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- <text id=93TT0482>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1993: No Thanks For The Memories
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 08, 1993 Cloning Humans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CONGRESS, Page 41
- No Thanks For The Memories
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A Senator's diary prompts questions of crime, propriety and
- privacy
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE--With reporting by Andrea Sachs/New York and Nancy Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The writings were to have served as Bob Packwood's monument,
- to be published years after his death. For more than two decades,
- every morning for 30 minutes, he scribbled his recollections
- of the day before, thoughts both philosophical and quotidian,
- ranging from political ruminations to juicy gossip. As he described
- it, the writings contained "the hopes and the dreams and the
- despairs of all of us."
- </p>
- <p> The diaries, in fact, may turn out to be Packwood's greatest
- despair. After allegations erupted last November that the Oregon
- Republican had made uninvited sexual advances to 10 female staff
- members, Packwood first denied any sexual misconduct, then laid
- blame for his untoward advances on the influence of alcohol,
- raising both disbelieving hoots and doubts about his probity.
- As the number of women charging sexual harassment rose to 26,
- Packwood parried with threats to stamp scarlet letters on his
- accusers, bringing additional allegations of intimidation. Then
- last month, under questioning before the Senate ethics committee,
- Packwood disclosed that he had kept the diaries--opening the
- door to public scrutiny of his most private thoughts.
- </p>
- <p> Now come hints that besides the sexual-misconduct charges, Packwood
- may be guilty of criminal violations. In mid-October, he willingly
- surrendered some 5,000 pages of entries up through 1989. He
- also let the committee's counsel look at additional entries.
- After the counsel reported back to the bipartisan committee
- that those entries contained information pointing to possible
- misconduct unrelated to the current inquiry, the committee asked
- to see the remaining 3,200 pages. Packwood balked, charging
- an infringement of his right to privacy. The committee responded
- with a subpoena. Last week in a five-page statement, ethics
- committee chairman Richard Bryan, a Democrat from Nevada, asserted
- that information seen by the committee counsel "raised questions
- about possible violations of one or more laws, including criminal
- laws."
- </p>
- <p> Bryan's vague claim drew a sharp retort from Senate minority
- leader Robert Dole. "This is almost a prejudgment here," said
- the Kansas Republican. "It seems to me it ought to be followed
- up with a charge or it ought to be retracted." As yet, the only
- hint of the nature of the alleged violations comes in a letter
- from Packwood's lawyers to Bryan that suggests a possible misuse
- of campaign donations.
- </p>
- <p> The latest furor over Packwood is largely the result of his
- own bungling. When the ethics committee first subpoenaed the
- diaries on Oct. 20, many Senators questioned the propriety and
- legality of delving into someone's private writings. Packwood's
- attorney immediately let it be known that the diaries included
- entries that could lay bare the sextracurricular activities
- of at least two other legislators--including a Senator's divorce
- and his "extended affair" with a staff member, and a liaison
- between a Senate aide and a member of the House leadership.
- Last week when colleagues shouted "Blackmail!" Packwood coolly
- responded on the Senate floor, "I have no intention of ever
- using it for blackmail, graymail or anything else, but I want
- the Senate to clearly understand that it is the ethics committee
- that has demanded the production of the pages."
- </p>
- <p> Packwood's undignified tactics upstaged Senators' concerns about
- Fifth Amendment safeguards against self-incrimination. Instead,
- many Senators fumed privately that the man who may already have
- been exposed as a letch, lush and liar was a lout as well. Says
- an ethics committee staff member: "The fact that ((Packwood))
- stood on the Senate floor and issued a not-so-veiled threat
- against his colleagues has alienated a lot of people." (An unnamed
- woman, described by her lawyer as "prominent within the country,"
- was equally unhappy, charging that the release of the diaries
- would cause "irreparable damage" to her reputation.)
- </p>
- <p> Packwood's clumsy attempts to elude further scrutiny of his
- diaries served only to fuel the ethics committee's determination.
- By midweek, the committee convinced the Senate leadership to
- schedule a chamber-wide debate on its subpoena of the full diaries.
- The debate this week, which will be followed by a vote, will
- determine if the Senate proceeds to U.S. district court to enforce
- compliance. Plainly hoping to calm jitters and win votes, Bryan
- dismissed Packwood's suggestion that other Senators might be
- caught in a diary dragnet. "There is no witch hunt or fishing
- expedition under way," Bryan said. "The ethics committee has
- no interest in pursuing information related to the private lives
- of members of Congress."
- </p>
- <p> The committee does have an interest, however, in pursuing information
- that falls beyond the scope of its immediate inquiry. At present,
- Packwood faces three charges: sexual misconduct, intimidation
- and misuse of staff. Packwood maintains that it is "unfair and
- probably unconstitutional" for the committee to disclose incidents
- unrelated to those charges. In a letter to Bryan, the American
- Civil Liberties Union concurs: "The Supreme Court has repeatedly
- held that Congress cannot use its subpoena power to view material
- relating to private affairs that goes beyond the scope and purpose
- of a particular inquiry." Bryan counters that Packwood was specifically
- informed that "if the committee saw information related to possible
- other misconduct, the committee would be compelled to pursue
- the material." Bryan also notes that the diaries were transcribed
- by Packwood's Senate-employed secretary and that the Oregon
- Senator told the committee that he might use the diaries to
- write a book.
- </p>
- <p> Still, many constitutional scholars are disturbed by the committee's
- claims of unfettered access to Packwood's writings. "By definition,
- a diary is a conversation with yourself," says Stephen Gillers,
- a professor of ethics at New York University School of Law.
- "Allowing the state to get your diary is allowing the state
- to get into your mind." Professor Yale Kamisar of the University
- of Michigan Law School adds, "Why should a person have to divulge
- self-incriminating statements merely because he chose to write
- them down rather than keep them sealed in his head?"
- </p>
- <p> As yet, it is unclear if Packwood's diaries are primarily private
- musings or notations about his public life, like the journals
- of Ronald Reagan and George Bush. Even if Packwood's diaries
- contain a considerable number of personal entries, some scholars
- argue, the writings are not automatically protected. "You have
- to show some constitutional immunity, some privilege against
- self-incrimination or free speech or freedom of association,"
- says Jesse Choper, a professor at the University of California,
- Berkeley, School of Law. "As a general proposition, a court
- can subpoena records that contain reference to criminal conduct."
- Such legalistic caveats cannot fail to crimp amateur Samuel
- Pepyses, who scribble in faith that their scribblings will remain
- private.
- </p>
- <p> It will be all the more uncomfortable for Senate members if
- some of Packwood's jottings implicate them in criminal acts.
- As it is, Senators who vote in support of the subpoena risk
- being accused of trampling on Packwood's civil liberties. Those
- who vote the other way risk being accused of protecting their
- own hide. Either way, the Senate stands to look the way it did
- two years ago when Anita Hill visited its chambers: incapable
- of dealing effectively with charges of sexual harassment.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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