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- <text id=94TT0282>
- <title>
- Mar. 14, 1994: Shadow Of Doubt
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 14, 1994 How Man Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WHITEWATER, Page 28
- Shadow Of Doubt
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Administration's judgment is in question again as the special
- counsel fires a volley of subpoenas
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Nina Burleigh, James Carney, Julie Johnson and Suneel
- Ratan/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton has always modeled himself after John F. Kennedy.
- But as the Whitewater scandal continues to plague him, it is
- increasingly the fading memories of Richard Nixon that keep
- cropping up in the White House. The current scandal seems to
- lack any of the deep seriousness of Watergate, but the handling
- of the questions still hanging over the strange little land
- deal in Arkansas 16 years ago has produced an outsize shadow
- of doubt over the Administration--and prompted the resignation
- of a member of the President's and First Lady's inner circle.
- </p>
- <p> The latest problem arose late Friday afternoon, when the phone
- rang in the office of associate White House counsel William
- Kennedy III. On the other end was an FBI official, calling to
- tell him that subpoenas ordered by special counsel Robert Fiske
- were about to be served on six White House officials and three
- Treasury Department staff members. Kennedy brought the bad news
- to chief of staff Mack McLarty, who gathered five of the targeted
- aides in the counsel's office at 6 to await the subpoenas.
- </p>
- <p> The documents bore some of the Administration's biggest names,
- including White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum, senior adviser
- Bruce Lindsey, communications director Mark Gearan and deputy
- chief of staff Harold Ickes. They were ordered to Federal District
- Court in Washington to provide testimony for a grand jury in
- Little Rock. At issue is a series of meetings between White
- House aides and Treasury Department officials connected to the
- Whitewater investigation. Another subpoena ordered the White
- House to preserve any evidence relating to the meetings. Deputy
- counsel Joel Klein immediately barred the destruction of computer
- records or the removal of any burn bags and trash containers.
- </p>
- <p> The subpoenas were one of the most embarrassing developments
- yet. At a time when the President is losing ground on health-care
- reform, his Administration's bobbling of the investigation brought
- on a week of painful disclosures, the FBI at the White House
- door--and Nussbaum's resignation.
- </p>
- <p> His departure, effective April 5, became official in an exchange
- of letters with the President. Nussbaum blamed "those who do
- not understand, nor wish to understand the role and obligations
- of a lawyer..." Clinton more diplomatically noted, "We have
- worked together in Washington at a time when serving is hard."
- </p>
- <p> Prodded by stories in the Washington Post, the White House had
- acknowledged a few days earlier that Treasury Department officials
- had met twice with Nussbaum and other Administration aides for
- the unusual purpose of discussing the progress of a federal
- investigation of the Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan. Madison
- Guaranty is the failed Arkansas thrift once owned by James McDougal,
- the Clintons' partner in the Whitewater real estate development.
- Deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman, acting head of the Resolution
- Trust Corporation, admitted to the Senate banking committee
- that he had briefed Nussbaum and other top aides on the probe.
- </p>
- <p> The most ill-advised contact was in late September, when Nussbaum
- met with Jean Hanson, general counsel at the Treasury Department.
- She told him that the RTC, the agency charged with cleaning
- up the S&L mess, would soon send a request to the Justice Department
- asking for a criminal investigation of Madison. Though the request
- does not charge the Clintons with wrongdoing, it names them
- as possible beneficiaries of illegal Madison transactions. For
- a regulatory body to disclose such a matter to any of the parties
- involved is a considerable departure from standard practice,
- to say nothing of a spectacular instance of bad political judgment.
- </p>
- <p> At a second meeting in October, Nussbaum was joined by Gearan;
- Lindsey, a top Clinton aide who was the chief explainer of Whitewater;
- and Josh Steiner, Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen's chief of
- staff. According to Gearan, they discussed how best to respond
- to press questions about Whitewater.
- </p>
- <p> Faced with something that approached a regular kaffeeklatsch
- linking the White House with agencies looking into Whitewater,
- an embarrassed Clinton insisted at midweek that "no one has
- actually done anything wrong," but nonetheless added, "I think
- it would be better if the meetings and conversations hadn't
- occurred." The President ordered McLarty to issue a rule to
- senior Administration officials about Whitewater chats with
- federal regulators: Don't have them or, before you do, clear
- them with me.
