She says a Hillary Clinton presidency gives her cause to fear for her life

The former Arkansas state employee who sued former President Bill Clinton for sexual harassment says she fears for her life in the event that his wife, Hillary Clinton, wins the election.

Paula Jones, the woman who received $850,000 from Bill Clinton as part of an out-of-court settlement after she claimed that he exposed himself to her in 1991 in a Little Rock, Arkansas, hotel, told Fox News that she is worried another Clinton administration could spell the end of her life.

‘Absolutely I feel that way if she gets in,’ Jones said when asked by Fox News host Sean Hannity if she fears for her life.

In the interview, Jones was sitting alongside two other women who have accused Clinton of sex crimes – Juanita Broaddrick and Kathleen Willey.

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Paula Jones (right), who accused former President Bill Clinton (left) of sexual harassment, says she fears for her life if Hillary Clinton (second from left) wins the election

Broaddrick has said that Clinton raped her while he was campaigning for Arkansas governor in 1978.

Willey, a former White House volunteer, claims she was assaulted in the 1990s by the then-president.

All three women joined Republican candidate Donald Trump prior to Sunday's televised debate.

Trump has accused Hillary Clinton of supporting her husband Bill's infidelity and destroying the lives of his mistresses.

His searing personal jibes came after Hillary branded the GOP frontrunner misogynistic.

'She's been the total enabler,' Trump said during a rally in Spokane, Washington, this past May.

'She would go after these women and destroy their lives. She was an unbelievably nasty, mean enabler, and what she did to a lot of those women is disgraceful.'

Jones (seen here in 1998) got an $850,000 out-of-court settlement from Bill Clinton. It was Jones' lawyers who first learned of Monica Lewinsky's relationship with the then-president

He did not give any examples or evidence for his claims, but added: 'Have you ever read what Hillary Clinton did to the women that Bill Clinton had affairs with? And they're going after me with women?'

In the last week, Trump has been accused by at least eight women of making unwanted advances and groping.

He was also overheard on a 2005 video making statements in which he bragged about using his celebrity status to initiate sexual contact with women.

Trump's claims have generated renewed interest in Bill Clinton's sexual dalliances which took place before and during his presidency - and his wife's role in defending him and denying the allegations.

Hillary Clinton once told a White House staffer that the administration had to 'destroy the story' of a woman who claimed in Penthouse magazine that she had an affair with Clinton, according to The Washington Post.

Donald Trump (seen left during his debate with Clinton this past Sunday in St. Louis) has accused her of acting as an 'enabler' for her husband

She also did not believe White House intern Monica Lewinsky's allegation that she and the president engaged in sexual activity - even though it later emerged that Lewinsky was telling the truth.

Jones suggested to Fox News that there is a historical record of people who have crossed paths with the Clintons who have ended up dead.

When asked by Hannity if the three women could be next, Jones replied: ‘Why wouldn’t we? I mean there have been so many things happen to so many people who are connected to the Clintons.’

In the interview, Broaddrick hit out at Hillary Clinton by saying by saying she is 'not for all women.’

She said Hillary was in the presidential race for herself.

The former nursing home administrator also accused the Democratic candidate of pressuring her into keeping quiet about the alleged incident.

Reliving their encounters with the 42nd President, Broaddrick told Fox News: 'I thought that we might possibly be able to bring this out and influence people and be able to tell them that Hillary is not for all women.’

'Hillary is only for one woman and that's herself.'

Broaddrick then went on to say she met Hillary Clinton weeks after the alleged rape.

She said: 'She comes straight to me and says to me, big smile, very pleasant voice, says to me, "I'm Hillary Clinton. It's so nice to meet you. I just want to thank you for everything that you do for Bill's campaign".'

She says Hillary grabbed her arm and pulled her close, saying, 'Do you understand everything you do?'

'I felt like at that moment, she knew everything and was saying, "You better keep quiet",' Broaddrick told Fox.

Asked why she didn't go to the police, Broaddrick said of Bill, 'He could close the doors of my business - he was the police.'

Willey said Bill Clinton's alleged actions were being trivialized by people calling his alleged actions 'infidelities.’

All three women accused Bill or Hillary Clinton of pressuring them to keep quiet about their alleged assaults and a fourth woman, Kathy Shelton, claimed Hillary Clinton besmirched her character.

The presidential candidate defended a man Shelton accused of raping her as a 12-year-old in 1975.

Clinton - then Hillary Rodham - said the alleged victim was an 'emotionally unstable with a tendency to seek out older men and engage in fantasizing' in an affidavit and also accused Shelton of falsely claiming to have been attacked before.

'If she was for children, she would not have put me through what I went through,' Shelton told Fox News.

In an Arkansas paper 10 years later, Clinton reportedly said Shelton's attacker passed a lie detector test, adding it 'forever destroyed my faith in polygraphs.’