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In August 2008, Edwards admitted to an extramarital affair, which was initially reported in December 2007 by the National Enquirer [1] but was given little attention outside the tabloid press and political blogosphere.
Edwards hired Hunter to make a behind-the-scenes film of the campaign, a perfect cover for their secret affair to continue while they were on the road together. But nine months after Hunter joined the campaign, their illicit bliss was shattered when Elizabeth Edwards heard a cell phone ring.
Jake Tapper is revisiting the infamous John Edwards affair for his upcoming episode of United States of Scandal — rewinding the clock with none other than Edwards' onetime mistress, Rielle...
Former presidential candidate John Edwards was accused of funneling nearly $1 million in donor contributions to support his pregnant mistress and criminally charged with a campaign finance...
Jun. 3, 2011 -- John Edwards was indicted today over massive sums of money spent to keep his mistress in hiding during the peak of his 2008 campaign for the White House. The former senator and presidential hopeful had previously admitted to having an affair with Hunter, 42, who later give birth to his daughter Frances Quinn.
WASHINGTON — Former presidential candidate John Edwards, who won nationwide praise and sympathy as he campaigned side by side with his cancer-stricken wife, Elizabeth, admitted in shame Friday...
John Edwards, who was the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 2004 and a leading contender for the party's presidential nomination in 2008, was indicted by a grand jury in North Carolina...
It was the encounter that would unceremoniously hoist former Senator John Edwards’s extramarital affair into full public view: a visit last month with the woman and her baby in a hotel room...
O n May 3, former Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards acknowledged that a federal investigation had been opened into whether his campaign improperly gave money to a woman with whom...
John Edwards' nationally televised confession of an affair had its roots in an odd place — supermarket tabloids.