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- <text id=94TT1811>
- <title>
- Dec. 26, 1994: Investigations:On Fresh Ground
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 26, 1994 Man of the Year:Pope John Paul II
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INVESTIGATIONS, Page 111
- On Fresh Ground
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The probe of Mike Espy widens to include new allegations against
- chicken producer Tyson Foods
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Behar/Fayetteville
- </p>
- <p> The goodies that started the investigation of Agriculture Secretary
- Mike Espy were relatively small things as political scandals
- go: sky-box seats at a Dallas Cowboys game, tickets to a Chicago
- Bulls play-off, a ride on a corporate jet and lodging at a lakeside
- cabin. One of the largest items was a $1,200 scholarship for
- his girlfriend. At first, the situation seemed as if it might
- be cleared up quickly. For accepting those gratuities from Tyson
- Foods and other companies, some of which Espy had reimbursed,
- the White House demanded his resignation. Independent counsel
- Donald Smaltz, appointed by a three-judge panel last September,
- promised a low-profile and speedy inquiry to see whether evidence
- could be found that Espy did anything illegal in accepting the
- items and whether he provided favors in return.
- </p>
- <p> That seemingly narrow task, however, has expanded into a full-scale
- investigation that has gone beyond Espy to include Tyson Foods
- and its relationship with Bill Clinton as Arkansas Governor.
- Many close ties are already known: Tyson executives helped finance
- Clinton's campaigns, and James Blair, one of the firm's lawyers,
- guided Hillary Rodham Clinton's successful commodities trades.
- Smaltz, 57, a former prosecutor from Los Angeles who was expected
- to finish the current probe within six months, says he has collected
- such a large battery of allegations that he may not finish the
- task before 1996. He is working seven days a week and has hired
- nearly 30 employees, including six lawyers and eight FBI agents.
- Last week he opened an office that he describes as "a toehold"
- in Fayetteville, Arkansas, just a few miles from the headquarters
- of Tyson, the world's largest poultry producer (1993 sales:
- $4.7 billion).
- </p>
- <p> Smaltz has served more than 50 grand-jury subpoenas on individuals
- and groups ranging from the National Broiler Council, a chicken-industry
- trade group dominated by the Tyson company, to the Arkansas
- Workers Compensation Commission, the state agency that handles
- disability claims by Tyson employees. Among the many areas of
- Smaltz's inquiry are whether Tyson induced Espy to delay tough
- inspection rules for poultry, and why Espy intervened on Tyson's
- behalf in a chicken-labeling dispute in Puerto Rico. TIME has
- learned that Smaltz is also investigating a charge made by a
- former Tyson pilot that he helped convey cash payments from
- the company to Clinton while Clinton was Governor of Arkansas.
- </p>
- <p> The reaction to the expanding probe of Tyson Foods has been
- swift and furious. In a prepared statement, company spokesman
- Archie Schaffer accused Smaltz of going "outside the scope of
- the independent counsel's charge" and of "taking off on a politically
- motivated witch-hunt." Tyson has hired Thomas Green, a top Washington
- white-collar defense attorney, to represent the company. Smaltz,
- however, says he was given the jurisdiction to look into any
- criminal charges arising from his original inquiry. "It's a
- very broad mandate," he said in an interview.
- </p>
- <p> In the Puerto Rico scandal, as reported in TIME last July, a
- commonwealth official had refused to permit several million
- pounds of chicken parts from mainland U.S. to leave the docks
- in January 1993 because the importers' names were missing from
- the food labels, a violation of local law. Espy was in office
- only one week at that point, but Tyson Foods, through intermediaries,
- helped persuade the Secretary to sign a letter that moved the
- chicken off the piers and into the grocery stores.
- </p>
- <p> A far more provocative allegation comes from Joseph Henrickson,
- 43, a pilot who served until last year as the second-highest
- member of the company's aviation division. The former captain
- alleges that on six occasions, mostly in the 1980s, he carried
- sealed white envelopes from Tyson's headquarters in northwest
- Arkansas to Little Rock while making regular business flights.
- In each instance, he claims, he held the envelopes up to the
- light in order to examine the contents. Each envelope, he says,
- measured about a quarter-inch thick and appeared to be filled
- with $100 bills. In each case, Henrickson believed the envelopes
- were intended for delivery to Clinton, though there is no evidence
- he ever received them nor any allegation as to the purpose for
- which the money was intended. In confirming that he is looking
- into the accusation, Smaltz told TIME, "It's very high on my
- radar screen."
- </p>
- <p> Both Clinton and Tyson Foods vehemently deny the charges. "I'm
- extremely surprised that these vague and baseless allegations
- are being irresponsibly bandied about in this way," says David
- Kendall, the Clintons' personal lawyer. "They're totally false
- and don't merit further comment." Tyson's lawyer, Green, said
- in a letter to TIME: "These allegations are totally false."
- </p>
- <p> The former Tyson captain provided the details of his charge
- during three intense days of interviews with Smaltz and a team
- of FBI agents shortly before the Thanksgiving holiday in Fayetteville,
- where Henrickson lives with his wife and two children. "I nearly
- fell off my chair when I heard Joe make the allegation. I took
- over the questioning," recalls Smaltz. Henrickson also spoke
- with TIME on several occasions before and after his contacts
- with the federal investigators. Smaltz told the Washington Post
- earlier this month that he is not investigating Clinton. Last
- week he explained that in the case of Henrickson's allegations,
- he is investigating only the alleged "gratuity giver," Tyson
- Foods, but not the alleged "gratuity receiver."
