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- <text id=94TT0074>
- <title>
- Jan. 24, 1994: The Tangled Web
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 24, 1994 Ice Follies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE PRESIDENCY, Page 30
- The Tangled Web
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Reno chooses a special prosecutor, new questions arise in
- the Whitewater case
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by James Carney with Clinton, Richard Behar/Little
- Rock, Elaine Shannon/Washington and Suneel Ratan/Yellville
- </p>
- <p> If there is anything Bill Clinton does not need, it is another
- embarrassing question about Whitewater. In fact the President
- has agreed, most reluctantly, to the appointment of a special
- counsel to investigate that mess largely to move the questions
- off the front pages and TV network news for a while. But now
- TIME has turned up evidence that Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton
- participated in deals in which the same land was sold and resold--in one case to themselves--at rapidly escalating prices
- for reasons that cannot quickly be pinned down.
- </p>
- <p> Even in the middle of what should have been a heady European
- trip, a senior aide reported Clinton to be "vexed" and "frustrated."
- In Brussels, Prague, Kiev and Moscow he was winning favorable
- press coverage for his handling of foreign policy. But at every
- stop he kept hearing that awful word Whitewater to his obvious
- dismay. Presidential aides had fought to portray criticisms
- of Whitewater and related deals as partisan Republican sniping.
- But now nine Democratic Senators had joined the clamor for a
- special counsel to take an independent look.
- </p>
- <p> A conference call Tuesday night between Clinton's entourage
- in Prague and people at the White House ended with no final
- decision. But before leaving the Czech capital Wednesday morning,
- Clinton told advisers, "I want to get on with the business of
- my presidency," and gave the go-ahead for a special counsel.
- Officially, the decision came in a letter from White House counsel
- Bernard Nussbaum to Attorney General Janet Reno.
- </p>
- <p> That gave White House aides a reason to turn aside any new Whitewater
- questions: from now on, it's all up to the special counsel.
- But there are questions about the special counsel. Who will
- be chosen? Reno's only answer was someone "ruggedly independent."
- Outsiders could agree only on a general description: the counsel
- should be someone well known and respected, at least within
- the legal profession; probably retired or semi-retired (because
- he or she could not be involved in any active litigation); and
- preferably a Republican. How broad or narrow will the probe
- be? Said Justice Department spokesman Carl Stern: "We're not
- going to tell the special counsel what to investigate. He or
- she is going to tell us."
- </p>
- <p> The difference could be crucial. An inquiry focused narrowly
- on Whitewater and the failed Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan,
- whose owner James McDougal and then wife Susan were partners
- with the Clintons in that land venture, might be concluded speedily,
- but be open to charges of inadequacy. A broader investigation
- could turn into a fishing expedition lasting for years.
- </p>
- <p> In any case, matters meriting a special counsel's attention
- keep piling up. The fundamental questions still are: Was any
- money from Madison Guaranty improperly funneled into Governor
- Clinton's campaigns, or into the Clintons' pockets? And did
- the Governor repay with political favors to the S&L? But any
- attempt to answer quickly leads into a tangled financial-political
- underbrush, which seems to get thornier every day. Some new
- problems:
- </p>
- <p> RUNAWAY INFLATION? On July 14, 1978, Arkla Land Co. sold a 3,600-acre
- tract in northern Arkansas to a company called 101 River Development
- Inc. for a price equivalent to about $400 an acre. On Aug. 2,
- a 230-acre parcel was resold. The buyers: Bill and Hillary Clinton
- and James and Susan McDougal. A deed examined by TIME in the
- Marion County seat of Yellville is recorded in their individual
- names; tax stamps indicate the price was $203,000, or roughly
- $882 an acre--more than double the per-acre price only 19
- days earlier. Little more than a year later, on Sept. 30, 1979,
- the Clintons and McDougals sold the land again, to their newly
- formed Whitewater Development Corp. The price, again as calculated
- from tax stamps: $250,000, or just under $1,087 an acre.
- </p>
- <p> Why the rapid price inflation? Why did the Clintons and the
- McDougals pay twice the price paid by 101 River? Why was the
- price increased almost 25% a year later? The only explanation
- available, and a not fully satisfying one, comes from James
- Patterson Jr., who was involved in several ways: he was secretary
- of 101 River Development, which sold the land to the Clintons
- and McDougals, and also president of Citizens Bank and Trust
- in the tiny Arkansas town of Flippin, which loaned money to
- 101 to buy the land and later advanced a $182,611 mortgage loan
- to Whitewater so it could repurchase the same land. Patterson,
- in an interview with TIME, insists that the sale to the McDougals
- and Clintons was an arm's length transaction. The reason they
- paid more per acre than other buyers of acreage from the large
- parcel was that they bought better land with a large amount
- of river frontage. And the reason his bank extended such loans,
- Patterson said, was to boost local economic development.
- </p>
- <p> PROFIT OR LOSS? The Clintons have contended that rather than
- improperly profiting from their half-share in Whitewater, they
- lost nearly all the $69,000 they invested. But that claim is
- becoming increasingly difficult to support. For one thing, Whitewater's
- purchase of the land for $47,000 more than the Clintons and
- McDougals had paid for it would have yielded each couple an
- initial profit of $23,500, if they had a fifty-fifty share in
- everything. The profit may have been entirely on paper; even
- so, they should have paid federal capital-gains taxes on it.
