The New Zealand Herald

Investigat­ors contact judge’s second accuser

- Michael Balsamo

The FBI has contacted the first of two women who came forward last week with accusation­s of sexual assault against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh as it launches its additional background investigat­ion following Friday’s Senate hearing.

The bureau has contacted Deborah Ramirez, a Yale University classmate of Kavanaugh’s who alleges he shoved his genitals in her face at a party where she had been drinking and become disoriente­d, her lawyer said yesterday.

Ramirez’s lawyer, John Clune, said agents want to interview her and she has agreed to co-operate. Ramirez has said Kavanaugh exposed himself to her at a party in the early 1980s.

On Saturday President Donald Trump ordered the FBI to reopen Kavanaugh’s background investigat­ion. Senate leaders agreed to delay a final vote on Kavanaugh’s nomination to allow for the one-week FBI investigat­ion. The Senate Judiciary Committee has said the probe should be limited to “current credible allegation­s” against Kavanaugh and be finished by Saturday.

Democratic Senator Dick Durbin said it was his understand­ing that there would be an FBI investigat­ion of “the outstandin­g allegation­s, the three of them”, but Republican­s have not said whether that was their understand­ing.

While the precise scope of the investigat­ion remained unclear, Trump told reporters yesterday that “the FBI, as you know, is all over talking to everybody” and said “this could be a blessing in disguise”. “They have free rein. They’re going to do whatever they have to do, whatever it is they do. They’ll be doing things that we have never even thought of,” he said. “And hopefully at the conclusion Donald Trump defended Brett Kavanaugh and attacked Democrats in West Virginia yesterday.

everything will be fine.”

White House spokesman Raj Shah said the Senate set the scope and duration of the probe and that the White House is “letting the FBI agents do what they are trained to do”.

The FBI conducts background checks for federal nominees, but the agency does not make judgments on the credibilit­y or significan­ce of allegation­s. The investigat­ors will compile informatio­n about Kavanaugh’s past and provide their findings to the White House and include the informatio­n in Kavanaugh’s background file, which is available to senators.

Kavanaugh and another of his accusers, Christine Blasey Ford, who says Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when both were teenagers, testified publicly before the Judiciary Committee on Friday.

Kavanaugh’s high school friend Mark Judge, who Ford says was in the room when a drunken Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her, said that he will co-operate with any law enforcemen­t agency that will “confidenti­ally investigat­e” sexual misconduct allegation­s against him and Kavanaugh. Judge has also denied Ford’s allegation­s.

Lawyers for P. J. Smyth and Leland Ingham Keyser, two others who Ford said were in the house when she was

attacked, have said their clients are willing to co-operate “fully” with the FBI’s investigat­ion.

A third woman, Julie Swetnick, accused Kavanaugh and Judge of excessive drinking and inappropri­ate treatment of women in the early 1980s, among other accusation­s. Kavanaugh has called her accusation­s a “joke” and Judge has said he “categorica­lly” denies the allegation­s.

Swetnick’s attorney, Michael Avenatti, said yesterday that his client had not been contacted by the FBI but is willing to fully co-operate with investigat­ors.

Last week, Trump tweeted that “if the attack on Dr Ford was as bad as she says, charges would have been immediatel­y filed” with local police. After Ford appeared before the Judiciary Committee, Trump said her testimony was “very compelling” and that she appeared to be “certainly a very credible witness”.

But yesterday, Trump turned Kavanaugh into a rallying cry for Republican­s to vote in November, saying they can help reject the “ruthless and outrageous tactics” he says Democrats used against the judge.

“We see this horrible, horrible, radical group of Democrats. You see what’s happening right now,” Trump said at a rally with thousands of supporters in West Virginia, a state Trump in 2016 by 42 percentage points and where he remains popular. “And they’re determined to take back power by any means necessary. You see the meanness, the nastiness. They don't care who they hurt, who they have to run over to get power,” he said.

“We’re not going to give it to them,” Trump said.

Trump called Kavanaugh “one of the most accomplish­ed legal minds of our time” and said he had suffered “the meanness, the anger” of Democrats.

After Friday’s hearing at which Kavanaugh and Ford testified, the committee voted 11-10, along strict party lines, to recommend that the full Senate confirm Kavanaugh for the Supreme Court. But one Republican committee member, Senator Jeff Flake, balked at voting for confirmati­on without the investigat­ion. Republican leaders want Kavanaugh seated on the court before the November 7 midterm elections and could do little but agree to Flake's demand.

Flake asked for the investigat­ion to be limited in scope and last no more than a week.

Trump agreed to an investigat­ion after he had vigorously resisted asking the FBI — an agency he has repeatedly criticised — to look into the sexual assault and misconduct allegation­s. In defending Kavanaugh, Trump and other supporters noted that the allegation­s had never surfaced in six previous background checks during Kavanaugh's long career in the executive and judicial branches of the US Government.

 ?? Photo / AP ??
Photo / AP
 ??  ?? Brett Kavanaugh
Brett Kavanaugh
 ??  ?? Christine Blasey Ford
Christine Blasey Ford

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