A Hollywood stuntwoman who worked with California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on the 1991 film "Terminator 2" filed a lawsuit against the former actor on Monday, claiming the Schwarzenegger campaign defamed her in an attempt to discredit her sexual harassment allegations.
On the eve of Gov. Schwarzenegger's Oct. 7 election victory, Rhonda Miller told reporters that he had accosted her in his makeup trailer, lifting her shirt and photographing her breasts.
The lawsuit also alleges that the actor-turned-governor groped her while she worked on his 1994 film "True Lies."
Schwarzenegger denied the charges.
But problems arose when his campaign released information on Miller's lengthy arrest record, which, according to her attorney Paul Hoffman, pertained to a different Rhonda Miller.
"Miss Miller has never been arrested in her life. She's never been convicted of anything," Hoffman told reporters on Monday. "She's a nice woman. And what they did was not very nice."
Marty Singer, a longtime lawyer for Schwarzenegger, told CNN that Miller's harassment claims were "totally fabricated" and insisted that her case "is absolutely without merit."
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