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- <text id=94TT0355>
- <link 94TO0155>
- <title>
- Apr. 04, 1994: More Follies On The Sidelines
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 04, 1994 Deep Water
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE WHITE HOUSE, Page 26
- More Follies On The Sidelines
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett and Nina Burleigh/Washington
- </p>
- <p> "It's difficult to defend the White House as much as we'd like,"
- sighs a Democratic congressional leader. "Every day it's something
- else making them look as if they don't know what they're doing."
- Two Arkansan cases in point: William H. Kennedy III and Patsy
- Thomasson.
- </p>
- <p> Kennedy should have learned something about Washington ways
- while serving on the staffs of two Arkansas Senators in the
- 1970s before becoming a partner with Hillary Rodham Clinton
- in the Rose Law Firm of Little Rock. But as associate White
- House counsel, he has shown mainly a talent for getting in trouble.
- He drew a reprimand from the White House last summer for appearing
- to make political use of the FBI by calling in the G-men to
- investigate the White House travel office. He has been taking
- heavy flak for the strange anomaly of a White House staff peopled
- largely by aides whose legal right to roam its corridors is
- questionable. A third of the 1,044 employees have never received
- permanent passes attesting that they have passed security clearances--largely, higher officials say, because Kennedy has failed
- to forward FBI background checks to the Secret Service for final
- approval.
- </p>
- <p> Last week came the semifinal straw. One of Kennedy's duties
- was to look into the records of potential Administration appointees
- and advise the White House of any ethical problems, such as
- failure to pay taxes. But, it developed, he came to Washington
- with a tax problem of his own: like Zoe Baird, Clinton's failed
- first choice for Attorney General, Kennedy had not paid required
- Social Security taxes on the wages of a nanny. In February 1993,
- Kennedy did pay $1,352.52 to settle the 1992 bill--but he
- did it with a cashier's check supposedly drawn by "Leslie Gail
- McRae"--his wife's maiden name (they are engaged in what a
- friend calls "bitter" divorce proceedings).
- </p>
- <p> Kennedy denied he had tried to deceive anyone, but it hardly
- mattered; he also failed to pay nanny taxes for 1991, and forked
- over $700 only three weeks ago. When that became public, the
- White House frostily announced Kennedy would no longer run background
- checks on potential appointees but would perform less demanding--and unspecified--duties. The betting is that he'll go back
- to Arkansas as soon as he can resign inconspicuously.
- </p>
- <p> Patsy Thomasson, once Arkansas highway commissioner and now
- director of the White House Office of Administration, has also
- managed to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Like Kennedy,
- she was involved in the travel-office affair. A Little Rock
- investment group she headed has been caught up in a Securities
- and Exchange Commission investigation into a run-up in the price
- of the stock of a fisheries company just before it was acquired
- by Tyson Foods of Arkansas; Thomasson says she did no trading
- in the shares.
- </p>
- <p> Further, Thomasson joined ex-White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum
- and Mrs. Clinton's chief of staff Margaret Williams in entering
- the office of Vincent Foster Jr. the night of his suicide last
- July, and neither she nor the other two have ever explained
- what they were doing in there. Last week a crowd of reporters
- who did not even recognize Thomasson nonetheless turned up when
- she testified at a House Appropriations Subcommittee hearing,
- but learned next to nothing. She would love to relate what happened
- that night, Thomasson told Congress, but felt she should talk
- first only to special counsel Robert Fiske. Questioned about
- those White House passes, she gave a tantalizing quote. "We
- don't think we have any Aldrich Ameses in the White House,"
- said Thomasson, "but we certainly could." Oh?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-