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Gegli news - Theresa May denies she 'was aware of Green's pattern of behaviour' - 12/22/2017 2:15:07 PM 2:15:07 PM 

The woman who claimed Damian Green acted inappropriately says a No 10 aide told her the PM knew about his "pattern of behaviour".

 Theresa May has denied knowing last year about allegations of inappropriate behaviour made against Damian Green.

The writer Kate Maltby claimed she told a Downing Street aide in 2016 about the former First Secretary of State making advances towards her.

She also alleged that the senior aide informed her it was part of a "pattern of behaviour" and that "the Prime Minister knows".

Ms Maltby told The Daily Telegraph: "I would never, never have told my story about Damian Green if I did not believe I was exposing a pattern of behaviour of which I thought the Prime Minister was personally aware."

On a visit to Cyprus on Friday morning, Mrs May said: "I first learnt of these allegations when Kate Maltby wrote about them in The Times.

"I recognise that Kate Maltby was obviously extremely distressed by what has happened. Damian Green has recognised that. He said that in the letter that he wrote to me. He has apologised and I think that's absolutely the right thing to do."

Ms Maltby claimed Mr Green "fleetingly" touched her knee during a meeting in a pub in 2015, and a year later sent her a "suggestive" text message after she was pictured wearing a corset in a newspaper.

The allegations triggered a Cabinet Office probe into his conduct.

It led to Mrs May sacking her de facto deputy after he made "misleading" statements about allegations that police found pornography on computers in his parliamentary office in 2008.

Reporting the probe's findings, Cabinet Secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood said that with "competing and contradictory accounts of what were private meetings" it was "not possible to reach a definitive conclusion on the appropriateness of Mr Green's behaviour with Kate Maltby in early 2015, though the investigation found Ms Maltby's account to be plausible".

When Mr Green left office on Wednesday he said he did not recognise Ms Maltby's version of events, stating: "I deeply regret the distress caused to Kate Maltby following her article about me and the reaction to it.

"I do not recognise the events she described in her article, but I clearly made her feel uncomfortable and for this I apologise."

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Video:Were the police right to leak information from the Green investigation?

During her overseas trip, Mrs May told reporters she was "very sad" about having to sack Mr Green.

"He and I have known each other since university and he's a good - was a good - minister. A minister in a number of areas. He and I worked together in the Home Office before I became Prime Minister."


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