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- December 28, 1987NATIONThe High Price of Friendship
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- Deaver faces a jail term for lying about his lobbying activities
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- Former White House Deputy Chief of Staff Michael K. Deaver
- stood stiffly beside his lawyer in a federal courtroom in
- Washington last week, expecting the worst. His lawyers, in a
- long-shot gamble, had presented no evidence to counter the
- assertion by Independent Counsel Whitney North Seymour Jr. that
- Deaver had repeatedly lied under oath about his lucrative
- lobbying business. When the jury returned guilty verdicts on
- three of five counts, canny Defense Counsel jack Miller manfully
- shouldered the blame: "We didn't put on a defense because we
- didn't think we had to. The jury verdict suggests I may have
- made a mistake."
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- Maybe not. By keeping Deaver off the witness stand, where he
- would have been subjected to withering cross-examination, Miller
- won not- guilty verdicts on two key counts. Moreover, Deaver
- and others are challenging the constitutionality of the 1978 law
- that established independent counsel. Two of Deaver's three
- guilty verdicts came on charges of lying to Seymour's grand jury
- that was investigating him for possible ethics-law violations.
- If the independent-counsel law is overturned, Seymour's work
- would be thrown out, and Deaver would be liable for retrial only
- on a single count of falsely testifying to a congressional
- committee. Given the evidence against Deaver, it was perhaps
- the best Miller could have done.
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- The seven-week trial provided a rare glimpse into the world of
- Washington special pleading, particularly at the Reagan White
- House. A top Boeing executive told the court that his company
- chose Deaver to lobby for a lucrative contract to build a new
- Air Force One because of Deaver's familiarity with the "personal
- tastes and preferences of the President." Deaver was paid
- $250,000, and Boeing eventually landed the $200 million
- contract.
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- Former White House Chief of Staff Donald Regan testified about
- his efforts to prevent a Korean client of Deaver's from getting
- a two- minute meeting with the President. Regan said he
- repeatedly vetoed the trade-related meeting, only to see it
- reappear on Reagan's schedule. Deaver was paid $475,000 for
- setting up the appointment and doing a few other errands for the
- Koreans. Philip Morris paid Deaver $250,000 to help win access
- to the South Korean tobacco market; company officials
- acknowledged they were overjoyed when Deaver obtained an
- hour-long meeting with South Korean President Chun Doo Hwan in
- Seoul and another, five-hour session with Korea's top trade
- official.
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- Telephone logs showed that former Secretary of Transportation
- Elizabeth Dole received a call from Deaver to discuss attempts
- by his client TWA to avoid a hostile takeover. Dole was never
- called to appear as a witness, but Deaver was found guilty of
- lying about the matter to a grand jury.
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- Canadian Ambassador Allan Gotlieb refused to waive diplomatic
- immunity to testify about a lunch he had with Deaver in January
- 1985 to discuss acid rain. Without evidence about the lunch,
- that section of the count was dismissed. The jury finally
- acquitted Deaver of the remaining charges involving acid rain.
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- Deaver faces a sentence of up to 15 years and a $22,000 fine at
- his sentencing Feb. 25. After the trial, Seymour blasted the
- climate of "too much loose money and too little concern in
- Washington about ethics." Lobbyists "will continue to undermine
- public confidence in government," said Seymour, "until
- lawmakers, business and community leaders and individual
- citizens decide to cry 'Enough!'"
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- The President and his wife issued a statement saying they were
- "sorry" about Deaver's conviction. But when Nancy Reagan was
- asked whether the Deavers would be invited to Christmas dinner
- at the White House this year as usual, her eyes widened, her
- features twisted into a grimace, and she answered, quietly but
- firmly, "No."
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- --By David Beckwith/Washington
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