Brett Kavanaugh Was Paranoid About Being Exposed in 1998

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IN 1998 BRETT KAVANAUGH WAS AFRAID OF BEING EXPOSED AS SEXUAL PREDATOR


In October 1998 Larry Flynt, publisher of the hard core sex magazine, Hustler, which included a cartoon called Chester the Molester, offered a million dollars for information on illicit sexual relations with a Congressman, Senator or other prominent officeholder. Brett Kavanaugh was not an officer holder at this time, nor has he ever been, yet he brought up the existence of this offer as proof that he was innocent of the charges leveled against him by Dr. Christine Ford. One person on the left even paid a million dollars for people to report evidence of sexual wrong doing, and it worked. Exposed some prominent people. Nothing about me. - Brett Kavanaugh Senate Judiciary Committee Testimony. Brett was not a prominent person. These are all the secondary mentions of him in the NYT for the year 1998: Yale, Clinton's Alma Mater, Is Little Moved by Drama OCT. 18, 1998 Mr. Clinton's private lawyer in the Lewinsky case, David E. Kendall, and a new White House coordinator of his political defense, Gregory B. Craig, also went to the law school. Brett Kavanaugh, a main author of the Starr report, has a bachelor's and a law degree from Yale. Supreme Court Hears Case on Ex-White House Counsel's Notes JUNE 9, 1998 Mr. Hamilton's adversary, Brett M. Kavanaugh, had no easier a time. When Mr. Kavanaugh told the Justices that they could presume that most people would not object to their conversations with lawyers being made public after death because of a civic obligation to be truthful with grand juries, Justice David H. Souter did not buy it. TESTING OF A PRESIDENT: THE AUTHORS; A Young ProtĂŠgĂŠ of Starr, and an Established Nonfiction Writer


SEPT. 12, 1998 Much of the editing and writing of the Starr report was done by Brett Kavanaugh, a Yale-trained lawyer, and Stephen Bates, a Harvard graduate, lawyer and journalist who has written several nonfiction books. IMPEACHMENT: THE TWISTS AND TURNS; How Republican Determination Overcame President's Popularity DEC. 21, 1998 Two Starr deputies, Brett Kavanaugh and Stephen Bates, had been assigned to write what became the 445-page Starr report. On Sept. 9, two Government vans disgorged the report, along with 17 boxes of supporting documents. Mr. Kavanaugh, who had worked at Mr. Starr's Chicago law firm, and Mr. Bates, an editor from the scholarly Wilson Quarterly, had written a 140-page narrative that chronicled in graphic detail each of 10 sexual encounters with the President that Monica Lewinsky had described in her grand jury testimony. The details, the prosecutors believed, were necessary to show conclusively that the President had lied. So because a child pornographer didn’t name him he had done nothing up to that point in time? This ad ran one time 20 years ago and did result in GOP House Speaker-elect Bob Livingston to resign after he was “Larry Flynted” for having four extra-marital affairs. Why did it stick in Brett’s mind for 20 years? Was he worried in 1998 that someone might provide information on him and destroy his career based on his activities in college and prep school? Why was Brett referencing a child pornographer in any context?


Bet Brett got his rocks off writing the Clinton stuff and wanted to ask Clinton a lot of highly graphic questions.

1998 was a big year for Brett as you can see from the documents below.






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