What did they expect? Her bio reads like the con man’s handbook. She was even sued for falsely accusing two men of sexual harassment. She tried to sue the Washington Mass Transit company over an injury of her nose, that she claimed cost her $420,000 in income, even though she never worked as a model and the modeling firm she listed on her law.
Here is the telling part as far as NBC is concerned. They could not verify even one item of her claims but let her go on national television and accuse Brett Kavanaugh of being part of a gang rape group. She gave NBC the names of four people she said could corroborate her claims. Two refused to talk, one was dead and the fourth one said he has never known anyone by the name of Julie Swetnick.
The tone of this NBC interview with Jule Swetnick, the Kavanaugh accuser being promoted by Michael Avenatti, is defensive to the point of being apologetic. Snow isn’t proudly rolling out a big scoop here, she’s offering a pre-buttal, trying to issue enough caveats to cover herself given that NBC was unable to verify any of the allegations Swetnick is making here.
“NBC News, for the record, has not been able to independently verify her claims,” Snow says. She continued, “There are things that she told us on camera that differ from her written statement last week. We’ve been trying independently to reach out to anyone who remembers attending parties with Julie Swetnick and Brett Kavanaugh and we’ve been asking her attorney for names, so far we’ve not found anyone who remembers that.”
Swetnick says she told her mother and a policeman about her assault, but both are now conveniently dead and can’t verify her statement.