Monday, December 26, 2011

Truman Arnold

http://heavenstaxforce.blogspot.com/2011/12/osamas-sister-in-law.html  (another complete breakdown right here and then another)  ...cal

http://hotair.com/archives/2008/04/01/hillary-fired-for-lies-unethical-behavior-from-senate-job-former-boss/
Excerpts:
1) As Hillary Clinton came under increasing scrutiny for her story about facing sniper fire in Bosnia, one question that arose was whether she has engaged in a pattern of lying.
The now-retired general counsel and chief of staff of the House Judiciary Committee, who supervised Hillary when she worked on the Watergate investigation, says Hillary’s history of lies and unethical behavior goes back farther – and goes much deeper – than anyone realizes.
Jerry Zeifman, a lifelong Democrat, supervised the work of 27-year-old Hillary Rodham on the committee. Hillary got a job working on the investigation at the behest of her former law professor, Burke Marshall, who was also Sen. Ted Kennedy’s chief counsel in the Chappaquiddick affair. When the investigation was over, Zeifman fired Hillary from the committee staff and refused to give her a letter of recommendation – one of only three people who earned that dubious distinction in Zeifman’s 17-year career.
Why?
“Because she was a liar,” Zeifman said in an interview last week. “She was an unethical, dishonest lawyer. She conspired to violate the Constitution, the rules of the House, the rules of the committee and the rules of confidentiality.”

2) Does that remind anyone of later incidents in the Clinton narrative, such as the billing records for the Rose Law offices and the 900+ raw FBI files on political opponents of the Clintons?
Hillary’s advocates could accuse Zeifman of conjuring up these stories in order to draw attention to himself in the middle of a presidential campaign. However, Calabrese reports that Zeifman kept diaries during this period, urged on by friends mindful of the historical nature of the Watergate investigation. No one would have known at the time that this 27-year-old barracuda would have any sort of national significance — which makes Zeifman’s testimony all the more compelling.
We know that the Tuzla Dash covered for something much more significant in Hillary’s character. Zeifman shows that all of this forms a pattern of lies, obfuscations, deceit, and treachery. Don’t miss a word on either site.

http://hotair.com/archives/2008/04/01/hitchens-on-the-tuzla-dash-and-what-hillary-hides/
Excerpt:
n the event, President Bill Clinton had not found it convenient to keep this promise. Let me quote from Sally Bedell Smith’s admirable book on the happy couple, For Love of Politics:
Taking the advice of Al Gore and National Security Advisor Tony Lake, Bill agreed to a proposal to bomb Serbian military positions while helping the Muslims acquire weapons to defend themselves—the fulfillment of a pledge he had made during the 1992 campaign. But instead of pushing European leaders, he directed Secretary of State Warren Christopher merely to consult with them. When they balked at the plan, Bill quickly retreated, creating a “perception of drift.” The key factor in Bill’s policy reversal was Hillary, who was said to have “deep misgivings” and viewed the situation as “a Vietnam that would compromise health-care reform.” The United States took no further action in Bosnia, and the “ethnic cleansing” by the Serbs was to continue for four more years, resulting in the deaths of more than 250,000 people.

http://motherjones.com/politics/1997/03/white-house-sleep-over-guest-list
Excerpt:

The White House Sleep-over Guest List

Mon Mar. 24, 1997 12:00 AM PST
Arkansas Friends (370 guests)

"Persons whom the President or First Lady met as part of their lives in Arkansas or in conjunction with persons with Arkansas relationships and their accompanying guests (e.g., nannies, etc.)"
Excerpt:
Truman Arnold

http://prorev.com/whtwtrr.htm
Excerpt:
Arief Wiriadinata came to the US from Indonesia allegedly to study landscape architecture -- although some accounts describe him simply as a gardener. In any case, he somehow seems to have become distracted by the more fascinating world of raising funds for the Democratic Party, to which he eventually gave nearly a half million dollars. We're not quite sure how a gardener (or even a landscape architect) actually does this but it is at least interesting to note that his wife was the daughter of a key business partner of the Riadys, who have been bailing out Bill Clinton since the 1970s. We lost track of Wiriadinata when he returned home, reportedly to work for Sea World Indonesia.

