Bill Clinton sexual-harassment accuser Kathleen Willey has launched an anti-Hillary Clinton website titled "A Scandal A Day."

The site is partially aimed at recruiting other women who may have been assaulted by the former president.

Calling Hillary Clinton "without a doubt the most corrupt politician that this nation has ever seen," Willey announced the launch of her new website Sunday on "Aaron Klein Investigative Radio," broadcast on New York's AM 970 The Answer and Philadelphia’s NewsTalk 990 AM and online.

Willey, the former volunteer aide to Bill Clinton who says she was sexually harassed by the president in the 1990s, explained the website is part information-oriented and part political activism.

TRENDING: Support for Black Lives Matter sees massive plunge, polls say

"The Clintons have made it extremely easy for me," she said in the radio interview. "I don’t have to do a lot of research, because it's not just a scandal a day. It's about two or three scandals a day. So what I'm doing is kind of a compilation of these scandals and explaining them in simple terms so most people can understand what's going on, and what they’re up to and why they are lying every day."

Like the reporting you see here? Sign up for free news alerts from WND.com, America's independent news network.

One section of Willey's website asks readers: "Are you being harassed, stalked, intimidated or persecuted by a person in position of power or public trust?"

Listen to Klein's interview with Willey:

Willey told Klein she was going to add another question to the site to recruit other women who may have been targeted by Bill Clinton.

And she said she previously heard from other possible Bill Clinton sex victims.

Stated Willey: "In light of what's happened with Bill Cosby, I thought I’m going to add to that. ‘If you or any one you know has been harassed, sexually harassed, assaulted or intimidated by Bill Clinton please send your name and email address and you can be assured that your anonymity will be ensured and it will be honored and you will be safe and we will make sure that you are safe.'"

"I think it's time for people to start coming forward," she maintained. "I know I’m not the only one."

Willey said that while she was writing her 2007 book, "Target: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill and Hillary Clinton," she was anonymously contacted by other women who claimed to have been sexually assaulted by Bill Clinton.

She told Klein the women who called her "were afraid to talk to me because they were afraid my phone was being tapped."

"They didn’t give me their names. They gave me incidences, time, places, where things happened and what happened."

She continued: "And frankly I was pretty horrified by some of the things they told me. And they were scared to death of Hillary Clinton. And I don’t blame them.

Get the whole story on how sexual harassment at the hands of Bill Clinton turned into bullying at the hands of the Clinton administration in Willey's book "Target: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill and Hillary Clinton."

“She is the one that everybody should be scared of. All of these women. Hillary Clinton is without a doubt the most corrupt human being, the most corrupt politician that this nation has ever seen, man or woman."

"And now it's time to come up and stand up and tell what happened once and for all," she said, referring to the other women who may have been victimized by Hillary's husband. "There's safety in numbers."

What do YOU think? Will more women claim Bill Clinton sexually harassed them? Sound off in the WND poll

As WND reported, Willey and her husband, Ed, were Democratic activists who founded Virginians for Clinton and helped send Bill and Hillary to the White House in 1992.

While serving as a volunteer in the White House and facing financial hard times, Willey says she met with Bill Clinton in the Oval Office to request a paying position. But instead of getting help, she says, she was subjected to "nothing short of serious sexual harassment."

Distraught, Willey fled Clinton's presence, only to discover that her husband Ed had committed suicide that same tragic afternoon.

Later, she was drawn "unwillingly" into the Paula Jones lawsuit, the Ken Starr investigation and impeachment proceedings.

Willey also claims the Clinton tag team was behind a string of events that can only be described as a mob-style intimidation campaign to keep her silent. It even included breaking into her home to steal her memoirs of the events.

Nonetheless, Willey wrote about her experiences with Bill Clinton's sex addiction and Hillary Clinton’s revenge in her book "Target: Caught in the Crosshairs of Bill & Hillary Clinton."