The FBI background check on Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for defense secretary, does not include interviews with Hegseth’s ex-wives or the woman who accused him of sexual assault in a California hotel room in 2017, according to three sources with direct knowledge of the contents of the report.

It is standard protocol to interview current and former spouses in conducting FBI background checks, according to two other sources familiar with the process. But it is also contingent on cooperation from the interviewees, and it is not clear whether the FBI attempted outreach to those people.

Democrats on the Senate Armed Services Committee, which will hold Hegseth’s confirmation hearing Tuesday, also sent inquiries to counsel for Hegseth’s ex-wives, but they did not share information with the committee, according to two sources.

Since Trump announced him as his pick to run the Pentagon, Hegseth, a military veteran and former Fox News host, has faced a number of controversies and negative allegations. With regard to the 2017 allegation of sexual assault, Hegseth has said the incident was consensual and that he paid his accuser an undisclosed amount in 2023 as part of a settlement agreement. The local district attorney declined to file charges, saying there was no “proof beyond a reasonable doubt” for charges.

Senate Democrats have already been raising alarms about delays producing the FBI check and concerns about its thoroughness, while the Trump transition team has downplayed such concerns.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., a former state attorney general and Armed Services Committee member, told reporters Monday night that “there may be surprises” at Hegseth’s confirmation hearing “because we have been denied access to some of the materials and documents and other information, including the FBI report, that may contain information forthcoming during the hearing.”

“I just want to emphasize there’s already ample and abundant information on the public record that shows Peter Hegseth lacks the character and confidence to be secretary of defense,” Blumenthal added. “There has never been a nominee for this position as unqualified as he is by virtue of financial mismanagement, as well as sexual impropriety and alcohol.”

Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., the committee’s ranking member, was briefing Democrats on the committee about the FBI report Monday night. Reed and committee chair Roger Wicker, R-Miss., received the report at the end of last week.

The FBI did not immediately reply to requests for comment Monday evening.

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

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