No, Kavanaugh
Shouldn't Withdraw. A Serious Look At The Allegations Against Him Shows Why.
ByBen Shapiro
@benshapiro
September 26, 2018
So, we now have four separate allegations against Judge
Brett Kavanaugh with claims of various types of sexual abuse. These claims are
all, thus far, unsubstantiated; nonetheless, Democrats have been disingenuously
claiming that they spell doom for Kavanaugh, and that Kavanaugh should remove
himself from convention. That’s absurd.
Let’s look at each allegation in turn.
1. Christine Blasey Ford. The first allegation
came courtesy of Christine Blasey Ford, a professor from California, who
alleges that when she was 15 and Kavanaugh was 17, she attended a party: date
unknown, location unknown, how she got there unknown. At this party, she said,
were either four boys and two girls (according to her polygraph note), or four
boys and her (according to her note to Senator Dianne Feinstein). She says that
at this party, Kavanaugh and his friend Mark Judge forced her into a room and
turned up the music, and that Kavanaugh forced her onto a bed, where he
attempted to take off her clothes and then placed his hand over her mouth when
she tried to scream. No other witness has verified her account. The first time
she told anyone is when she told her husband that she was abused in high school
– in 2002. The first time she mentioned Kavanaugh’s name was 2012, to her
psychiatrist. There is no corroborative evidence of any sort to back her
allegation. Both she and Democrats have been remarkably unforthcoming in
turning over materials (she won’t turn over her medical records or therapist
notes) or facilitating her testimony at a hearing. She has hired Democratic
hacks as her lawyers. Kavanaugh fully denies the charges.
2. Deborah Martinez. The
New Yorker reported Martinez’s allegations on Sunday – but the
allegations were full of holes. According to Martinez, Kavanaugh thrust his
penis in her face at a frat party at which he was drinking. But The New
Yorker piece is extraordinarily weak: according to the publication, she was
hesitant to speak publicly because “her memories contained gaps because she had
been drinking at the time of the alleged incident,” and she was “reluctant to
characterize Kavanaugh’s role in the alleged incident with certainty.” Only
after “six days of carefully assessing her memories and consulting with her
attorneys” did she decide to come forward. No corroborating witnesses have come
forward. According to The New Yorker, “The New Yorker has not
confirmed with other eyewitnesses that Kavanaugh was present at the party. The
magazine contacted several dozen classmates of Ramirez and Kavanaugh regarding
the incident. Many did not respond to interview requests; others declined to
comment, or said they did not attend or remember the party.” Kavanaugh, again,
fully denies the charges, stating, “This is a smear, plain and simple. I look
forward to testifying on Thursday about the truth, and defending my good
name—and the reputation for character and integrity I have spent a lifetime
building—against these last-minute allegations.”
3. Julie Swetnick. Stormy Daniels’ lawyer and 2020
Democratic candidate Michael Avenatti brought forward Swetnick on Wednesday.
According to her sworn declaration, she saw Kavanaugh get drunk in high school
and then grope girls against their will, as well as spiking punch with
qualuudes and alcohol, and participating in a “gang rape” line at multiple
parties. Swetnick says that she went to approximately 10 parties at which such
activities took place – without saying anything, and returning to multiple
parties, apparently. She says she was victim of such a gang rape, but is
unclear as to whether Kavanaugh participated (it seems he didn’t, but she says
he was present at such parties). Avenatti refuses to answer simple questions on
her behalf, and has not made her available to testify. She says there are other
witnesses – none have come forward. Swetnick graduated high school three years
before Kavanaugh, as well – yet she was still supposedly attending high school
parties as an adult. This is the wildest allegation of the bunch, and should be
the most easily provable – and yet no proof has been offered whatsoever. The
New York Times kindly put it this way: “None of Ms. Swetnick’s claims could
be independently corroborated by The New York Times, and her lawyer, Michael
Avenatti, declined to make her available for an interview.” Some sixty women
who went to high school at the same time as Kavanaugh said they have never
heard of Swetnick. Kavanaugh stated, “That’s totally false and outrageous. I’ve
never done any such thing, known about any such thing.”
4. Anonymous. Late on Wednesday afternoon, NBC
News reported that the Senate Judiciary Committee was inquiring about another
allegation of misconduct. They report, an anonymous woman says her daughter’s
friend was physically assaulted by Kavanaugh in the Washington, D.C. area in
1998 while he was drunk. She states, “When they left the bar (under the influence
of alcohol) they were all shocked when Brett Kavanaugh, shoved her friend up
against the wall very aggressively and sexually. There were at least four
witnesses including my daughter.” The daughter has not come forward; neither
has the mother; neither has the friend. The media ran with the story anyway.
Now, maybe Kavanaugh did some of this or all of it. But
we can't destroy his life based on uncorroborated allegations without any
verifiable details. In sum, we have four incidents – all allegedly in public
areas, without a single corroborating witness on the record. No names. No
dates. Nothing. No wonder Democrats want Kavanaugh to simply step down. The
last thing they want is Republicans questioning these allegations with any
level of seriousness.
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