The Telegram (St. John's)

Kavanaugh’s accuser wants FBI probe before she testifies

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Christine Blasey Ford wants the FBI to investigat­e her allegation that she was sexually assaulted by Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh before she testifies at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing next week, her lawyers said in a letter to the panel.

The lawyers wrote that Ford, who is now a college professor in California, wants to co-operate with the committee. But in the days since she publicly accused Kavanaugh of the assault when they were teens at a party 35 years ago, the lawyers said, she has been the target of “vicious harassment and even death threats.” Her family has relocated, they said.

An FBI investigat­ion “should be the first step in addressing the allegation­s,” the lawyers wrote in the Tuesday letter, which was obtained by The Associated Press.

The developmen­t came after President Donald Trump showered sympathy on his embattled nominee and as Senate Republican­s and Democrats fought determined­ly over who should testify at a high-stakes hearing on the allegation just six weeks before major congressio­nal elections.

Trump has already rejected the idea of bringing in the FBI to reopen its background check of Kavanaugh. Should he order

such a review, it would likely delay a confirmati­on vote until after the election. Republican­s hope to have Kavanaugh confirmed by Oct. 1, the start of the next Supreme Court term.

In a tweet Tuesday night, Trump wrote: “The Supreme Court is one of the main reasons I got elected President. I hope Republican Voters, and others, are watching, and studying, the Democrats Playbook.”

Meanwhile, Republican­s are suggesting that Ford, whose allegation­s have upended Kavanaugh’s nomination - the

committee’s vote was already pushed from Thursday to likely next week — will have one chance to testify, and one chance only.

“Monday is her opportunit­y,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., said Tuesday, a line that was echoed by other Republican­s throughout the day.

Mcconnell expressed confidence that Kavanaugh would be confirmed. “I’m not concerned about tanking the nomination,” he said.

The GOP chairman of the

Judiciary Committee, Chuck Grassley of Iowa, said an FBI investigat­ion wouldn’t have bearing on Ford’s testimony so “there is no reason for further delay.”

Grassley said the committee offered Ford “the opportunit­y to share her story” in a public or a private hearing, or staff interviews, “whichever makes her most comfortabl­e. The invitation for Monday still stands.”

Said Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, a key Republican on the panel, said, “We should proceed as planned.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-iowa, walks through a tunnel towards the Dirksen Senate Building on Capitol Hill in Washington Wednesday.
AP PHOTO Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-iowa, walks through a tunnel towards the Dirksen Senate Building on Capitol Hill in Washington Wednesday.

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