home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0042>
- <title>
- Jan. 17, 1994: Searching For The Missing Pieces
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 17, 1994 Genetics:The Future Is Now
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE WHITE HOUSE, Page 20
- Searching For The Missing Pieces
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Clintons' messy handling of the Whitewater scandal intensifies
- the demand for a special prosecutor to find some answers to
- its complex puzzles
- </p>
- <p>By George Church--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett and Michael Duffy/Washington,
- Richard Behar and Adam Zagorin/Little Rock
- </p>
- <p> Why would a lawyer ask the Justice Department to subpoena some
- of the papers of his own clients--especially if those clients
- are the President of the U.S. and his wife? White House senior
- adviser Bruce Lindsey has a simple answer: "Privacy." Indeed,
- subpoenaed papers become part of the record of a criminal investigation,
- unavailable for release under the Freedom of Information Act
- and thus shielded more effectively than otherwise from Congress
- and the press.
- </p>
- <p> Accordingly, on the day last week that the Justice Department
- received a request under the Freedom of Information Act to make
- public files on Whitewater Development Corp.--an Arkansas
- land venture in which Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton were partners--the White House announced that those files were under subpoena.
- David Kendall, the Clintons' personal lawyer, had asked for
- that subpoena almost two weeks earlier, on Dec. 23--the day
- Clinton announced he would turn over all the files to Justice
- "voluntarily." As it happened, Justice lawyers were already
- drafting a subpoena; Kendall persuaded them to broaden it and
- demand more documents than they originally wanted to see. Kendall
- handed over about half the papers last week, after a couple
- of days of confusion and contradiction: the White House had
- first announced that all the papers had been turned over, and
- then that none would be for a couple of weeks because they had
- to be "cataloged."
- </p>
- <p> Had the President wanted to amplify whispers of "cover-up" into
- roars, he could hardly have devised a better strategy. And the
- Administration promptly compounded the damage. Besieged by demands
- that she appoint a special counsel to look into the case, Attorney
- General Janet Reno steadfastly refused to do so at this time.
- That "might be a possibility," she said, if Congress passes
- a new law authorizing her to ask a court to choose a special
- counsel (the old law expired in 1992). But if she were to name
- one on her own now, said Reno, no one would believe the counsel
- would be "truly independent." To critics the reasoning seemed
- lame, and even inside the White House some aides were offering
- to bet that a special counsel will be named soon. But it might
- be too late to save Clinton from suspicion that he resisted
- as long as he could.
- </p>
- <p> Altogether, it seems as if the President, the First Lady and
- their aides have forgotten everything they learned about damage
- control during the bitter campaign of 1992. Old Washington hands
- point out that suspicions of hiding a scandal usually hurt a
- President far more than the scandal itself. That seems especially
- true in this case. The affairs of Whitewater and its partners--the Clintons, James McDougal, the owner of a failed Arkansas
- savings and loan, and his wife Susan--were so convoluted that
- they defy quick summary. Even the questions that the dealings
- raise are too complex to fit on a bumper sticker. The press
- and television paid almost no attention until recently, and
- then largely because it developed that a file relating to Whitewater
- had been removed from the office of White House counsel Vincent
- Foster after he committed suicide last July (that file is one
- of the papers Justice subpoenaed and Kendall handed over last
- week).
- </p>
- <p> But there is a strong reason for White House efforts to soft-pedal
- the whole affair, and it can be put in a single word: Hillary.
- Compared with the President, the First Lady was a central player.
- Among other things, she sought power of attorney for Whitewater
- and represented McDougal's S&L before a state regulator appointed
- by her husband, then Arkansas Governor. "This is hers," says
- a White House official. "If the troopers [who accused Bill
- Clinton of extramarital affairs] were about him, this one is
- about her."
- </p>
- <p> But within the White House no one is allowed to voice anything
- that sounds like criticism of Hillary. The last person who tried--staff secretary John Podesta, who suggested that Mrs. Clinton
- might have had something to do with the dismissal of the White
- House travel-office staff--was banished from the inner circle
- for months. It would take considerable bravery for a Clinton
- aide to face the President with advice to agree to a special
- counsel and let the chips fall where they may, since some of
- those chips might fall on his wife's head. Late last week, nonetheless,
- some senior White House officials did discuss the special counsel
- idea with Clinton, but even the Commander in Chief deferred
- to Hillary's fierce opposition--at least for now. The problem
- for the White House, of course, is that stonewalling, or the
- suspicion of it, only intensifies the questions.
