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- <text id=94TT0624>
- <title>
- May 16, 1994: Administration:Jones vs The President
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 16, 1994 "There are no devils...":Rwanda
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ADMINISTRATION, Page 44
- Jones vs. the President
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A woman sues Bill Clinton, saying he sexually harassed her when
- he was Governor of Arkansas. The White House says he did nothing
- of the kind.
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Nina Burleigh/Little Rock and Michael Duffy/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Washington may be one of the few places on earth where people
- have trouble keeping their minds on sex. The titillations of
- power are too distracting. For the rest of the country, it will
- take a while to absorb the details of Paula Jones' charge that
- Bill Clinton, when he was still Governor of Arkansas, spotted
- her at a Little Rock hotel, summoned her to his room, promptly
- dropped his pants and made a blunt sexual proposition. When
- she finally filed a $700,000 lawsuit against the President last
- week, she added a detail that launched the case decisively into
- the tabloid universe of Michael Jackson and the Bobbitts. To
- prove her allegation, she says, she can identify "distinguishing
- characteristics in Clinton's genital area."
- </p>
- <p> That should be enough for the Leno and Letterman monologues.
- But by now Washington is more transfixed by the really dirty
- part--the politics. In a week when Clinton won a close but
- smashing victory in Congress on assault weapons, the big question
- is what impact the lawsuit could have on his effectiveness as
- President. Even if the case is dismissed, it can't help the
- President to have the national imagination supplied with one
- more image of him as the Libido in Chief. And at a time when
- public curiosity about the tales of Clinton's womanizing might
- have died down, Jones' accusations revive them with a feminist
- angle: sexual harassment. That has conservatives hoping for
- a mirror-image replay of the Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas battle,
- this time with the No. 1 Democrat as the accused.
- </p>
- <p> Four witnesses--two friends and two family members--have
- said that Jones told them about Clinton's advances on the day
- they took place. That didn't stop Robert Bennett, the Washington
- legal pit bull whom Clinton brought on last week to defend him,
- from tearing into the charges. "The President adamantly denies
- the vicious and meanspirited allegations in the complaint,"
- said Bennett. "Quite simply, the incident did not occur."
- </p>
- <p> Asked if he would have Clinton repeat his denial under oath,
- Bennett stopped short. "That's a very premature question," he
- said. The Administration is hoping the case will be dismissed
- before it comes to that. Bennett will argue that the charges
- were filed too late for the federal statute Clinton is accused
- of violating. Moreover, Bennett suggested last week that he
- will move to dismiss the case on grounds that a sitting President
- cannot be sued on matters that occurred before he took office.
- Unless the courts buy that argument swiftly, however, Bennett's
- client is in for a lengthy and politically damaging period of
- civil discovery in which depositions might be taken from other
- witnesses, other women and perhaps even the President himself.
- </p>
- <p> If the case proceeds, the main Clinton defense strategy is to
- depict Jones as a gold digger in the service of people out to
- destroy the Clinton presidency. "This is about money and book
- contracts, and radio and television appearances," Bennett says.
- It probably helps his case that a covey of Clinton haters have
- been the biggest promoters of the Jones story. Jones first made
- her charges during a February press conference at a meeting
- of the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington,
- to which she was brought by Cliff Jackson, a Little Rock lawyer
- and full-time Enemy of Bill.
- </p>
- <p> Jones says Clinton made his move on May 8, 1991, five months
- before he launched his presidential bid. On that day they were
- both at Little Rock's Excelsior Hotel for an annual gathering
- of business executives and government officials. Jones, who
- was then a 24-year-old clerk (salary: $10,270) for the Arkansas
- Industrial Development Commission, a state agency, was working
- at a table in the hotel lobby, handing out name tags. Her account
- of the episode proceeds like this:
- </p>
- <p> A state trooper, Danny Ferguson, came by her table to relay
- a message from Clinton: "The Governor said you make his knees
- knock." Ferguson came back with Clinton's hotel-room number
- and the message that the Governor wanted her to stop up in a
- few minutes. She told the Washington Post that she wasn't wary
- of the invitation because "I was brought up to trust people,
- and especially of that stature--you know, a Governor."
- </p>
- <p> Ferguson led her to Clinton's room, she says, which was furnished
- with a sofa and chairs but no bed. With the trooper waiting
- in the hallway, Clinton closed the door and made small talk
- about her job. Then he took her hand and pulled her toward him.
