FBI questions people from Hegseth’s past ahead of Senate confirmation hearing: Sources
The Senate will hold confirmation hearings for the defense secretary nominee.
The FBI has interviewed multiple individuals about Defense Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth's personal life as part of its background check investigation, asking questions about alleged extramarital affairs, his relationship with alcohol and his character, according to sources familiar with the matter.
As part of the background investigation, the FBI reached out to people in Hegseth's past, including individuals Hegseth has known much of his adult life, according to multiple sources familiar with the FBI's outreach and other sources briefed on the process.
Sources tell ABC News that Hegseth sat for an interview with the FBI in recent weeks. The Armed Services Committee is expected to hold Hegseth's confirmation hearing on Tuesday, ahead of President-elect Trump's inauguration.
On Friday, the top Senators on the Senate Armed Services Committee, Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., were briefed on the results of Hegseth's FBI background investigation by a representative from Trump's transition team, according to sources familiar with the matter. The background investigation materials were also made available for Wicker and Reed to review if they chose to do so. At this point, the FBI's findings are only being shared with Wicker and Reed, according to sources familiar with discussions between the committee and Trump's representatives.
A spokesperson for Reed declined to comment to ABC News, and a spokesperson for Wicker did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The extent of the traditionally thorough FBI background check is an indication that the Senate could be provided with more information about Hegseth's personal life, amid reports, disputed by Hegseth, about alleged infidelity and personal behavior that some senators have found concerning.
Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, who described her December meeting with Hegseth as a "good, substantive discussion," told reporters last month that she "pressed" Hegseth "on both his position on military issues as well as the allegations against him."
The Maine Republican said she would wait for the FBI review to help her determine how to vote.
"I, obviously, always wait until we have an FBI background check, and one is underway in the case of Mr. Hegseth, and I wait to see the committee hearing before reaching a final decision," Collins, the chair of the Appropriations Committee, said.in December.
Other Republican senators have downplayed some of the reports as "anonymous" allegations.
"If people have an allegation to make, come forward and make it," Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said in an interview on "Meet the Press" on Dec. 15. "We'll decide whether or not it's credible."
As part of the process, the FBI has spoken to individuals in Minnesota, Hegseth's home state, according to sources familiar with the outreach.
The FBI declined to comment on the details and focus of its inquiry. A spokesperson for Hegseth declined to comment. The Trump transition team did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The New York Times has also published a 2018 email from Hegseth' s mother, Penelope Hegseth, to her son, in which she said he mistreated women for years, amid his divorce from his first wife. She later told the newspaper that she regretted her original sentiments and expressed regret to her son in a follow up email. ABC News has not obtained or reviewed the email.
The Monterey Police Department released a report last month detailing how a woman told investigators in October 2017 that she had encountered Hegseth at an event afterparty at a California hotel where both had been drinking, and claimed that he sexually assaulted her.
No charges were filed, although Hegseth subsequently paid the woman as part of a settlement agreement, which Hegseth's attorney said was only because Hegseth feared his career would suffer if her allegations were made public. The agreement stated that Hegseth made no admission of wrongdoing in the matter.
Hegseth, who has previously said he welcomed the FBI's work, has denied the allegations against him, writing in the Wall Street Journal that "the press is peddling anonymous story after anonymous story, all meant to smear me and tear me down."
"It's a textbook manufactured media takedown. They provide no evidence, no names, and they ignore the legions of people who speak on my behalf. They need to create a bogeyman, because they believe I threaten their institutional insanity," he wrote in the op-ed.
As ABC News previously reported, the Senate Armed Services Committee, which will review Hegseth's nomination, has also reached out to the Monterey County, California, district attorney regarding the 2017 sexual assault allegations, and to the conservative veterans' organization Hegseth once ran following a New Yorker report about alleged financial mismanagement, alcohol abuse and sexist behavior, which Hegseth has denied.
Hegseth has denied claims of alcohol abuse, and said in a podcast interview that he won't drink if confirmed by the Senate.
"This is the biggest deployment of my life, and there won't be a drop of alcohol on my lips while I'm doing it," he said last month in an appearance on "The Megyn Kelly Show."