- </p>
- <p> The essential background is simple enough: the Clintons and
- McDougals formed Whitewater, a company that tried unsuccessfully
- to sell land in northern Arkansas for vacation homes, in 1979,
- Clinton's first year as Governor; it lingered in existence until
- late last year. In 1989, McDougal's S&L, Madison Guaranty, went
- broke, costing federal taxpayers $47 million. Madison was regulated
- by Clinton's state government, while its deposits were insured
- by the Federal Government.
- </p>
- <p> Suspecting check kiting and other abuses, the Resolution Trust
- Corp., the federal body formed to clean up the affairs of failed
- S&Ls, referred the matter to the Justice Department in 1992
- for investigation and possible prosecution. The referral, which
- has never been made public, mentioned the Clintons, but in what
- capacity is uncertain. People who have seen the referral say
- it definitely did not identify the Clintons as suspected wrongdoers.
- Some say they were named as potential witnesses, or as people
- who might have benefited from improper activities, though perhaps
- unwittingly. As investigators delve more deeply into the tangled
- affair, they will be seeking answers to these questions:
- </p>
- <p> WAS MONEY FROM MADISON GUARANTY AND/OR WHITEWATER DIVERTED INTO
- CLINTON'S CAMPAIGNS FOR GOVERNOR? The RTC is known to have raised
- this question. The grounds for its suspicions are somewhat less
- clear. But there is no question that James McDougal was one
- of Clinton's money raisers. In particular, it is known that
- he held a fund raiser in 1985 and came up with $35,000 to help
- repay Clinton for a $50,000 loan that the Governor had made
- to his own campaign fund the previous year (making personal
- loans to their campaigns is a common practice among politicians).
- There is some suspicion that at least part of the money may
- have come from Madison's depositors rather than from bona fide
- individual contributors.
- </p>
- <p> Iowa Republican Jim Leach, ranking minority member of the House
- Banking Committee, makes this charge explicitly. Says he: "The
- effect is that the money that flowed into the Clinton campaign
- to pay back a personal loan of the Clintons' ends up being deferred
- public financing of a campaign, and not by choice. That is,
- the money in effect came from an insolvent thrift ((institution)),
- paid back later by the federal taxpayer" in the form of reimbursements
- to money-losing depositors. Nothing has been proved, however,
- and Clinton has denied any knowledge of money improperly diverted
- into his campaigns.
- </p>
- <p> DID THE CLINTONS GET SWEETHEART DEALS IN WHITEWATER AND OTHER
- VENTURES? Quite the opposite, say the President and First Lady;
- they put $69,000 into Whitewater and lost virtually all that
- money. But Bill Clinton once put the loss at "at least $25,000,"
- and the Clintons never wrote off any loss at all on their tax
- returns. A Clinton aide contends that the documentation is too
- poor to enable them to do so.
- </p>
- <p> Other aspects of the Whitewater venture are somewhat odd. To
- begin with, the Clintons got a half share, although they invested
- much less than the McDougals (who put in $92,000). The Clintons
- have claimed to be only "passive" investors who let the McDougals
- run the show, but that hardly squares with Hillary's known activities.
- In her 1988 letter requesting power of attorney, she mentions
- having been actively involved in selling lots. Also, she built,
- sold and then bought back a model home. It now turns out that
- Hillary built the house in 1981 with a $30,000 loan from the
- tiny Bank of Kingston, which was controlled by McDougal and
- Steve Smith, a former top aide to Governor Clinton. (Another
- shareholder was Jim Guy Tucker, who has succeeded Clinton as
- Arkansas Governor.) Marlin Jackson, who was then Arkansas banking
- commissioner, has told TIME that the loan violated state regulations
- because the home and borrower's residence were outside the area
- in which the bank was permitted to lend.
- </p>
- <p> Then there was an incident in which McDougal in effect swapped
- 20 Whitewater building lots, almost half the project's total,
- for little more than a twin-engine Piper Seminole airplane that
- was later sold for a loss of $13,000. That loss was absorbed
- by Madison Guaranty's depositors, but federal taxpayers eventually
- had to pick up the tab through the RTC. Another intriguing factor
- is that the plane was at one point owned by Seth Ward, the father-in-law
- of Webster Hubbell, then a law partner of Hillary's and now
- Reno's top deputy at the Justice Department. McDougal sold Ward
- the plane, and his S&L loaned him the money for the purchase,
- Ward told TIME, in order to keep the aircraft off Madison's
- books, where it might have aroused suspicion among regulators.
- Hubbell acted as counsel to his father-in-law in the deal, one
- of several connections with the thrift that have had the effect
- of forcing Hubbell to dissociate himself from any investigations
- involving Whitewater or Madison. All in all, Whitewater's finances
- were tangled enough to make the traditional can of worms look
- simple.
