WASHINGTON | Senator gives federal investigators information on Kavanaugh
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WASHINGTON | Senator gives federal investigators information on Kavanaugh
WASHINGTONÂ â Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Thursday she has notified federal investigators about information she received â and wonât disclose publicly â concerning Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.
The California Democrat said in a statement that she âreceived information from an individual concerning the nomination.â She said the person âstrongly requested confidentiality, declined to come forward or press the matter further, and I have honored that decision.â
The FBI confirmed that it received the information Wednesday evening and included it in Kavanaughâs background file, which is maintained as part of his nomination. The agency said that is its standard process.
A Senate Democratic aide and another person familiar with the matter said it referred to an incident that occurred while Kavanaugh was high-school age. The two spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they werenât authorized to discuss the matter.
The details of the alleged incident and the identity of the person who provided the information were unclear.
The White House called Feinsteinâs move an â11th hour attempt to delay his confirmation.â
The Judiciary Committee, which has finished confirmation hearings for Kavanagh, is scheduled to vote next Thursday on whether to recommend that he be confirmed by the full Senate.
Feinsteinâs statement that she has âreferred the matter to federal investigative authoritiesâ jolted Capitol Hill and threatened to disrupt what has been a steady path toward confirmation for Kavanaugh by Republicans eager to see the conservative judge on the court.
Feinstein has held the letter close. Democratic senators on the panel met privately Wednesday evening and discussed the information, according to Senate aides who were not authorized to discuss the situation publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Some senators, including the No. 2 Democrat, Dick Durbin of Illinois, learned about the information for the first time at the meeting, according to one of the aides. Durbin told the senators they needed to bring the matter to the FBI, the aide said.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has not had access to the letter but said he believes the Judiciary Committee is handling it appropriately, his office said.
On Thursday, Feinstein declined to answer questions outside the hearing room, and other senatorsâ offices largely deferred to her.
A spokeswoman for Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., declined to confirm reports that the congresswoman had forwarded a letter containing the allegations to Feinstein. She said her office has a confidentiality policy regarding casework for constituents.
A White House spokeswoman, Kerri Kupec, said the FBI has vetted Kavanaugh âthoroughly and repeatedlyâ during his career in government and the judiciary.
She said Kavanaugh has had 65 meetings with senators â including with Feinstein â sat through over 30 hours of testimony and publicly addressed more than 2,000 questions. âNot until the eve of his confirmation has Sen. Feinstein or anyone raised the specter of new âinformationâ about him,â she said.
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the second-ranking Republican and a member of the committee, was also skeptical.
âLet me get this straight: this is (sic) statement about secret letter regarding a secret matter and an unidentified person. Right,â he tweeted.
Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, was unaware of the information until it was made public, according to a GOP committee aide.
Kavanaugh has undergone six federal background checks over time in government, including one most recently for the nomination, the aide said.
The new information on Kavanaugh was included Thursday in his confidential background file at the committee and is now available for senators to review, the aide said.
Democrats donât have the votes to block Kavanaughâs nomination if Republicans are unified, but they are fighting it and decrying the process that Republicans used to compile his government records for review.
At the committee Thursday, Republicans brushed aside a flurry of Democratic attempts to delay the consideration of Kavanaugh or subpoena more documents, sticking with a schedule that could see him confirmed by Oct. 1, when the new court session begins.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., protested that the nomination will be âtaintedâ and âstainedâ by the unusual process for vetting the nominee.
âWe lack the time. We lack the documents.â He called it a âbadly broken process.â
Feinstein had sought a subpoena for documents from Kavanaughâs time as President George W. Bushâs staff secretary. She said senators âshould be able to see this recordâ and wondered, âWhat in Judge Kavanaughâs records are Republicans hiding?â
The Republicans have declined to pursue Kavanaughâs staff secretary documents, saying it would be too cumbersome. They rejected Feinsteinâs motion and several others, including motions to subpoena documents and witnesses and a motion to adjourn. Grassley set the panelâs vote on Kavanaugh for Sept. 20.
New documents released ahead of Thursdayâs meeting included Kavanaughâs 263-page written response to questions from senators, along with 28 files from the judgeâs work in the Bush White House that had been available to senators only on a âcommittee confidential basis.â Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey made the Bush documents public.
Among the details in the new written responses, Kavanaugh says he would have shaken the hand of a school shooting victimâs father during a break in last weekâs Senate hearing had he recognized him before being whisked away by security detail.
The documents released by Booker, meanwhile, show Kavanaughâs involvement in Bushâs nomination of Charles Pickering to an appellate court in the South as Pickering faced questions about his views on race relations. Kavanaugh had indicated in 2006 testimony that he was not substantially involved in the nomination.
In releasing a new batch of committee confidential documents about Kavanaugh, Booker was repeating a tactic that could prompt a review from the Senate Ethics Committee.
Bookerâs GOP colleagues and outside groups are criticizing him for releasing the documents. Last week, he released some documents that were later made public by the committee, but also others that werenât. Wednesdayâs disclosure brings the total to 75.
The conservative group Judicial Watch delivered a letter Wednesday to the Senate Ethics Committee seeking an investigation. It says Booker violated Senate rules against disclosing confidential documents and could face Senate expulsion.
Booker has welcomed the fight. He says the documents about Kavanaughâs work âraise more serious and concerning questionsâ about his honesty during his testimony before the committee.
At issue has been the unprecedented process the Senate Judiciary Committee used for gathering documents on Kavanaugh, an appellate court judge who is President Donald Trumpâs nominee to replace retired Justice Anthony Kennedy on the court.
By LISA MASCARO,Associated Press















