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Back when Donald Trump's love life was tabloid heaven, a Trump spokesman with intimate knowledge of the businessman's personal relationships offered juicy stories about a failing
marriage, a new live-in paramour and three other girlfriends he was juggling at once. The spokesman identified himself as John Miller. But The Washington Post says it was actually Trump,
posing as his own publicist on the phone with a reporter who wondered why Miller's voice sounded so familiar. The Post has unearthed a recording of that 1991 phone call. The voice on
the phone describes Trump as irresistible to women. "He gets called by everybody in the book, in terms of women," says the voice. "He's got a whole open field,
really." On NBC's "Today" show Friday, Trump denied being the voice on the phone. "I don't know anything about it," he said. But he owned up to it at the
time, describing the Miller call as a "joke gone awry," said the Post. Trump also testified in a 1990 court case that he occasionally used the name John Miller and disclosed that
his favorite alias was John Baron. In the call with People magazine reporter Sue Carswell, the "spokesman" said "actresses just call to see if they can go out with him and
things." He said Madonna "wanted to go out with him" and "came in a beautiful evening gown and combat boots" to hang out with Trump at the Plaza Hotel, which he
owned. "He's got zero interest that night," said the man known as Miller, apparently meaning they did not have sex. Trump's marriage to Ivana Trump was ending that year
and he was with Marla Maples, who would become his second wife. He was also seeing three other women, said the "spokesman," including model Carla Bruni. Carswell, now at Vanity
Fair, told the Post she played the recording to Maples, who confirmed the call was from Trump himself and cried upon hearing him say that a ring he had given her was not meant to imply an
engagement - although their engagement was announced weeks later. Carswell says Maples persuaded Trump to invite her out with the two of them to make up for the trickery. A Trump supporter
in Congress, GOP Rep. Duncan Hunter of California, said what happened back then "has no bearing on who he is today." "It doesn't matter to me one whit," he said.
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