The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

The other victim — and hero — of the Kavanaugh saga

- Columnist

Every good story needs a hero, and the saga of Brett Kavanaugh’s rise to the Supreme Court has provided one: Leland Keyser.

She also became a victim when her longtime friend, Christine Blasey Ford, decided to hit refresh on a decades-old high school incident that apparently only Ford remembers.

Keyser is the other female student whom Ford named as having been at the small party where Kavanaugh allegedly pinned her down on a bed and groped her. She is also the friend who swore under penalty of perjury that she doesn’t recall such a party or, in fact, ever having met Kavanaugh. This isn’t what places Keyser on the heroes’ roster. What earns her that distinctio­n is her steadfastn­ess, at great personal suffering, in refusing to change her story despite what she describes as pressure to rethink her initial statement. According to “The Education of Brett Kavanaugh” by New York Times reporters Kate Kelly and Robin Pogrebin, some of Keyser’s erstwhile friends tried to persuade her to say she didn’t remember the party, not that it didn’t happen.

Keyser, reportedly a registered Democrat, has become increasing­ly convinced that Ford’s story isn’t true and doesn’t make sense, according to the book. Given their close friendship during their school days, isn’t it likely that Ford would have told her about such an attack? And, had Keyser been at the alleged party, since she already had her drivers license and often gave Christine a ride, wouldn’t she have taken her friend home?

According to the book, Ford’s team of friends and advisers apparently saw Keyser as an obstacle to Ford’s narrative and brainstorm­ed ways for her to get onboard. The book cites a group text among Ford’s acquaintan­ces from soon after her testimony. A man who had gone to a neighborin­g boys’ school chimed in: “Perhaps it makes sense to let everyone in the public know what her condition is.”

Keyser, a former profession­al golfer who has undergone numerous operations on her back and neck, has suffered addiction during her adult life. Although recovering, she told Kelly and Pogrebin she was concerned that this history would be used against her if she didn’t come up with a more-acceptable recollecti­on of events. When pressed, however, she refused to take the easy route and protect herself.

For her integrity and valor under perceived pressure, she has been punished.

Even Ford seemed to turn on her old friend, mentioning Keyser’s “significan­t health challenges,” during her testimony, and seeming to suggest that her friend might have diminished capacities.

On CNN’s “Reliable Sources” Sunday, Kelly pointed to Keyser’s “memory issues ... because she has a history of substance abuse, which she acknowledg­es.”

In fact, Keyser remembers very well the summer of 1982, when Ford believes the alleged incident occurred. It was the year after her grandmothe­r introduced her to golf and Keyser became consumed with the sport, according to another book published this past summer, “Justice on Trial,” by Mollie Hemingway and Carrie Severino. Keyser worked full-time in the golf pro shop at a Washington-area country club and had little time for socializin­g.

Her hard work at school and in sports paid off with stellar grades, seven varsity letters, and acceptance to the University of Virginia, followed by a profession­al golfing career and a coaching position at Georgetown University.

Today, Keyser keeps a low profile, as was always her preference. She is, indeed, in fragile health from her injuries and surgeries. But Keyser can stand tall for having remained true to her conviction­s despite being exposed and pressured by those who seemed to have used her struggles against her.

In my book, that’s heroic.

 ??  ?? Kathleen Parker
Kathleen Parker

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