998)
4.6 Mindy McGillivray (2003)
4.7 Rachel Crooks (2005)
4.8 Natasha Stoynoff (2005)
4.9 Juliet Huddy (2005 or 2006)
4.10 Jessica Drake (2006)
4.11 Ninni Laaksonen (2006)
4.12 Cassandra Searles (2013)

5 Allegations of pageant dressing room visits
5.1 Miss Teen USA contestants
5.2 Bridget Sullivan (2000)
5.3 Tasha Dixon (2001)
5.4 Unnamed contestants (2001)
5.5 Samantha Holvey (2006)



They rearranged it to the ones who have actually file cases in court, and into a second tier of those who publicly accused Trump of inappropriate sexual behavior short of rape.

And a third tier who said he walked in the Miss America dressing rooms and saw them changing, or "He looked at me creepy" typoe stuff. Which again, in the latter two categories, is not rape or sexual assault.

At least Wikipedia is a bit more honest about that in this new reformatting of their listing.



Less clear: none of these allegations are proven (as compared with, say, Bill Clinton, or the Kennedys).

Also less clear: Many of these women either:
1) were involved in business with Trump, and only made sexxual allegations after their business didn't go their way, and thus was motivated by payback
2) were politically motivated, by women who clearly stated their allegience to Hillary Clinton as who they were voting for and "Trump has to be stopped". And adding evidence to this motive, most of them revealed their allegations in October 2016, as an orchestrated "October surprise" to cripple Trump's candidacy in the weeks before the election. Most likely orchestrated by the Hillary campaign itself.