At Bush White House, Kavanaugh Offered Help on Terrorism Prisoners, Email Shows Image

The following article by Charlie Savage and Michael D. Shear was posted on the New York Times August 9, 2018:

Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh, President Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, denied in 2006 that he had been involved in terrorism detainee policies. Credit: T.J. Kirkpatrick for The New York Times

WASHINGTON — Brett M. Kavanaugh volunteered to prepare a senior Bush administration official to testify about the government’s monitoring of conversations between certain terrorism suspects and their lawyers after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, a newly disclosed White House email shows.

The email appeared likely to become a focus at Judge Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation hearing this year. Democrats have suggested that he misled the Senate at his 2006 appeals court confirmation hearing, when he turned aside questions about the George W. Bush administration’s handling of terrorism suspects by saying that he was “not involved in the questions about the rules governing detention of combatants” and by portraying his portfolio as focusing on “civil justice issues” like terrorism insurance.

The email, released Thursday, was part of a trove of about 5,700 pages of documents involving Judge Kavanaugh’s time as an associate White House counsel.

View the complete article here.