Three more women have come forward with accounts of inappropriate touching involving former Vice President Joe Biden, a report in the Washington Post said Wednesday.

The women — Sofie Karasek, Vail Kohnert-Yount and Ally Coll — told the Washington Post stories similar to those of four other women who have described unwanted touching by the Democratic politician.

In 2016, Karasek was one of 51 sexual assault victims who appeared onstage at the Oscars with singer Lady Gaga.

Biden had introduced her, and after the performance Karasek met with him and shared a story about a sexual assault victim who committed suicide, according to the report. Biden responded by holding her hands and placing his forehead on hers.

The encounter was snapped in a photograph, which was widely shared.

Kohnert-Yount, a former White House intern, described similar actions by the vice president during an encounter when she was walking out of the basement of the West Wing.

Biden walked over to shake her hand, she told the newspaper. “He then put his hand on the back of my head and pressed his forehead to my forehead while he talked to me,” she said.

“I was so shocked that it was hard to focus on what he was saying,” she added.

In 2008, Ally Coll, a former Democratic staffer who now works at a non-profit group that fights sexual harassment, told the Washington Post that Biden held her “for a beat too long” at a reception she was helping to set up.

“There’s been a lack of understanding about the way that power can turn something that might seem innocuous into something that can make somebody feel uncomfortable,” Coll told the newspaper.

Biden vowed in a Twitter video Wednesday to be more mindful of his unwanted touching.

“Social norms have begun to change, they’ve shifted and the boundaries of protecting personal space have been reset,” Biden said in the clip, which ran just over two minutes. “I get it.”