- </p>
- <p> Henrickson says the envelopes were typically given to him by
- Tyson employees at the company headquarters in Springdale. In
- one case, he says, a Tyson executive handed him an envelope
- of cash in the company's aircraft hangar in Fayetteville and
- said, "This is for Governor Clinton." Henrickson says he usually
- delivered the envelopes to receptionists working at Midcoast
- Aviation, formerly called the Little Rock Air Center, where
- Tyson lands its planes. In another instance, Henrickson says,
- he handed an envelope to a man who appeared to be a plainclothes
- state trooper who was waiting on the tarmac.
- </p>
- <p> So far, no eyewitness has corroborated Henrickson's story to
- TIME. Receptionists at Midcoast Aviation cannot recall any cash
- drop-offs. In interviews, all 11 current and former Tyson pilots
- who flew with Henrickson during his 15-year tenure at the company
- denied having any knowledge of such events. Most describe Henrickson
- as a bully and a "disruptive force" while he worked in the flight
- division. "Personally, I wouldn't put it past Joe to lie if
- it benefited him," says Tony Lundquist, a former Tyson pilot
- who now runs Wal-Mart's aviation division. A onetime protege
- of Henrickson's, Tyson pilot Randy Parette, refers to his former
- mentor as "a 600-lb. gorilla who pretty much did what he wanted
- in the face of rules and common sense."
- </p>
- <p> When Henrickson took part in his first alleged cash delivery
- for Clinton in the early 1980s, the captain at the wheel of
- the Citation II aircraft was Haskell Blake, Henrickson says.
- "((Blake)) showed me the envelope outside the airplane," maintains
- Henrickson. "We held it up to the light." But Blake, now an
- Indianapolis-based pilot, recalls nothing of the sort; "I like
- Joe, but I don't know where he came up with that," says he.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, Henrickson's tale has had some discrepancies. In his
- first interview with TIME, Henrickson recalled that the envelopes
- "always had Clinton's name on them and no return address." After
- meeting with Smaltz, he now says the envelopes were "always
- blank." Similarly, Henrickson initially could recall only two
- or three deliveries. After meeting with Smaltz, he now remembers
- six deliveries from 1982 until as late as 1991. Henrickson's
- wife Mary Ann insists that her husband discussed the deliveries
- with her as they occurred. "The envelopes bothered me at the
- time," she recalls. "I would ask Joe, `You're taking cash? Don't
- you get a receipt? Someone could steal it.'" Henrickson, a
- former Marine, says it was not in his nature to ask questions.
- "I just did what I was told," he says. "It was none of my business.
- I was one of the boys." The Henricksons maintain that they are
- both Clinton supporters.
- </p>
- <p> Smaltz's investigators came upon Henrickson when they discovered
- a lawsuit the pilot had filed against his former employer and
- called him in for questioning about it. Henrickson's relationship
- with his immediate boss had grown strained in recent years.
- Then in 1993 a fellow pilot was fired for what Henrickson and
- other pilots felt was a minor infraction. Henrickson tried to
- intervene. Two months later, he too was fired. He then brought
- the lawsuit, charging retaliatory dismissal. His personnel records
- were clean, reflecting regular raises and promotions, but the
- suit was dismissed in October. "Under current Arkansas law,
- Joe's case is impossible," points out Henrickson's attorney,
- Marcia Brinton.
- </p>
- <p> Last summer, despite the company's strong legal position, Brinton
- says she was invited for coffee by some current Tyson employees,
- whom she refuses to identify, who made "an implication" that
- if Henrickson didn't drop his lawsuit, they would step forward
- and testify that he transported drugs aboard Tyson airplanes.
- Nobody has followed through with the threat, which Henrickson
- reported to the FBI, even though Henrickson has appealed his
- case. Other Tyson pilots dismiss the drug-running charge against
- Henrickson as preposterous. Henrickson believes the threat was
- intended to scare him away from talking about the alleged deliveries
- to Clinton. He claims he's being blacklisted in the industry,
- a fate he says his former colleagues might suffer if they backed
- him up. "It's easy to control people who don't know where their
- next house payment is coming from," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Smaltz has served Henrickson with a subpoena to appear before
- a grand jury and given him a two-page letter of immunity, which
- protects the pilot from criminal charges and subjects him to
- perjury charges if he is lying. The former Tyson captain has
- also volunteered to take a lie-detector test. In his first conversation
- with TIME, Smaltz did not admit to knowing Henrickson. But when
- asked about the letter of immunity and presented with information
- that TIME had gathered, the independent counsel spoke with unusual
- candor. He found Henrickson's story "very interesting," he said,
- partly because in their first meeting, Henrickson did not mention
- the envelopes until the day was nearly finished. "Based upon
- the way his story unfolded, it has a ring of truth to it," said
- Smaltz. "If a guy's got an agenda, usually he can't wait to
- tell you about it."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Espy remains a major focus of the probe. Smaltz says
- he is investigating more than 30 allegations against the Agriculture
- Secretary. Espy's lawyer, Reid Weingarten, declared that Smaltz's
- growing staff and multiple subpoenas "suggest an investigation
- out of control or one with a funny agenda." His client, who
- leaves office Dec. 31, certainly faces a far longer wait for
- a resolution than nearly anyone imagined a few months ago.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-