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- From: DowJones@andrew.cmu.edu
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.mexican
- Subject: Prosecutor Considers Calling Weinberger Before Grand Jury
- Message-ID: <YfDqOAe00Uj500pE1=@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Date: 28 Dec 92 10:41:48 GMT
- Article-I.D.: andrew.YfDqOAe00Uj500pE1=
- Organization: Doctoral student, Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, PA
- Lines: 74
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- WASHINGTON -AP- Iran-Contra prosecutor Lawrence Walsh is considering
- calling Caspar Weinberger before a federal grand jury to testify about
- others in the scandal, including President Bush, according to sources
- close to the investigation.
-
- Walsh said today that he would return shortly to Washington, but refused
- to say what his plans are. Yet the sources, speaking on condition of
- anonymity, said that he is likely to call former Defense Secretary Weinberger
- and ex-CIA official Duane Clarridge as witnesses before a grand jury
- here.
-
- Both men received Christmas Eve pardons from Bush for allegedly lying
- about their knowledge of the arms-for-hostages deals.
-
- Before the pardon, neither man was called as a witness because they
- were being investigated by the grand jury. They eventually were indicted
- and were awaiting trial when they were pardoned.
-
- Bush also pardoned four Iran-Contra figures and has since been accused
- by critics of trying to hide his own role in the Reagan administration's
- secret arms-for-hostages deal.
-
- Walsh's spokeswoman, Mary Belcher, said she ''will not comment on any
- speculative grand jury action.''
-
- Clarridge has never appeared before Walsh's prosecutors and ''I wouldn't
- be surprised'' if the former CIA official is called to testify, said
- William McDaniel, Clarridge's lawyer.
-
- Weinberger lawyer Robert Bennett said his client ''has given all the
- information there is to give'' to Congress and Walsh's investigators.
-
-
- Calling him as a witness would ''just be further evidence of their
- harassment of him,'' said Bennett.
-
- The sources said prosecutors would question Weinberger extensively
- on his handwritten notes from 1985 and 1986 _ with particular emphasis
- on meetings that Bush attended. Prosecutors didn't uncover Weinberger's
- notes until 1990, and this would be their first opportunity to question
- him about them.
-
- After the pardons, Walsh said that Bush is a ''subject'' in the Iran-Contra
- investigation because he failed to turn over his own notes to prosecutors.
- A ''subject'' is someone whose activities are under scrutiny in a criminal
- investigation.
-
- The White House didn't notify Walsh until Dec. 11 that it had Bush's
- typewritten notes _ which the then-vice president began dictating in
- November 1986 as the Iran-Contra affair was erupting.
-
- A grand jury appearance by Clarridge would renew questions about the
- CIA's role in the affair, particularly a CIA-assisted shipment of Hawk
- missiles to Iran in November 1985 that Weinberger was accused of lying
- about, said the sources.
-
- Clarridge is mentioned frequently in ex-White House aide Oliver North's
- notebooks regarding the Iran arms sales and support for the Contras -
- the Nicaraguan guerrilla force that Congress had barred the CIA from
- assisting militarily.
-
- The sources said that Walsh also will decide whether to look into the
- circumstances surrounding the Weinberger pardon.
-
- Bush may have granted the pardon to avoid being called into court to
- explain his own role in Iran-Contra, prosecutor James J. Brosnahan said
- over the weekend.
-
- Bennett called Brosnahan's suggestion ''nonsense'' and ''sour grapes.''
- He said Monday that he had had no intention of calling Bush.
- 3:41 PM
-