Less than two weeks after denying that he impersonated his own spokesman in a 25-year-old tape, Donald Trump said on a ABC News show aired today that he often used aliases throughout his business career.
However, he still denied being the voice in the 1991 recording claiming to be the mysterious Trump spokesman "John Miller".
"You know, over the years I've used aliases. And when I'm in real estate and especially when I was out in Brooklyn with my father and I'd want to buy something," the 69-year-old business tycoon said.
Asked which names he used, Trump said he liked the name "Barron," which he named his now 10-year-old son.
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"I made a very good deal using that name," Trump said, without offering specifics about the deal.
"I used an alias in terms of setting up a meeting with Mr Donald Trump, and it was, and many people in the real estate business do that. You use aliases, and you have to do it. Otherwise they find out it's you, and they charge you more money and nobody wants to pay more money," he said.
"It didn't sound like me, though, really," Trump said. "You think that sounded like me?"
"I will say this: To me, that didn't sound like my voice," Trump said on the show.