- </p>
- <p> DID STATE REGULATORS GO EASY ON MADISON GUARANTY IN RETURN FOR
- FAVORS TO THE CLINTONS? This is another charge leveled by Leach,
- who cannot conveniently be accused of blind partisanship. He
- is, in fact, perhaps the least partisan Republican in the House.
- One reason for the contention: at the start of 1985, Clinton
- appointed Beverly Bassett Schaffer as head of the state department
- that regulates S&Ls. Later, Schaffer approved a proposal for
- an unusual stock sale to shore up McDougal's already troubled
- S&L. The proposal was presented by none other than Hillary Clinton,
- acting as attorney for Madison Guaranty. The stock sale, however,
- never went into effect, and records in the Arkansas state security
- division show that Schaffer was quite tough on Madison. In the
- middle of 1986, state and federal regulators joined in removing
- McDougal as its chief.
- </p>
- <p> WERE THE EVENTUAL INVESTIGATIONS LESS VIGOROUS THAN THEY SHOULD
- HAVE BEEN? In 1992, when Whitewater's name was starting to crop
- up in stories about Bill Clinton's campaign, Denver lawyer James
- Lyons did an audit, at Clinton's request, that to critics seemed
- highly inadequate. The RTC's referral of the case to Justice
- landed in Washington in the fall of 1992--just as Clinton
- was forging decisively ahead of George Bush in the presidential
- race. Justice officials were afraid they would be accused of
- a partisan effort to smear Clinton if they had Washington take
- over the investigation, so they left it with the U.S. Attorney
- in Little Rock. At the time that was Republican Charles Banks,
- but after Clinton's victory he was replaced by Democrat Paula
- Casey.
- </p>
- <p> Enter David Hale, an Arkansas judge and head of a lending company
- that was backed by federal money. Hale claims that in 1986,
- Clinton, who had appointed him to the bench, and McDougal pressured
- him to arrange a $300,000 loan to clean up some dubious Madison
- Guaranty loans. Hale did approve a loan of that amount to McDougal's
- wife, but $110,000 went into Whitewater. Clinton denied exerting
- any pressure and said he had been unaware of such money winding
- up in Whitewater. Hale proposed to Casey that he have himself
- wired up to record incriminating conversations, perhaps with
- Clinton and aides.
- </p>
- <p> Casey refused, suspecting the offer was not serious. Hale, who
- had been indicted for fraud in a separate case, wanted Casey
- to give him a plea bargain; Casey offered instead a reduction
- in sentence if he pleaded guilty and cooperated with the government
- on other matters. But Hale refused the deal and will stand trial
- next month. Casey eventually recused herself from both the Hale
- and Madison cases, but most belatedly, last November. She would
- have trouble claiming impartiality; she had been a law student
- of Bill Clinton's and a volunteer in all his campaigns. Her
- husband works for Arkansas Governor Tucker, who had many dealings
- with McDougal. After Casey's recusal, the Justice Department
- in Washington took over the investigation; pending possible
- appointment of a special counsel, it is being run by Donald
- Mackay, a senior trial attorney--and a Republican.
- </p>
- <p> It is important to note that no one has offered proof of any
- criminal activity. Even if anyone did, it would be very difficult
- to prove the Clintons knew of it and approved. Who would be
- a credible witness against them? James McDougal insists they
- did nothing wrong, appearing last week on the tabloid TV A Current
- Affair to make the point. Even if he were to decide otherwise,
- he has suffered a mental breakdown. Susan McDougal is separated
- from him; last week she pleaded not guilty to a California indictment
- charging her with embezzling $200,000 from symphony conductor
- Zubin Mehta, whom she served as a financial adviser. Even Leach
- concedes the whole affair has no potential to be another Watergate;
- it is entirely possible the Clintons will never face any penalties
- at all or be asked only to repay some money to Madison Guaranty
- depositors and be accused of a conflict of interest. Still,
- even by the standards of Arkansas, where members of a tiny financial-political
- elite constantly deal with one another, Hillary's representation
- of a business partner before a banking regulator appointed by
- her husband the Governor seems to be going rather far.
- </p>
- <p> At the very least, the Clintons' choices of James and Susan
- McDougal and David Hale as associates call into question their
- ability to judge character. And the other questions raised by
- the affair could come back to haunt Clinton in his probable
- 1996 re-election run. It may be that the President and his wife
- are guilty of nothing wrong. All the more reason to agree to
- have a special counsel conduct a vigorous investigation that
- is free of any suspicion of bias. Unless that is done, no one
- will ever really know.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-