- The Clintons' tax returns from 1980 through 1987 show no such
- payment; their 1979 return is unavailable.
- </p>
- <p> Besides the $183,000 loan from Citizens Bank, Whitewater was
- started with a down payment of $20,000. But documents establish
- that the $20,000 was also borrowed, from Union Bank of Little
- Rock. That raises the question of whether the loan from Citizens
- was prudent, given that there was no cash down payment. Also,
- it is not known for sure how much, if any, unborrowed cash the
- Clintons put into Whitewater.
- </p>
- <p> Further, records and interviews with Chris Wade, the real estate
- agent who sold the lots for the Clintons and McDougals and ended
- up buying much of the land from them, indicate that Whitewater
- over the years took in around $270,250. Wade claims that Whitewater
- spent $40,000 on improvements like roads, and carrying costs
- on the land may have eaten up much of the rest. But it is hard
- to see how the Clintons' half-share could have resulted in a
- loss of anything like $69,000. McDougal has told the Associated
- Press that he thought their cash investment, and loss, was only
- about $9,000 up to 1986.
- </p>
- <p> CONFLICT OF INTEREST? A Governor going into partnership with
- a man whose main business is regulated by the state government
- seems questionable to begin with--or at least an occasion
- for special vigilance. But at least one more specific potential
- conflict has been turned up by TIME. In 1983, Madison Guaranty
- sought state approval, over the objections of a rival S&L, to
- open a branch in Salina County. A six-member board established
- to decide such cases had a temporary vacancy. Governor Clinton
- sent a letter to one Dick Fisch (nobody today recalls anything
- about him) appointing Fisch a "special member...to specifically
- hear" the Madison case. The board, including Fisch, voted to
- approve Madison's application. As it turned out, the branch
- never opened. No matter; in the view of some lawyers, it was
- unethical for Clinton to decide who should vote on an application
- from a business partner of the Governor's.
- </p>
- <p> TRYING TO MISLEAD REGULATORS? Rose Law Firm, in which Hillary
- Clinton was a partner, represented Madison Guaranty for a retainer
- of $2,000 a month, and in 1985 Mrs. Clinton presented to a regulator
- appointed by her husband a plan for a sale of preferred stock
- to shore up the S&L's finances. In support of that petition,
- Richard Massey, another member of the Rose firm, wrote two letters.
- One, in June, acknowledged inferentially that Madison did not
- meet federally mandated cash requirements but cheerily asserted
- that "the applicant anticipates that no deficiency will exist
- in the near future." The next month Massey advised that Madison
- "anticipates...improvement of its financial condition and
- services provided to customers." Massey told the Associated
- Press that he was merely passing on what he was told by Madison
- management.
- </p>
- <p> Those rosy opinions were sandwiched between totally contrasting
- judgments by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, which supervised
- S&Ls whose deposits were insured by the Federal Government,
- as Madison's were. In a 1984 audit, the bank board warned that
- Madison's "investment and lending practices in real estate developments"
- were jeopardizing its "viability." In 1986, eight months after
- the second Massey letter, another bank-board audit cited a hair-raising
- list of "problems," including "conflicts of interest, high-risk
- land developments, poor asset quality...inadequate income
- and net worth, low liquidity, securities speculation, excessive
- compensation [presumably to officers] and poor records and
- controls." All that, said the bank board, raised "a significant
- threat to [Madison's] continued existence."
- </p>
- <p> The federal forebodings proved prescient: Madison did fail,
- and was taken over by federal regulators on March 2, 1989. A
- few days before, Vincent Foster, then a partner in Rose Law
- Firm, wrote to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which
- had temporarily taken responsibility for dealing with failed
- thrifts, seeking a contract for Rose to represent the regulators.
- Rose in fact got the business, and Webster Hubbell, a partner
- who has since become Associated U.S. Attorney General, brought
- a $6 million suit on behalf of the regulators against Madison's
- accountants; he settled for $1 million.
- </p>
- <p> The question is whether anyone told the FDIC that Rose had previously
- represented Madison. Under federal law, it could be a crime
- not to disclose this fact. Foster's letter made no mention of
- it, and he cannot shed any light on the matter now: he became
- a White House counsel after Clinton's victory but committed
- suicide in July (after his death, a Whitewater file was removed
- from his office, and the disclosure of that helped trigger the
- whole scandal). According to government documents, a Rose lawyer
- recalls telling the FDIC. Officials of that agency say they
- can find no records nor anyone with a memory of being orally
- informed.
- </p>
- <p> Obviously, no one can predict the outcome of the special counsel's
- probe. The dealings in question are so complex that it is difficult
- even to summarize the suspicions they arouse, let alone cite
- the evidence supporting such suspicions. The sums of money involved
- are relatively petty, certainly on the scale of those Clinton
- now grapples with in shaping a federal budget. Violations of
- law, if any, would be extremely difficult to prove. Even Iowa
- Congressman Jim Leach, the chief Republican gadfly on Whitewater,
- doubts that the special counsel can or should bring criminal
- charges against Bill or Hillary Clinton. At most, he thinks,
- they might be assessed some civil penalties, perhaps mostly
- "symbolic" ones. But on another level, the investigation concerns
- the much larger issue of whether a President and First Lady
- can be trusted to obey the law and tell the truth.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-