home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1845>
- <title>
- June 07, 1993: Flying Blind
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 07, 1993 The Incredible Shrinking President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WHITE HOUSE, Page 28
- Flying Blind
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Whether or not it involves cronyism and cover-up, the affair
- of the White House travel office is a tale of ineptitude by
- officials who blindly followed bureaucratic rules. It begins
- with a phone call on Wednesday, May 12, from associate White
- House counsel William Kennedy to James Bourke, head of the FBI
- unit that conducts investigations of presidential nominees.
- Kennedy, a former law partner of Hillary Rodham Clinton, spoke
- vaguely about problems at the travel office, which charters
- flights for reporters accompanying the President and makes airline
- and hotel reservations for Executive Office aides. Would the
- FBI take a look?
- </p>
- <p> Bourke and his colleagues decided they should at least find
- out what Kennedy was talking about. Over the next two days,
- four FBI agents visited the White House. They were shown a pile
- of checks--totaling $18,200 according to a subsequent audit--made out to "cash" but not recorded on the travel office's
- books. Also, a source familiar with the investigation told TIME,
- Catherine Cornelius, a distant cousin of President Clinton's
- who was working there, informed the agents she had heard that
- a travel-office employee had solicited a kickback from Miami
- Air International, which flew eight White House press charters
- in 1992.
- </p>
- <p> The $18,200 could have gone unrecorded because of slipshod
- accounting, and the kickback allegation was hearsay. In fact,
- Ross Fischer, head of Miami Air, has told TIME neither he nor
- his staff was ever asked for a kickback. There were grounds,
- however, for a closer look. By Friday afternoon, May 14, the
- agents were reporting to Joseph Gangloff, head of the Justice
- Department section concerned with the integrity of public officials.
- He authorized what the FBI regarded as a "preliminary" inquiry
- to continue.
- </p>
- <p> Up to this point, everyone's actions had been perfectly appropriate.
- No one realized the probers might poke into a political hornet's
- nest. But as the world shortly learned, Hollywood producer Harry
- Thomason, a pal of the President's, had been trying to get
- friends of his cut in on the charter action, and Clinton's cousin
- Cornelius had proposed a reorganization of the travel office,
- with herself at its head.
- </p>
- <p> White House aides did not even notify Attorney General Janet
- Reno of the case's sensitivity. Their reason: while written
- guidelines specify that the head of the Justice Department must
- be told about any "pending" FBI investigation requested by the
- White House, they considered the travel-office inquiry to be
- merely a "potential" investigation. Gangloff did write a memo
- to his boss, John Keeney, who sent a short "alert" message to
- Reno, but she apparently never read it. Aides say the Attorney
- General gets five or six "alerts" a day, many about routine
- matters, and that there was nothing to single out the Keeney
- memo for special attention.
- </p>
- <p> FBI officials insist they were as shocked as anyone else when
- the White House on May 19 fired the entire seven-person travel-office
- staff without any proof or even formal accusation of wrongdoing.
- The White House got the FBI to confirm that it was investigating
- the travel office, as official guidelines permit if another
- agency or "credible person" first breaks the news. But on Friday,
- May 21, as reporters' questions became far more persistent,
- John Collingwood, head of the FBI press office, was summoned
- from lunch to an impromptu meeting at the White House. With
- communications director George Stephanopoulos, press secretary
- Dee Dee Myers and White House aide David Levy, Collingwood worked
- out a statement the FBI insists was intended only to guide officials
- responding to journalists' questions. To the FBI's dismay, the
- White House trumpeted it to the world.
- </p>
- <p> By Monday morning, May 24, calls were flooding into Reno's office,
- and the Attorney General asked press aide Carl Stern to find
- out how the FBI had become involved. On getting his report,
- says an associate, Reno "wheeled in her chair and called Bernie
- Nussbaum" in the White House counsel's office. Calmly but firmly,
- she insisted that "potential" as well as "pending" investigations
- be cleared through her. Nussbaum's reply: "We didn't do anything
- wrong, but it won't happen again."
- </p>
- <p> By George J. Church. Reported by Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-