After Tuesday's hearing wrapped up, committee members could not contain both their frustration and the feeling that people are just not telling the truth.
After 38 hours of hearings, a legislative oversight panel still can't answer a basic question: who approved hiring an official who'd been accused of rape?
Murphy is refusing to release former campaign staffers and current employees from nondisclosure agreements they were forced to sign as a condition for working with the Murphy team.
A legislative panel investigating how Gov. Phil Murphy’s team handled allegations of sexual assault lodged by one senior administration official against another heard another marathon round of testimony Thursday – and after 21 hours across four days, it seems exhaustion is creeping in.
As lawmakers probed into the inner workers of Phil Murphy's campaign for governor, his transition, and his administration, they could not believe what they were hearing.
A new year is a time for new beginnings, but Gov. Phil Murphy continues to struggle to recover from a series of missteps during his first year in office.
The complaint also included the full response from Gov. Murphy's and wife Tammy to Brennan's email in which she requested a meeting about a "sensitive matter" that occurred during the campaign.
Gov. Phil Murphy’s chief of staff said Tuesday that he told an administration official who had been accused of rape to leave his job 10 weeks earlier than it had been known he was urged to depart – but never followed up on that late March request.