Brett Kavanaugh will not return to Harvard University to teach a course scheduled for the 2019 term.

The school made that announcement in an email sent to law students and obtained by Business Insider on Monday evening.

"Today, Judge Kavanaugh indicated that he can no longer commit to teaching his course in January Term 2019, so the course will not be offered," the announcement reads.

The embattled Supreme Court nominee is facing renewed FBI scrutiny over multiple claims of sexual misconduct from his years in high school and college. On Monday new questions about his drinking habits during that time have also emerged.

Brett Kavanaugh will not return to Harvard University to teach a course scheduled for the 2019 term.

The school made that announcement in an email sent to law students and obtained by Business Insider on Monday evening. Kavanaugh's faculty page is also gone from the school's website.

"Today, Judge Kavanaugh indicated that he can no longer commit to teaching his course in January Term 2019, so the course will not be offered," reads an announcement sent by the associate dean and dean for academic and faculty affairs, Catherine Claypoole.

A Harvard law school spokesperson later confirmed to Business Insider that the course was indeed canceled. It was not immediately clear why Kavanaugh indicated he could not teach the class as scheduled.

The embattled Supreme Court nominee is facing renewed FBI scrutiny over multiple claims of sexual misconduct from his years in high school and college. Beginning last week, new questions about his drinking habits during that time also emerged, prompting former classmates to share their knowledge of Kavanaugh's behavior.

Several classmates have indicated that Kavanaugh has not been entirely truthful about his past drinking and the behavior he engaged in while intoxicated.

Republican and Democratic senators have urged the FBI to take a closer look at the claims. President Donald Trump ordered the agency to restart its inquiry on Friday. The White House gave the FBI more freedom to investigate the outstanding claims on Monday.