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- <text id=94TT0307>
- <link 94TO0153>
- <title>
- Mar. 21, 1994: Does Rose Have Something To Hide?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WHITE HOUSE, Page 32
- Does Rose Have Something To Hide?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Richard Behar/New York and Suneel Ratan/Little Rock
- </p>
- <p> The attorneys at the Rose Law Firm of Little Rock have always
- liked to operate near the center of power. Their first woman
- partner was Hillary Rodham Clinton, who got the title in 1979,
- the same year her husband became Governor. When she became First
- Lady, she took three other partners with her to Washington,
- where Vincent Foster and William Kennedy became White House
- counsels and Webster Hubbell was named Associate Attorney General.
- The future looked so promising that Rose opened a one-man Washington
- operation to explore opportunities for establishing a permanent
- office.
- </p>
- <p> But sometimes it doesn't pay to get too close to the seat of
- power. The lawyers at Rose have spent much of the past few weeks
- trying to contend with the tributaries of Whitewater that run
- straight through their firm--and the whirring noise of a shredder.
- Two college students employed as couriers in the Little Rock
- office say that in late January, after the special counsel began
- his Whitewater investigation, they shredded materials from the
- office of Foster, who had handled some of the Clintons' Whitewater
- dealings, and who committed suicide last July. Senior attorneys
- are said to be watching miserably as the firm's white shoes
- are dragged through the mud. "Yeah, it's more tense," says Jeremy
- Hedges, one of the shredders. "But then, it's always been tense."
- </p>
- <p> With roots going back to 1820, the firm takes its name from
- U.M. Rose, a founder of the American Bar Association. By the
- 1980s, when its growth took off under the direction of C. Joseph
- Giroir, a securities specialist, it had long been the cream
- of Arkansas firms. Its list of present and former clients includes
- some of the state's biggest businesses, including Tyson Foods,
- Wal-Mart and TCBY, the national yogurt franchiser, as well as
- Little Rock Airport Commission and the Federal Deposit Insurance
- Corporation, which oversees banks.
- </p>
- <p> That client roster, mixing businesses with government regulators,
- sometimes led to conflict-of-interest accusations. In 1988 the
- firm and its insurer paid $3 million to settle a conflict charge
- stemming from the failure of FirstSouth Savings and Loan. At
- the insistence of Senate Republicans, the FDIC has reopened
- a conflict-of-interest investigation involving Madison Guaranty,
- the failed S&L headed by James McDougal, the Clintons' partner
- in Whitewater. In 1989 the firm represented the FDIC in a suit
- against Madison's auditors, despite the fact that, four years
- earlier, Hillary had dealt with state regulators on Madison's
- behalf.
- </p>
- <p> Spokesmen for the firm say it began shredding to protect confidential
- client information during the 1992 primary campaigns, when reporters
- were discovered rummaging through office garbage. In late January,
- after special counsel Robert Fiske announced the start of his
- Whitewater investigation, Hedges and another courier, Clayton
- Lindsey, say they spent an hour shredding documents plainly
- marked VWF. The only lawyer at the firm with those initials
- was Vince W. Foster. At a meeting with managing partner Ronald
- Clark and others a few weeks later, they were informed that
- they would have to answer FBI questions and testify before the
- Whitewater grand jury. Hedges says they were told to tell the
- truth and "not to do anything to protect the firm." But when
- Hedges informed senior partner Jerry Jones that he would tell
- the FBI he had shredded Foster documents, Jones replied, "Don't
- assume they were his documents." According to Hedges, when he
- answered in turn that he was certain, Jones told him, "Don't
- assume that they have anything to do with the investigation."
- </p>
- <p> Rose partners shrug off the story, insisting, plausibly, that
- if they had anything to hide, they would not have gotten two
- lower-rung employees to do their dirty work. Hedges says senior
- partners would be just as unlikely to risk attracting suspicion
- by doing something out of the ordinary--like their own shredding.
- "People get suspicious."
- </p>
- <p> Tired of the spotlight--and of being compared to the fishy
- practitioners in The Firm--Rose is showing the strain. Some
- members of the firm have knives out for the big names whose
- troubles have come back to haunt the firm. They leaked word
- that Rose was conducting an internal review of Hubbell to determine
- whether he had overbilled clients and misused his expense account.
- And politically conservative partners are also said to be itching
- to undercut Rose alumni attached to the Democratic White House.
- The Washington Times reported last week that in connection with
- the expense-account questions, an unidentified group of partners
- is thinking of filing an ethics complaint against Hubbell with
- the Arkansas Supreme Court.
- </p>
- <p> The Whitewater fallout is also being felt by Rose's man in Washington,
- Allen Bird II. But he predicts Rose will pursue plans to open
- "a legislative practice" in Washington, a term for lawyer-lobbyists.
- While he promises they won't be selling access, that won't keep
- them from picking up the phone: "We decided we would feel free
- to contact anyone in the Administration anytime we felt it was
- appropriate, legal and ethical." It's hard to know how much
- comfort to take from that.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-