Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s accuser goes public: 5 takeaways

Nafissatou Diallo, 32, breaks her silence, offering Newsweek new details on what allegedly happened in room 2806 of New York’s Sofitel hotel  

Nafissatou Diallo reveals the life-changing events that lead her to accuse Dominique Strauss Kahn of sexual assault.
(Image credit: Newsweek)

The embattled hotel housekeeper who rocked the global political world in May with accusations of sexual assault against Dominique Strauss Kahn — then the International Monetary Fund chief and a likely candidate to replace Nicolas Sarkozy as president of France — has broken her silence in a tearful, three-hour interview with Newsweek, and an on-camera interview with ABC News to air Tuesday night (Good Morning America broadcast a preview on Monday). In recent weeks, the prosecution’s case against Strauss-Kahn, who pleaded not guilty, has begun to unravel, as investigators say they’ve caught his accuser in a number of lies and contradictions. Now, his accuser — Nafissatou Diallo, an illiterate, 32-year-old Guinean immigrant and widow — tells Newsweek that she's going public to counter the media's unfair portrayal of her. (Strauss-Kahn's lawyers call the media campaign an "unseemly circus.") What can we learn from Diallo's tale of what happened at the Sofitel hotel on May 14? Here, five takeaways:

1. A sexual encounter almost certainly took place

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