KEY POINTS
  • President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has categorically denied an allegation of sexual assault from his high school years — and has submitted pages from his 1982 calendar as evidence.
  • The pages make no apparent reference to the gathering at which he is accused by Christine Blasey Ford of sexual misconduct.
  • Kavanaugh's lawyers reportedly informed the committee that the pages were intended to prove that Kavanaugh was never at the house party where Ford alleges he assaulted her.
President Donald Trump's nominee for the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh

President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has categorically denied an allegation of sexual assault from his high school years — and has submitted pages from his 1982 calendar as evidence.

The five green-on-white calendar pages revealed by USA Today and CNN on Wednesday paint a portrait of an Ivy League-bound varsity athlete filling his summer with beach trips, sports camps and college preparations. The schedule of Kavanaugh's youth will now be used to help him defend himself in sworn testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.