Fashion PR powerhouse Kelly Cutrone has come forward to say that music mogul Russell Simmons attempted to rape her in 1991.

Cutrone, who starred in MTV’s The Hills and America’s Next Top Model, told Page Six she was 26 at the time of the alleged incident. She says she bumped into Simmons — a casual acquaintance — at a party. The two ended up dropping by an apartment she believes belonged to Simmons.

“He pushed me into his apartment and then he threw me down on the floor and literally tried to grab … take my clothes off of me,” Cutrone said. “And I started kicking him really, really hard, screaming, telling him to get the (expletive) off of me. And that I would have him killed if he ever (expletive) laid a hand on me.”

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Cutrone said after the alleged ordeal, she ran out of the apartment.

"I remember running out the door and getting a cab and all I remember was that I got in a cab and I remember a feeling — which was so crazy — of, ‘Oh my god. Somebody just tried to rape me. What do I do?’ "

Cutrone said she did not press charges because "the energy of going to the police and pressing charges against him was overwhelming to me.”

A friend Cutrone’s, Tatijana Shoan, backed up the account to Page Six. Simmons' publicist released an existing statement from the mogul "vehemently" denying "all these accusations."

"These horrific accusations have shocked me to my core and all of my relations have been consensual," Simmons said in the statement.

Cutrone said she’s coming forward because she was horrified by Simmons’ #NotMe campaign, which he unveiled on Instagram on Thursday, to deny the growing allegations against him.

On Thursday, New York Police Department spokeswoman Jocelyn Clarke said the department is looking into allegations against Simmons: "The NYPD has received information regarding allegations involving Russell Simmons in the NYC area and our detectives are in the process of reviewing that information."

Nine new women came forward alleging sexual misconduct or assault by Simmons Wednesday. Four said Simmons raped them.

In a story published Wednesday by The New York Times, the four new women detailed a pattern of alleged violent sexual behavior by Simmons, disclosing incidents from 1988 to 2014.

The Los Angeles Times followed shortly after with accounts from five additional women accusing Simmons of sexual misconduct over three decades.

The New York Times reported that in 1995 Drew Dixon was working her dream job as an executive at Def Jam Recordings, which Simmons co-founded. The mogul regularly harassed her and exposed his erect penis to her, she said, and later that year raped her in his downtown Manhattan apartment. She quit Def Jam soon after but was subsequently harassed by another boss, L.A. Reid.

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Singer Tina Baker says Simmons raped her in the early 1990s when he was her manager, she told the Times. “The second he agreed to work with me, my budget increased, the label was paying more attention to me,” Ms. Baker recalled. But after the assault, she said, “I went into oblivion.”

In 1987, music journalist Toni Sallie met Simmons while on assignment. The two dated briefly, and remained cordial, she told the Times. But in the fall of 1988, she says the mogul invited her to his Manhattan apartment for a party he was hosting for his girlfriend. When Sallie arrived, the place was empty except for Simmons, she recalled. Saying he wanted to show her the apartment, Simmons led her to his bedroom.

“He pushed me on the bed and jumped on top of me, and physically attacked me,” she said. “We were fighting. I said no.” He raped her, she said, and a year later attacked her at a music conference in South Florida.

The Los Angeles Times followed with a rape allegation from Sherri Hines dating back to 1983. Hines, who was in the all-female hip-hop group Mercedes Ladies, says she ran into Simmons at a New York nightclub one night when she was 17 or 18. He invited her to check out his nearby offices. “The next thing I knew, he was pinning me down and I was trying to fight him and he had his way,” she said. “I left crying.”

The Los Angeles Times also alleges Simmons aggressively harassed a woman, Lisa Kirk, in a nightclub bathroom in 1988; attempted to force actress Natashia Williams-Blach to perform oral sex in 1996; exposed himself to massage therapist Erin Beattie in 2005; and uses his high-profile L.A. yoga studio, Tantris, to pursue women.

Simmons has previously been accused of assault by Keri Claussen Khalighi, an aspiring model who was 17 at the time of the alleged incident. Khalighi said Simmons assaulted her and coerced her into performing oral sex while Brett Ratner was present, according to a report from The Los Angeles Times on Nov. 19. Simmons has denied the allegations.

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On Nov. 30, screenwriter Jenny Lumet, daughter of director Sidney Lumet, became the second woman to publicly accuse Simmons in a guest column for The Hollywood Reporter, alleging the mogul sexually assaulted her in 1991 when she was 24.

Following Lumet's essay, Simmons apologized for being “thoughtless and insensitive” and announced he was stepping down from his companies. "This is a time of great transition ... I don’t want to be a distraction so I am removing myself from the businesses that I founded," he wrote at the time. "As for me, I will step aside and commit myself to continuing my personal growth, spiritual learning and above all to listening."

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But after new reports surfaced Wednesday, Simmons vowed to "relentlessly fight against any untruthful character assassination that paints me as a man of violence."

Simmons says he "already apologized for the instances of thoughtlessness in my consensual relations" but categorically rejects the current allegations reported by the New York Times and Los Angeles Times, which he describes as ranging from "patently untrue to the frivolous and hurtful."