jennifer, and neither occasion did he leave jennifer a message. he left messages for others and spoke with others, text messages, for instance, the same friend multiple times. but in that two-hour period, at no time does he leave that location to look for jennifer perhaps, to go to the other side of the blocked off street. you know, if he called her and texted her once, surely that s enough. i mean, she ll call him back. the cell phone records actually bear out that he s a person that would call or text her 200 to 300 times a day if he wasn t around her, able to get a hold of her. his silence especially at the crime scene was deafening. because there was no text message, and i did to the jury, he stood at that location because he wanted people to see him there. how could the jury be sure that paul was guilty? the prosecutor offered her. remember rosie, the skillful police dog trained to alert to the faintest whiff of accelerant of the sort used in arson fire? she alerted when she
that the things he s predicted to come true have generally come true, and things he s proven to be facts have generally come out. it was a ridiculous previously that mark judge was not being subpoenaed before avenatti s e-mail to the committee. the fact that mark judge is not being subpoenaed now if he s not now going forward is a travesty. this a person who strangely i had some acquaintance with when i moved to washington, d.c. where he was a frequenter at a bar in georgetown, and he was everything you can imagine him to be in the book. and he was someone who must be subpoenaed to appear before this committee. if there s any pretense or the faintest whiff of a pretense of the truth around brett kavanaugh and the allegations that cloud his nomination.
everything you can imagine him to be in the book. and he was someone who must be subpoenaed to appear before this committee. if there s any pretense or the fainte faintest whiff of a pretense of the truth around brett kavanaugh and the allegations that cloud his nomination. john, let me ask you quickly i know you spent some time with susan collins. i saw it on your show the circus sunday night. this story has been moving so fast, and what i heard her tell you was that she was as close to a decision on the vote, but that was clearly before anything that we re talking tonight. it was on friday night. she did an event in new hampshire where we caught up with her. that interview took place around 7:00 or so on friday night. so all of the kavanaugh and professor ford related stuff that had happened last week was
was alive or dead. but in the time that he was there, he made 38 calls and text messages, two of which went to jennifer, and neither occasion did he leave jennifer a message. he left messages for others and spoke with others, text messages, for instance, the same friend multiple times. but in that two-hour period, at no time does he leave that location to look for jennifer perhaps, to go to the other side of the blocked off street. you know, if he called her and texted her once, surely that s enough. i mean, she ll call him back. the cell phone records actually bear out that he s a person that would call or text her 200 to 300 times a day if he wasn t around her, able to get a hold of her. his silence especially at the crime scene was deafening. because there was no text message i would submit and i did to the jury that he stood at that location because he wanted people to see him there. how could the jury be sure that paul was guilty? the prosecutor offered her. remember rosie
jennifer, and neither occasion did he leave jennifer a message. he left messages for others and spoke with others, text messages, for instance, the same friend multiple times. but in that two-hour period, at no time does he leave that location to look for jennifer perhaps, to go to the other side of the blocked off street. you know, if he called her and texted her once, surely that s enough. i mean, she ll call him back. the cell phone records actually bear out that he s a person that would call or text her 200 to 300 times a day if he wasn t around her, able to get a hold of her. his silence especially at the crime scene was deafening. because there was no text message, and i did to the jury, he stood at that location because he wanted people to see him there. how could the jury be sure that paul was guilty? the prosecutor offered her. remember rosie, the skillful police dog trained to alert to the faintest whiff of accelerant of the sort used in arson fire? she alerted when she