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No, Christine Blasey Ford's brother isn't linked to Fusion GPS, Russia investigation
Christine Blasey Ford’s brother’s job history from 14 years ago has been pulled into widespread internet speculation about Ford’s accusations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.
Ford, a California professor, went public with her accusations against Kavanaugh earlier this week, saying he sexually assaulted her at a party while the two were in high school in the early 1980s.
"I categorically and unequivocally deny this allegation," Kavanaugh said in a statement. "I did not do this back in high school or at any time."
YourNewsWire.com points to Ralph Blasey’s time at the law firm BakerHostetler from 1989 to 2004 as evidence that Ford is somehow linked to the Russia investigation. The blog post was cited in a news release from the conservative legal group Liberty Counsel as a "disturbing fact" that "undermine(s) her story."
"Ford has a brother, Ralph Blasey, who worked for BakerHostetler, a law firm that retained Fusion GPS, the infamous DC company that produced the unverified Steele dossier on President Donald Trump and Russia, sparking the Russia investigation," the release states, linking to YourNewsWire.com.
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This theory that somehow Ford is linked to the Russia investigation through her brother’s old job comes from the fact that in 2013, nine years after Blasey left BakerHostetler, the firm hired Fusion GPS, a consulting firm, to assist with a Russian money-laundering investigation.
In 2015, Fusion GPS subcontracted with Christopher Steele, a British intelligence officer to produce the Russian dossier. Fusion GPS has said the two cases were unrelated.
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In a letter to the Judiciary Committee, Ford’s lawyers said she had "been the target of vicious harassment and even death threats." They said as a result of those threats, her family relocated out of their home. The letter also said Ford’s email had been hacked and she had been impersonated online.
Ford’s brother, Ralph Blasey, worked for a law firm that worked with Fusion GPS nine years after he left the company. Fusion GPS’s work on the Russian dossier began more than a decade after Blasey left BakerHostetler.
While it’s accurate to say Blasey worked for BakerHostetler — he says that clearly on his LinkedIn — it is ridiculously wrong to somehow link her brother’s past employment to Fusion GPS’s work in investigating Donald Trump’s ties to Russia.
We rate this claim Pants on Fire.
Our Sources
YourNewsWire.com, "Breaking: Kavanaugh Accuser’s Brother’s Firm Linked To Fusion GPS," Sept. 17, 2018
Liberty Counsel, "Allegations Against Kavanaugh," Sept. 18, 2018
LinkedIn, Ralph Blasey, accessed Sept. 20, 2018
The Washington Post, "Inside the link between the Russian lawyer who met Donald Trump Jr. and the Trump dossier," July 11, 2017
The Washington Post, "California professor, writer of confidential Brett Kavanaugh letter, speaks out about her allegation of sexual assault," Sept. 16, 2018
TIME, "Read the letter from Christine Blasey Ford's lawyers requesting an FBI Inquiry Into Kavanaugh allegation," Sept. 19, 2018
The New York Times, "Debunking 5 viral rumors about Christine Blasey Ford, Kavanaugh’s accuser," Sept. 19, 2018
The New Yorker, "A sexual-misconduct allegation against the Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh stirs tension among Democrats in Congress," Sept. 14, 2018
NPR, "What you need to know about the Russia investigations: the dossier," April 25, 2018
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No, Christine Blasey Ford's brother isn't linked to Fusion GPS, Russia investigation
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