Kavanaugh's fellow Yalies transfixed by
Senate hearing
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[September 28, 2018]
By Gabriella Borter
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (Reuters) - In a crowded
lounge at Yale Law School, cheers erupted when the middle-aged woman on
the TV screen told a Senate panel that she had no doubt that Brett
Kavanaugh, the Yale graduate nominated to the Supreme Court, had
sexually assaulted her when they were teens.
Like millions of Americans who tuned into the hearings, the young
lawyers-in-training gathered on the New Haven campus hung on every word
of the testimony, keenly aware of what the spectacle that was unfolding
in Washington would mean for the political direction of the country for
years to come.
With the multiple sexual misconduct allegations that have emerged
against Kavanaugh this month, his nomination has become enmeshed in a
national debate over sexual misconduct.
The conservative federal appeals court judge in his testimony on
Thursday angrily and tearfully denied he had sexually assaulted his
accuser, Christine Blasey Ford.
But Ford, a research psychologist at the Stanford University School of
Medicine in California, seemed very credible to many of the Yalies who
watched the proceedings.
"Her clinical language - I think she uses the word hippocampus about six
times, that actually made her more, not less credible to me," said Jacob
Bennett, a third-year law student, referring to Ford's physiological
descriptions of how the brain forms memories.
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"Judge Kavanaugh I thought was frightening," third-year law student
Alyssa Peterson said after watching some of Kavanaugh's testimony. "I
can't imagine being Dr. Ford and seeing someone who sexually assaulted
you screaming before the entire country."
Students said a minority on the Yale campus supported Kavanaugh's
nomination but were reluctant to be open about it. Laura Pietrantoni, a
first-year law student who opposes Kavanaugh, said some of the judge's
supporters were "very scared to come forward and voice how they feel."
As a Supreme Court nominee, Kavanaugh personifies the prestige of Yale,
an institution in which many of the law students have invested their own
career aspirations and identity. Kavanaugh earned both his undergraduate
degree and law degree at Yale.
Yale's public affairs office trumpeted Kavanaugh in a July press
release, following his nomination to the U.S. top court, as a "terrific
judge" who wrote "smart, thoughtful and clear" opinions.
In recent days, students have demonstrated on campus, papering walls
with posters of support for Ford and holding a sit-in protest in the law
school hallway over the nomination and the handling of Ford's
allegations.
In the law school lounge on Thursday, most of the students were rooting
against Kavanaugh.
"I do not think that someone who has committed sexual assault should be
on the Supreme Court of the United States," said Veronica Guerrero, a
second-year law student.
President Donald Trump nominated Kavanaugh to fill the Supreme Court's
pivotal ninth seat. Three other graduates of Yale's law school already
sit on the court: Samuel Alito, Sonia Sotomayor and Clarence Thomas.
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Lawrance Hall is shown at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut,
U.S., September 27, 2018. REUTERS/Gabriella Borter
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NATIONAL OBSESSION
Beyond the Yale campus, the hearing was a national obsession in many
parts of the country.
On Wall Street, traders watched the hearing with one eye while they
went about their business. People posted on social media images of
airplane seatback video screens all tuned into the hearings. A woman
was seen crying outside a Washington office building while she
followed Ford’s testimony on her cellphone.
On C-Span, the sober public affairs network that covers the federal
government, female viewers called in to share their own experiences
of sexual abuse.
Since Ford's name became public this month, at least two other women
have come forward to accuse Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct. One of
those, Deborah Ramirez, said Kavanaugh exposed his penis to her
during a drunken party at Yale's Lawrence Hall dormitory when they
were both undergraduates. Kavanaugh has denied the allegation.
In the Yale lounge, students laughed and clapped at Ford's assured
response when asked how she was sure that it was Kavanaugh who
assaulted her: "The way that I'm sure I'm talking to you right now,
it's just basic memory functions," Ford said.
The room erupted in applause when Senator Dick Durbin, a Democrat,
made a reference to the nearly 50 Yale Law professors who have
called for the Federal Bureau of Investigation to look into Ford's
allegation.
Sumer Ghazala, a first-year law student, said some students felt
they had a special responsibility to speak out because of the
school's connection to Kavanaugh.
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"It's not about, 'Oh, we’re very leftist,'" Ghazala said. "It
definitely is about the fair process and taking sexual violence
allegations as seriously as possible before someone is just
confirmed into the Supreme Court."
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in New Haven, Conn.; Additional
reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York and Ginger Gibson in
Washington; Writing by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Frank McGurty,
Alistair Bell and Leslie Adler)
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