The Sentinel-Record

‘Thorough’ FBI report bolsters GOP’s hopes for Kavanaugh

- ALAN FRAM LISA MASCARO

WASHINGTON — A pair of undeclared Republican senators accepted a confidenti­al new FBI report into sex-abuse allegation­s against Brett Kavanaugh Thursday as “thorough,” bolstering GOP hopes for confirmati­on as the Senate plunged toward showdown votes on President Donald Trump’s embattled Supreme Court nominee.

One of the senators hinted he was open to supporting Kavanaugh as party leaders set a pivotal preliminar­y vote for 10:30 a.m. Friday. If that succeeds, a final roll call was expected Saturday as the long, emotional battle over the conservati­ve jurist drew toward its climax.

Six days after Trump reluctantl­y ordered the FBI to scrutinize the accusation­s— which allegedly occurred in the 1980s and Kavanaugh has denied — leading GOP lawmakers briefed on the agency’s confidenti­al document all reached the same conclusion: There was no verificati­on of the women’s past claims and nothing new.

Democrats complained that the investigat­ion was shoddy, omitting interviews with numerous potential witnesses, and accused the White House of limiting the FBI’s leeway. Those not interviewe­d in the reopened background investigat­ion included Kavanaugh himself and Christine Blasey Ford, who ignited the furor by alleging he’d molested her in a locked room at a 1982 high school gathering.

A week after a televised

Senate Judiciary Committee hearing at which Kavanaugh and Ford transfixed the nation, the Capitol campus remained a stew of tension as the election-season cliff-hanger neared its conclusion. A hefty police presence added an air of anxiety, as did thousands of noisy anti-Kavanaugh demonstrat­ors who gathered outside the Supreme Court and in Senate office buildings. U.S. Capitol Police said 302 were arrested — among them comedian Amy Schumer, a distant relative of Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

“What we know for sure is the FBI report did not corroborat­e any of the allegation­s against Judge Kavanaugh,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told reporters about the document, which was sent to Congress overnight. On the Senate floor, he witheringl­y called the accusation­s “uncorrobor­ated mud.”

Earlier, Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, one of the publicly undecided Republican­s, told reporters that “we’ve seen no additional corroborat­ing informatio­n” about the claims against the 53-year-old conservati­ve jurist and said the investigat­ion had been comprehens­ive.

A second undeclared Republican, Susan Collins of Maine, also expressed satisfacti­on with the probe, calling it “a very thorough investigat­ion” and paid two visits to the off-limits room where the document was being displayed to lawmakers. She told reporters she’d not announce her position until Friday.

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, said she was “still reviewing” her decision.

While GOP leaders were not saying they’d nailed down the support needed, backing from two of those three would ensure Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on because every other Republican was poised to back him. Republican­s have a narrow 51-49 Senate majority, and Vice President Mike Pence will be available to cast a tie-breaking vote.

The trio of GOP moderates, leery of three women’s claims of alcohol-fueled sexual misconduct by Kavanaugh, had refused to let his nomination proceed last week until Trump ordered the FBI probe. The three were briefed together on the investigat­ion in the secure room senators were using to view the report. They skirted reporters for much of the day, sometimes shielded by Capitol Police.

Underscori­ng the hardening partisan lines, one of the two undecided Democratic senators said she’d oppose Kavanaugh. North Dakota Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, who faces a difficult re-election race next month, cited concerns about his “past conduct” and said she felt his heated attacks on Democrats during last week’s Judiciary Committee hearing raised questions about his “current temperamen­t, honesty and impartiali­ty.”

West Virginia’s Joe Manchin, the other undeclared Democrat, spent time looking at the report and said he would resume reading it Friday.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the Judiciary Committee’s top Democrat, said while her party had agreed to a week-long FBI probe with a finite scope, “We did not agree that the White House should tie the FBI’s hands.”

Democrats also objected to a statement by committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, who said the investigat­ion “found no hint of misconduct.” The Judiciary panel’s 10 Democrats said in a statement that based on their briefing and study of the document, “That is not true.”

Grassley also said the FBI could not “locate any third parties who can attest to any of the allegation­s,” and he said there is “no contempora­neous evidence.”

Neither side specified what they were referring to. Under rules Congress and the White House have used for years, FBI background checks are considered confidenti­al, and lawmakers and aides are not supposed to reveal details.

White House spokesman Raj Shah rebuffed Democrats’ complaints, saying, “What critics want is a never-ending fishing expedition into high school drinking.” He said the FBI reached out to 10 people and interviewe­d nine, including “several individual­s at the request of the Senate, and had a series of follow-up interviews … following certain leads.”

Senators said the documents they examined totaled about 50 pages. Some said there were notes on interviews with nine people, though others said 10.

Trump, who Tuesday scornfully mocked Ford’s Judiciary panel testimony, tweeted that Kavanaugh’s “great life cannot be ruined by mean” and “despicable Democrats and totally uncorrobor­ated allegation­s!”

Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said five of the witnesses involved Ford’s claims and four were related to Deborah Ramirez, who has asserted that Kavanaugh exposed himself to her when both were Yale freshmen.

Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., said senators would sit around a rectangula­r table reading different sections of the report while a committee aide read other parts aloud. Senators were allowed to take notes but not remove them from the room, he said. The chamber, in the Capitol Visitor Center adjacent to the Capitol, is also used for secret intelligen­ce briefings. Some lawmakers said they’d not been able to schedule time in the room until Friday.

Corker said nine of the pages were about Mark Judge, the Kavanaugh friend who Ford said also jumped on her while Kavanaugh assaulted her. Judge has said he doesn’t recall the incident.

While the FBI interviews were to focus on sexual assault allegation­s, Democrats have also questioned Kavanaugh’s drinking habits during high school and college and dishonest comments they say he has made about his background. Kavanaugh has said stories of his bad behavior while drinking are exaggerate­d.

Barring leaks, it was unclear how much if any of the FBI report would be made public.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? FBI REPORT: Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., arrives to view the FBI report on sexual misconduct allegation­s against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, on Capitol Hill on Thursday in Washington.
The Associated Press FBI REPORT: Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., arrives to view the FBI report on sexual misconduct allegation­s against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, on Capitol Hill on Thursday in Washington.

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