- When she pulled away, he told her, "I love the way your hair
- flows down your back," and, "I love your curves." Then he put
- a hand on her leg and tried to kiss her neck.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the advances, Jones says she didn't leave the room but
- sat down at the end of a sofa. Clinton's next move, she claims,
- was to drop his trousers and his underwear, sit down beside
- her on the sofa and ask her to perform oral sex. At that, she
- says, she headed for the door. As she departed, she says, Clinton
- told her, "You are smart. Let's keep this between ourselves."
- </p>
- <p> Jones maintains that Clinton's alleged come-on was harassment
- because she was an Arkansas state employee in 1991. After refusing
- Clinton's advances, she says, she was treated badly at work,
- transferred and denied promotions. Because the federal statute
- of limitations bars harassment suits after six months, Jones
- is suing instead for infliction of "emotional distress," as
- well as deprivation of civil rights and defamation.
- </p>
- <p> The suit presents women's groups with a dilemma similar to the
- one they faced when Republican Senator Bob Packwood of Oregon
- was accused of sexual harassment, albeit in that case more than
- 20 women came forward to make the charge. How fast should women's
- groups jump to the accuser's defense when her target is a man
- who has supported many of their goals? For now they are moving
- very carefully. "We think both Paula Jones and President Clinton
- deserve their day in court," says Patricia Ireland, president
- of the National Organization for Women. "We are not going to
- rise to the right wing's bait by jumping aboard either party's
- case until we have an opportunity to assess the credibility
- of the witness."
- </p>
- <p> As for the issue of financial gain, Joseph Cammarata, one of
- two Virginia lawyers who now represent Jones, says his client
- will donate to charity anything she wins in court beyond her
- legal costs. Whether she also means to forgo profits from selling
- her story is not so clear. And she may have sought payments
- from the White House before going public. In interviews earlier
- this year, Daniel Traylor, a Little Rock real estate attorney
- who represented her until she abruptly switched last week, said
- he had contacted George Cook, a Little Rock businessman who
- is a friend of the President's. Traylor said he asked Cook to
- tell the White House that Jones would remain silent in exchange
- for an apology from Clinton and financial compensation. In a
- signed affidavit, Cook says Traylor also suggested that Clinton
- might find jobs for Jones and her husband, an airline ticket
- agent and would-be actor, who now both live in Long Beach, California.
- Traylor says he was just trying to settle out of court.
- </p>
- <p> Jones, raised by a devoutly Christian family in small-town Arkansas,
- insists that it was not money but honor that prompted her decision
- to come forward. In January the American Spectator, a conservative
- Washington monthly, published the claims of Arkansas state troopers
- who said then Governor Clinton had used them to bring him women
- when they were assigned to his security detail. One of the troopers,
- who has since been identified as Ferguson, told the story of
- having taken a woman named "Paula" to a hotel room where Clinton
- was waiting. When she left the room later, he said, "Paula"
- told him that she would be willing to be Clinton's girlfriend.
- Insisting that she never spoke to Ferguson after leaving the
- room--she has named him in the defamation count of her suit--Jones says she went public with her story so that no one
- would think she had had sexual relations with Clinton.
- </p>
- <p> Jones' older sister, Charlotte Brown, says money was an incentive
- for the suit. Brown says Jones did indeed tell her on the day
- of the alleged incident that Clinton had made a sexual advance
- that she resisted. But in an interview last week, Brown added
- that her sister had seemed "flattered" by the encounter and
- had told her that "whichever way it went, it smelled of money."
- That in turn led Jones' younger sister, Lydia Cathey, to claim
- that Paula was in tears when she told her of the incident, and
- to call their older sister "a liar."
- </p>
- <p> Since the scene that Jones described took place behind closed
- doors, no one can confirm for now whether her account is a vivid
- remembrance, a cynical concoction or some combination of the
- two. And if something happened, is it exactly what Jones would
- have us believe? By his admissions of "having caused pain in
- his marriage" and the sheer weight of rumors about his womanizing,
- Clinton has made himself vulnerable to ordeals like this one
- even if the charges are not justified. By the back-door attempts
- of her lawyer to get payment, Jones invites many questions about
- herself. If their present face-off sounds a bit like the Anita
- Hill-Clarence Thomas explosion, there's one important difference.
- In that encounter, it was hard to think of either party as the
- kind of person who would not tell the whole truth.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-