LAURA INGRAHAM (CO-HOST): You know those therapist notes? Do they even exist? Remember, she couldn't recall when she was asked at the hearing about those notes and whether she showed them to The Washington Post, she couldn't remember.
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INGRAHAM: Do we know those notes even exist? Do we know the name of the therapist? Has the husband been asked questions about this meeting with a therapist? I mean, really asked questions? Has the FBI interviewed the husband? I don't know. Do you think these notes exist? When she answered that question, I think I immediately -- was immediately tweeting about it. To me, that was the most revealing moment of the hearing. It wasn't when she said, “one hundred percent,” it wasn't when she said -- described the alleged assault.
For me, that was the most telling exchange. Why? The other one was about the polygraph, but this was the most telling exchange for me when I watched it, because she knows that those notes are critical to establishing that she actually did tell someone about this, going back to six years ago. That's critical, that's a critical piece of evidence. Now, it doesn't mean that the assault occurred, but it bolsters her credibility and her recollection of telling people about it, because she has no contemporaneous folks that she talked to about it.
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INGRAHAM: I do think the fact that those notes just never emerged is really telling.