- </p>
- <p> In addition to the subpoenas to Nussbaum, Lindsey and Gearan,
- who attended one or all of the meetings, and Ickes, who has
- lately been handling Whitewater damage control for the White
- House, two others went to aides of Hillary Rodham Clinton. Her
- chief of staff, Maggie Williams, attended at least one meeting.
- Press secretary Lisa Caputo had heard last fall from an RTC
- official about press inquiries involving the case. Four more
- subpoenas went to former Bentsen aide Jack DeVore and Altman,
- Hanson and Steiner at Treasury.
- </p>
- <p> Senate Republicans could hardly contain their glee as Whitewater
- appeared to turn into the kind of consuming issue that paralyzes
- an Administration; 43 G.O.P. members promised that until the
- Senate banking committee holds hearings on the suspect meetings,
- they will block the Administration's nomination of Ricki Tigert
- to head the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. "You're asking
- for big, big trouble and showing some stunningly bad judgment
- when you start mixing politics with law enforcement," clucked
- Senate minority leader Bob Dole.
- </p>
- <p> This realization came too late to Nussbaum, who brought to Washington
- the truculent manner of a big-city courtroom litigator and the
- political instincts of a country parson. His involvement in
- several notable White House debacles, including the travel-office
- uproar, the extended search for an Attorney General and the
- choice of an easily targeted Lani Guinier for a top Justice
- Department post, earned him the reputation of a Beltway naif
- and worse. Until last week the most serious charges against
- him involved his actions after the apparent suicide last year
- of White House lawyer Vincent Foster, when Nussbaum interfered
- in investigators' attempts to examine Foster's office and removed
- some records, including files pertaining to Whitewater. It was
- an odd notion of propriety for a man who did his first stint
- in Washington on the staff of the House Watergate committee.
- </p>
- <p> As soon as news of the Nussbaum meetings with Treasury officials
- emerged, pressure built within the White House to dump him.
- By last Friday, Clinton's most influential advisers--McLarty,
- David Gergen, George Stephanopoulos and Vice President Al Gore--all agreed he had to go.
- </p>
- <p> For a while, there was resistance from Nussbaum, who wanted
- the resignation postponed to avoid the appearance that he had
- been forced out, and from a dwindling number of supporters.
- However, fed up with Washington and its rough handling of her
- husband, Nussbaum's wife Toby was relieved to see him leave
- the job. On Friday afternoon, tellingly, Clinton passed up two
- opportunities to defend Nussbaum in public. That evening he
- called his old friend into the Oval Office to discuss how the
- deed would be done. A reluctant Nussbaum agreed to go. His view,
- as a senior White House official put it, was "I'll be the lightning
- rod. I'll take the hits."
- </p>
- <p> So far, the damage has not reached Treasury Secretary Bentsen.
- Scrambling to distance himself from the rising muck, he ordered
- his employees to have no more contact with the White House about
- Whitewater and asked the Office of Government Ethics to review
- the earlier contacts.
- </p>
- <p> When the Whitewater focus wasn't on Nussbaum, it turned toward
- the Rose Law Firm of Little Rock, where Foster, the First Lady,
- Associate Attorney General Webster Hubbell and White House lawyer
- Kennedy were all once partners, known collectively as "the Famous
- Four." Last week the firm added to the Whitewater saga that
- piece of office equipment vital to any full-fledged political
- scandal: a shredder. The New York Times reported that a college
- student who works at Rose told the federal grand jury convened
- by Fiske that in late January he and another employee were ordered
- to shred a box of documents that appeared to have come from
- the files of Foster, whose legal work on behalf of the Clintons
- included handling the sale of their parts of the Whitewater
- acreage. The story was denied by representatives of the firm,
- who had some logic on their side: Would they select a part-time
- college kid to deep-six something really damaging when they
- could have done the deed themselves? That flap followed in the
- wake of a Washington Post report that Hubbell was the subject
- of an internal investigation by his old firm into alleged overbilling
- of clients, including the RTC. Hubbell denied any wrongdoing,
- and was stoutly defended by Attorney General Janet Reno.
- </p>
- <p> In the tangled Whitewater case, even what seemed like settled
- questions keep coming unsettled. In a letter filed in U.S. District
- Court in New York, Fiske let it be known that his investigation
- will also re-examine the conclusion that Foster's death last
- year was a suicide. He asked the court to keep the reports secret
- until his probe is completed. But if last week is any indication,
- the steady drip, drip, drip of Whitewater disclosures is likely
- to afflict the Clintons for months to come.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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