comments on this point are unbelievable, because they re contrary to everything else that we know. so what s resulting are letters from dianne feinstein asking for give us a copy, don mcgahn of the parameters of the fbi investigation. white house counsel don mcgahn? yes, white house counsel. and i just signed on to a letter with all the democratic members of the committee, and said here is a list of the people you ought to be talking to. and are these people, potentialnesses, college classmates and should alcohol, what he did in terms of his drinking and whether or not, as you have suggested, whether or not he lied to the economy about his drinking habits and other aspects of his college years. it s not about whether he drank or not. but whether he lied about it. and the picture that is painted is that this is a person who drank a lot. not just in high school but also in college, and that when he
drank, he would become very belligerent and aggressive. he said no, i never did any of that and there are plenty of people coming forward, even today saying that when they listened to him testifying before our committee to that effect, it s just so unbelievable that they are coming forward and these are all the people that need to be interviewed by the fbi. and one of the things james comey said was that of course in an op-ed that he wrote this weekend? yes. and it doesn t matter how long ago the traumatic event was, but significant events, we all remember, even when you re 5 years eold, whatever. and he said that when the nominee lies very obviously about the meaning of things in his yearbook, it just is a red light to dig deeper. peter alexander was one of the key questioners asking the president to explain his statement today, peter, in the rose garden, that it s an open
include a specific witness list that does not include kavanaugh s third accuser, julie swetnick, and also off the list are kavanaugh s former college classmates, some of whom discredit, really, and undermine the characterization he tried to paint of himself, at least as it relates to his alcohol consumption while in college. kellyanne conway, the president s counselor, senior adviser was on one of the sunday shows, and she was asked directly about this issue. here s how she responded. has the fbi been told, don t look into julie swetnick s allegations, we don t find them credible? the white house is not getting involved in the fbi investigation in that way. the president very much respects the independence of the fbi, and feels, as he said last night, that they should be looking at anything they think is credible within this limited scope. did gotten mcgahn say you can interview these witnesses but don t interview these witnesses? i don t think don mcgahn
the senate, we re going to keep going on this. we re going to keep investigating this even afterthe election because we don t believe he s fit to serve on this court and they could impeach him. you say the investigation is being driven from inside fbi headquarters. help me understand how prioritization works. we were talking about limitations a moment ago. clearly things the white house counsel wasn t interested in fbi looking into. what college classmates said about his drinking or perhaps the lies or the small lies that were told by the nominee when it came to drinking on capitol hill. how does the fbi determine where to go and what paths to take? here what we have is a situation where this nominee has been investigating multiple times in his previous government jobs. there s already a wealth of information the fbi has available to it. also, over the last six or eight
here. his partner was injured can t remember what happened. an american woman accused of telling her college classmates to join the jihad facing federal terrorism charges. authorities say hassan tried providing material to al qaeda and lying to the fbi and accused of setting several fires at saint catherine university telling investigators they are lucky she didn t know how to make a bomb. julie: taking down a massive global cyber to the crime ring, several people indicted for their role in the fibers of the crime network, they are accused of trading stolen credit card and social security numbers and causing $530 million in losses. 13 members including five from the us are in custody, 30 years in prison if convicted. nancy pelosi sharing her grievances, one more shot for