AOC Claims Brett Kavanaugh Still Credibly Accused Of Sexual Assault By Multiple Women With Corroborated Details. That’s Not True.

The Supreme Court heard oral arguments regarding a Mississippi abortion law that could change the abortion landscape in the United States, so naturally Democrats are out in force claiming certain Supreme Court justices are illegitimate and shouldn’t be allowed to decide the case.

The most prominent accusation has come from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who claimed on Twitter that Justice Brett Kavanaugh “*still* remains credibly accused of sexual assault on multiple accounts w/ corroborated details & this year the FBI admitted it never fully investigated.”

Reminder that Brett Kavanaugh *still* remains credibly accused of sexual assault on multiple accounts w/ corroborated details & this year the FBI admitted it never fully investigated.

Yet the court is letting him decide on whether to legalize forced birth in the US. No recusal.

— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) December 2, 2021

The FBI didn’t investigate every claim because there was no basis for any of them, but for argument’s sake, let’s take a look at each of the main accusations against Kavanaugh – again – and how they lack credibility and corroboration.

Christine Blasey Ford

Blasey Ford, a psychology professor living in Palo Alto, California, accused Kavanaugh of having sexually assaulted her three decades earlier when they were in their teens. She made the accusation immediately after President Donald Trump announced he was nominating Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, but her allegations didn’t make news until shortly before the vote to confirm Kavanaugh, prompting a new hearing to let her make her accusations public.

Blasey Ford claimed that she was at a house party when Kavanaugh pushed her into an upstairs room and groped her. Kavanaugh vehemently denied the claims, and to date, no evidence has been presented to even prove Blasey Ford and Kavanaugh had ever actually met.

Ford was never even able to nail down a year that the alleged assault took place. She took a polygraph test to prove she was telling the truth, which consisted of her own handwritten statement and being asked if her statement was false or if she made any of it up. That handwritten statement initially said the alleged assault happened one “high school summer in the early 80’s,” but the word “early” was then crossed out. Blasey Ford never explained why. Her timeframe for the incident changed throughout the summer of 2018, starting with a July 6 text to The Washington Post in which she said the incident occurred in the “mid 1980s.” When she wrote about her alleged assault to Sen. Diane Feinstein (D-CA) that the incident occurred in the “early 80s.” A September 16, 2018, Washington Post article claimed Blasey Ford said the incident happened in 1982.

A prosecutor was brought into question Blasey Ford when she testified before the senate. That prosecutor outlined numerous issues with Blasey Ford’s testimony that made her allegations “weaker” than a “he said, she said” case. One of the biggest flags was Ford’s claims to have brought the assault up in couple’s therapy with her husband, but she has refused to provide any evidence for these claims.

Blasey Ford named three people other than herself and Kavanaugh who allegedly attended the house party where she was sexually assaulted. One of them, who is still a friend of Kavanaugh’s, denied the claims. Another named person, Patrick Smyth, said he never attended such a party, and the final person, Blasey Ford’s childhood friend Leland Keyser, said she couldn’t remember the party or any alleged sexual assault. In September 2018, the Post wrote that Keyser “believes Ford’s assertions,” yet two separate books discount this claim.

In “The Education of Brett Kavanaugh: An Investigation,” New York Times reporters Robin Pogebrin and Kate Kelly bury an admission that Keyser never believed Blasey Ford.

“We spoke multiple times to Keyser, who also said that she didn’t recall that get-together or any others like it. In fact, she challenged Ford’s accuracy. ‘I don’t have any confidence in the story,’” the authors wrote.

The book also said Keyser was threatened and pressured to support Blasey Ford’s story.

“I was told behind the scenes that certain things could be spread about me if I didn’t comply,” Keyser told Pogebrin and Kelly.

One major aspect of Blasey Ford’s story that was never explained is how she supposedly got home from this party where she was allegedly sexually assaulted. She said she left upset, but Keyser has no memory of this, and no one has ever come forward to say they drove her home. At one point, Blasey Ford claimed Keyser may have driven her home. She had previously claimed she did not know how she got home. Keyser said that the get-togethers she attended as a teen were nothing like what Blasey Ford described. For her part, Keyser said: “It would be impossible for me to be the only girl at a get-together with three guys, have her leave, and then not figure out


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