The Columbus Dispatch

GOP senators sideline prosecutor they brought in

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — With Christine Blasey Ford’s testimony over, Republican­s on the Senate Judiciary Committee sidelined the woman they brought in to question Ford about her allegation that Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when they were teenagers.

Republican senators, largely silent while Ford was in the witness chair, aggressive­ly defended Kavanaugh after the nominee strongly denied the allegation­s of Ford and other women.

If they were concerned about the optics of having 11 men question an alleged victim of sexual assault, those concerns were largely gone with Kavanaugh in front of them.

The woman who posed questions to Ford, Arizona prosecutor Rachel Mitchell, remained in the room but sat mute while the afternoon wore on.

It was another turn in what was clearly an awkward day for Mitchell. She typically tries to put people accused of sex crimes in prison. Instead, she was in the unusual and difficult position of trying to chip away at Ford’s credibilit­y.

And she was doing it on behalf of the 11 Republican men on the Senate Judiciary Committee who preferred not to question Ford themselves, and in the glare of television lights and with a strict five-minute time limit that seemed to get in her way repeatedly.

As her time for questionin­g Ford was coming to an end, Mitchell herself seemed to give voice to her exasperati­on with her task when she rhetorical­ly asked Ford about the best way to question victims of sex crimes.

“Would you believe me that no study says that this setting in five-minute increments is the way to do that?” Mitchell asked.

One Democratic senator, a former prosecutor who is not on the committee, said Mitchell had a “tough job.”

Sen. Claire McCaskill of Missouri said: “I can’t imagine doing either a direct examinatio­n or a cross-examinatio­n in fiveminute increments. And she’s not used to crossexami­ning people who are telling the truth.”

In her very first exchange Arizona prosecutor Rachel Mitchell conducted the GOP questionin­g of Christine Blasey Ford in the morning, but in the afternoon the Republican senators on the Judiciary Committee took back the floor when Judge Brett Kavanaugh appeared. with Ford, Mitchell began by expressing sympathy for Ford, who had said she was “terrified” to testify. Said Mitchell: “I just wanted to let you know, I’m very sorry. That’s not right.” But then she turned to her task, asking a series of small questions about the accuracy of statements Ford made.

The tenor of the questions suggested Mitchell was trying, if gently, to question the reliabilit­y of Ford’s recollecti­ons and portray Ford as a pawn of Democrats who are out to stop Kavanaugh at any cost.

In one example, Mitchell pointed out that Ford did not mention Kavanaugh’s name as her attacker between 1982, when the event allegedly took place, and 2012, when she was in couples therapy with her husband. Mitchell also asked Ford why she only contacted Democratic lawmakers about her allegation.

Ford replied that she contacted her representa­tive in Congress — Rep. Anna Eshoo, a Democrat — and Eshoo recommende­d contacting Feinstein, a California senator and the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee.

Later, Mitchell pressed Ford repeatedly to reveal who paid for a polygraph exam that Ford took in the late summer. One of her lawyers, Debra Katz, interjecte­d: “Let me put an end to the mystery. Her lawyers paid for the polygraph.”

When Mitchell asked why the polygraph was done near a Washington­area airport, Ford replied that it was to accommodat­e her as she headed to her grandmothe­r’s funeral.

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