- Janice Dickinson spoke to Queerty in an interview published Friday.
- She said she unknowingly stole Donald Trump's limo during a snowstorm in the 1980s.
Janice Dickinson says she unknowingly stole Donald Trump's limousine during a snowstorm to meet John F. Kennedy Jr. for a date.
The supermodel shared details about the escapade in a conversation Queerty published Friday. While discussing her life and career, Dickinson told the outlet that she "once stole Donald Trump's limousine without knowing it was his limousine."
"It was a snowstorm up in New York, a Nor'easter they call it. There were no taxi cabs anywhere. I was sitting there in the cold for a couple hours trying to get a taxi and there were none available," she said.
Dickinson said she and a friend decided to get in a nearby limo and "dive a few blocks." She told Queerty that, at the time, she'd never driven a limousine before.
"I drove it a few blocks down the street, swerving, you know, making fishtails in the street and there was no one on the road. It was a real storm," Dickinson said. "I remember this clearly because I was going there to meet John F. Kennedy Jr. for dinner. And I didn't want to miss that date, honey. Yes, he was divine. Yes, I did kiss him."
Dickinson said she didn't discover the limousine belonged to Trump until the next day. She didn't say if she faced any legal issues over reportedly taking the car.
Representatives for Trump did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.
On Tuesday, Brooke Shields spoke about her date with John F. Kennedy Jr. that ended with her taking a cab home on "The Howard Stern Show." Shields said John F. Kennedy Jr. showed his "true colors" after she refused to have sex with him.
"I had to get a cab home, which was a little less chivalrous, in my opinion," she told Stern, adding that he ignored her the following day.
"He didn't look at me and he didn't talk to me. On the one hand, I was like 'Shit.' On the other hand, I was like, 'Oh, thank God, because he still might not have talked to you,'" Shields said. "He showed his true colors in that."