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- <text id=93TT0519>
- <title>
- Nov. 15, 1993: Packwood Vs. Packwood
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE SENATE, Page 53
- Packwood Vs. Packwood
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Now the Senator's colleagues suspect that he tried to use his
- clout to get a better deal in his divorce case
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE--Reported by Julie Johnson/Washington and John Snell/Portland
- </p>
- <p> First it was just his diaries that were laid open. In recent
- weeks lawyers for the Senate ethics committee have combed through
- 5,000 pages of Senator Robert Packwood's private journal. "Are
- there personal things in there?" Packwood lamented last week.
- "Sure. Family heartaches. Disappointments. Irritation with the
- car repairman." There was more than that: word emerged from
- the committee that the diaries, which of course range far beyond
- the scope of the sexual-misconduct charges he faces, may in
- fact contain evidence of unrelated criminal violations. Last
- Monday Packwood responded to such reports by insisting, "For
- the life of me I do not understand...whatever this other
- thing may be that may be criminal." But within 24 hours he reversed
- himself, allowing, "The issue was employment opportunities for
- my wife and whether there was some quid pro quo on legislation."
- </p>
- <p> And now an equally intimate record of Packwood's life is drawing
- scrutiny: his divorce papers. The papers, combined with his
- diaries, address the suggestion that he illegally used his position
- to get his ex-wife Georgie a job in order to save himself hefty
- alimony payments.
- </p>
- <p> The Senate, doggedly pursuing the remaining 3,200 pages of Packwood's
- diaries, voted 94 to 6 last week to authorize the ethics committee
- to seek a federal court order compelling the Senator to turn
- over the journals. If the committee gets hold of those pages
- and finds sufficient evidence, Packwood may soon be in his deepest
- trouble yet. Although the sexual-harassment charges under investigation
- by the committee carry no threat of criminal prosecution, the
- same cannot be said for the allegations surrounding his possible
- misuse of office. Last week Packwood denied ever wrongfully
- soliciting work for his ex-wife, but the six members of the
- bipartisan committee seem bent on investigating and reaching
- their own conclusion.
- </p>
- <p> The Packwoods' divorce papers shed light on the Senator's discussions
- about his wife's employment. The records, filed with the circuit
- court in the Multnomah County courthouse in Oregon, show that
- while Georgie did not want the marriage to end, she could not,
- under state law, contest her husband's petition citing "irreconcilable
- differences." After the couple separated in January 1990, they
- wrangled about alimony. Packwood claimed that he was virtually
- broke and proposed monthly payments of $500. Georgie demanded
- $4,000. Eventually the court settled on $2,500, based in part
- on a calculation of Georgie's earning ability. At the time,
- she was running Plain 'n Fancy, a $12,000-a-year antiques business
- based in her Washington home.
- </p>
- <p> In the year between the Packwoods' separation and their divorce
- trial, Georgie received job offers from four of the Senator's
- friends. "I had not asked any of these people for a job," Georgie
- told the Washington Post last week. Those offers came from two
- Washington lobbyists, each of whom had approached Packwood on
- behalf of clients; an investment banker who had gone to law
- school with Packwood and raised campaign funds for him; and
- a businessman who once served on Packwood's staff.
- </p>
- <p> During the divorce trial, Packwood testified that he had no
- hand in any of the job offers. "In all these cases, they made
- the initial approach to Georgie or they asked me if it would
- be O.K. if they approached Georgie," he said. "I didn't initiate
- the calls myself." According to the divorce documents, Packwood
- criticized his wife for not accepting any of the offers and
- charged that she was unwilling to work.
- </p>
- <p> Packwood's former wife told the Post that she had no reason
- to think that Packwood had offered his friends any political
- favors in exchange for job offers--a quid pro quo that could
- be illegal. She told the Oregonian newspaper, however, that
- when one of the lobbyists, Steven Saunders, called Packwood
- to see if his offer of work might present the Senator with a
- conflict of interest, Packwood's response surprised Saunders.
- "Bob wanted to know, `How much money do you think you could
- pay her? How much money could she earn a year?'" she said.
- "Bob got coercive and manipulative, and Steve backed off. He
- was uncomfortable with Bob's ethics."
- </p>
- <p> What has exasperated Packwood's colleagues most is his inept
- handling of the ethics committee's inquiry. First he concealed
- the existence of his diaries from the committee. When the committee
- demanded all 8,200 pages, he tried to intimidate fellow Senators
- by warning that the release of further pages would expose other
- legislators' sexual dalliances.
- </p>
- <p> His performance on the Senate floor last week was no better.
- On Monday, summoned to debate the diaries, Senators listened
- to Packwood deliver a rambling, ranting soliloquy that basically
- charged the committee with prying into his private life. Maryland
- Senator Barbara Mikulski countered, "We are not the Senate Select
- Committee on Voyeurism." When the droning debate tied up Senate
- business for a second full day, legislators grew impatient.
- Finally Tuesday evening, Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia
- implored his embattled colleague to sacrifice himself for the
- larger good: "None of us is without flaws. But when those flaws
- damage the institution of the Senate, it is time to have the
- grace to go."
- </p>
- <p> Many other Senators, who are still smarting from Packwood's
- veiled threat of two weeks ago, privately agree that he should
- resign. That step not only would bring a rapid end to the ethics
- committee's sexual-misconduct inquiry, prompted by allegations
- by at least 26 women, but would also spare the Senate the discomfort
- of deciding what punitive action to take if the charges prove
- convincing (although his resignation would not prevent the women
- from pursuing lawsuits). If he fails to resign, the ethics committee
- may decide to push forward shortly with open hearings on the
- sexual-harassment charges. A colleague could also call for Packwood's
- expulsion from the Senate--but as yet no Senator has shown
- such an inclination. Only 15 Senators have been expelled from
- the Senate, all for treason.
- </p>
- <p> Packwood vows to serve out his fifth term and fight the subpoena
- for his diaries. Although the federal court is expected to move
- quickly on the Senate's request, if Packwood is not satisfied
- with the outcome, he threatens an appeal that "could take years."
- If he runs out the appeals process and still refuses to comply,
- Packwood could face civil contempt penalties. Meanwhile, he
- creates an opportunity for the committee to delve further into
- the possibility of criminal misconduct. Packwood's unfortunate
- pattern is that each attempt he makes to preserve his privacy
- seems to turn up the wattage of scrutiny even further.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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