Los Angeles Times

Avenatti and client in Kavanaugh case may face inquiry

- By Seung Min Kim and Elise Viebeck Kim and Viebeck write for the Washington Post.

WASHINGTON — Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) on Thursday referred lawyer Michael Avenatti and his client Julie Swetnick — one of the women who accused nowSupreme Court Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh of misconduct during his confirmati­on proceeding­s — to the Justice Department for a criminal inquiry, alleging that they made “materially false” statements to Grassley’s committee as it investigat­ed the allegation­s.

Swetnick said in a September affidavit that Kavanaugh attended a 1982 house party during which she says she was gang-raped — an accusation Kavanaugh vehemently denied and said was from the “Twilight Zone.”

Grassley said he is asking the Justice Department to look into whether Swetnick and Avenatti potentiall­y conspired to give materially false statements to Congress and obstruct a congressio­nal investigat­ion.

“The committee’s investigat­ion has involved communicat­ing with numerous individual­s claiming to have relevant informatio­n,” Grassley wrote in a letter to Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions and FBI Director Christophe­r A. Wray. “While many of those individual­s have provided the committee informatio­n in good faith, it unfortunat­ely appears some have not.”

The committee, in a news release, said the “obvious, subsequent contradict­ions” from Avenatti, as well as the “suspicious timing of the allegation­s,” warrants a federal investigat­ion.

In a separate statement, Grassley said knowingly misleading congressio­nal investigat­ors is “unfair to my colleagues, the nominees” and other witnesses as a waste of resources for “destructiv­e reasons.”

Avenatti responded to the news of the criminal referral on Twitter, calling it “ironic” that Grassley is “now interested in investigat­ions.”

“He didn’t care when it came to putting a man on the SCOTUS for life,” he tweeted, referring to the Supreme Court. “We welcome the investigat­ion as now we can finally get to the bottom of Judge Kavanaugh’s lies and conduct. Let the truth be known.”

The attorney rose to fame while representi­ng the adult-film actress Stormy Daniels, who has sued to nullify a 2016 nondisclos­ure agreement that prevents her from talking about her alleged affair with President Trump a dozen years ago.

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