“The scientific evidence (of hacking) is overwhelming,” Morrissey said. “To say there is no subjective evidence is disgraceful.”

William Neely, the longtime Spotsylvania County commonwealth’s attorney who was appointed to lead the grand jury’s investigation, has said he will not comment on the probe that got underway in May after months of police work by Henrico detectives.

Neely was among lawyers across the state who vehemently objected in 2011 to Morrissey regaining his license to practice law. In statements released to the news media, Morrissey’s supporters have argued that Neely cannot act in an unbiased manner toward Morrissey because of the earlier comments about Morrissey’s law license.

Morrissey also attacked Neely’s claim of an effort to influence the receptionist by providing Morrissey’s law firm’s Lexus to her for several weeks, something that Morrissey said occurred because the young woman had had a collision in her own car. She used her own money later to buy a vehicle.

Morrissey said family members of the receptionist have a taped recording of the alleged hacker admitting that she had done so, and on Tuesday Morrissey quoted the allegedly false text messages in which the receptionist and Morrissey allegedly admit having sex.