FBI report on Hegseth ‘insufficient’ says top Dem: ‘I do not believe you are qualified’
The Federal Bureau of Investigation's vetting of Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump's highly controversial nominee to head the U.S. Department of Defense, an $842 billion entity that employs more than 2.8 million people, was "insufficient," Senator Jack Reed (D-RI) the top Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee warned at the start of his confirmation hearing Tuesday.
The FBI's report on Hegseth was made available only to the Chairman and the Ranking Member of the Armed Services Committee, not the rank-and-file Senators on the Committee. Ranking Member Reed asked that the report be made available to the entire committee, but the Republican Chairman, Roger Wicker, refused.
Critics have noted that, similarly to how the FBI conducted its investigation into sexual harassment allegations against now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, the Bureau reportedly did not interview the person who allegedly was sexually abused. In October 2018, as ABC News reported, the FBI did not interview Dr. Christine Blasey Ford.
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ABC News also, on Tuesday, reported the FBI did not interview the woman, whose name has not been made public, who "told investigators in October 2017 that she had encountered Hegseth at an event afterparty at a California hotel where both had been drinking and claimed that he sexually assaulted her."
The New York Times on Tuesday published a report detailing concerns Democrats have voiced about Hegseth and the FBI's report.
“Quite a few of the women with significant allegations against him have not been interviewed by the F.B.I. investigators,” Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) said on MSNBC on Monday evening, The Times reported, "adding that some of those women feared for their safety and that of their children."
“My understanding is that some of them would like to be contacted by the F.B.I. investigative team, or the vetters, and they have not been talked to,” Duckworth also told MSNBC.
"One missed opportunity," The Times reported, "came when the bureau did not interview one of Mr. Hegseth’s ex-wives before its findings were presented to senators last week, according to people familiar with the bureau’s investigation."
Another Democratic Senator on the Armed Services Committee, Richard Blumenthal, told The Times: “There are significant gaps and inadequacies in the report, including the failure to interview some of the key potential witnesses with personal knowledge of improprieties or abuse.”
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Tuesday morning, Ranking Member Reed told Republican Chairman Wicker: "You and I have both seen the FBI background investigation, as they have said, and I want to say, to the record, I believe the investigation was insufficient."
"Frankly, there are still FBI obligations to talk to people, they have not had access to the forensic audit, which I referenced, and the person who had access to was quite critical of Mr. Hegseth, and I think people on both sides have suggested that they get the report."
"I know your colleagues have asked for it, [Senate Republican Majority Leader] Thune assured me personally that he thought it was the appropriate idea."
Reed noted that another of Trump's nominees, "had similar, very complicated personal issues," and the "report was made available for all the members."
Chairman Wicker refused Ranking Member Reed's request.
During Tuesday's hearing, Reed went on to tell Hegseth, "I do not believe that you are qualified to meet the overwhelming demands of this job."
Watch the video below or at this link.
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