Now Wiriadinata has appeared again, if only on videotape, using probably the corniest line in the whole Clinton saga. The 1995 tape shows a coffee at the White House hosted by Clinton and Gore. Clinton greets Wiriadinata, who actually says, "James Riady sent me."


http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=96459&page=1
Excerpt:
Congressman: Tape Shows Gore Illegal Fundraising
 

A Republican congressman is claiming that a 1995 videotape showing Vice President Al Gore talking politics with an Indonesian man who made illegal contributions is evidence of improper fund-raising activities.
ABCNEWS.com July 19 — Rep. Dan Burton is calling on the Justice Department to review a videotape of a 1995 White House coffee gathering that he claims is evidence of improper fund-raising practices by Vice President Al Gore.
Burton, the chairman of the House Committee on Government Reform, sent a letter to Attorney General Janet Reno on Tuesday urging Justice Department officials to review the tape.
The Indiana Republican claims it shows Gore discussing political ads with Arief Wiriadinata, an Indonesian citizen who was found to have made more than $400,000 in illegal donations to the Democratic Party.
Burton told The New York Times the vice president can be heard off-camera in the videotape telling Wiriadinata, “We ought to show Mr. Riady the tapes, some of the ad tapes.”
James T. Riady is an Indonesian businessman whose contributions to the Democrats are still under investigation.
“It would indeed be extraordinary for the vice president to suggest showing political issue advertisements to an Indonesian billionaire who lives in Jakarta, Indonesia,” Burton wrote to Reno.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuzla
Excerpt:
Tuzla is a city and municipality in Bosnia and Herzegovina. At the time of the 1991 census, it had 83,770 inhabitants, while the municipality 131,318. Taking the influx of refugees into account, the city is currently estimated to have 174,558 inhabitants.[1] After Sarajevo, and Banja Luka, Tuzla is the third largest city in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the seat of the Tuzla Canton and Tuzla Municipality. The name "Tuzla" is the Turkish word for salt mine, and refers to the extensive salt deposits found underneath the city.

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Glover_Park_Group
Excerpt:
The Glover Park Group (GPG) is a public relations / communications firm that claims to bridge the divide between "high-level strategy consultants who leave tactical implementation to clients and large public relations conglomerates that offer many services, but often lack the hands-on strategic experience that clients need." [1]
The firm, which includes several former Clinton administration officials,as well as former republican communications strategists[2], and offers services in advocacy and image advertising, corporate communications, issues and crisis management, legislative affairs (lobbying), media relations (PR), public affairs, and research. [3]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_House_FBI_files_controversy
Excerpt:
In 2000 Independent Counsel Robert Ray issued his final report on Filegate, stating that there was no credible evidence of any criminal activity by any individual in the matter and no credible evidence that senior White House figures or the First Lady had requested the files or had acted improperly or testified improperly regarding Livingstone's hiring. A separate lawsuit on the matter brought by Judicial Watch, a conservative watchdog group, has lingered on for years and was dismissed by a federal judge in 2010.

http://www.talkleft.com/story/2006/05/13/992/15923
Excerpt:

Robert Ray, Clinton Prosecutor Under Starr, Arrested for Stalking

What an ugly story. Allegation: Robert Ray, former Ken Starr associate independent counsel in Monica-gate, is charged with stalking his former lover after they broke up while he was still married. He's also a former N.J. candidate for the U.S. Senate.
The ex-lover says he lied while they were dating and said he was divorced.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Ray_(prosecutor)
Excerpt:
Robert William Ray (born April 4, 1960) is an American lawyer. As the successor to Ken Starr as the head of the Office of the Independent Counsel (1999 to 2002) he investigated and issued the final reports on the Whitewater scandal, the White House travel office controversy, and the White House FBI files controversy. Before that he was Deputy Independent Counsel investigating former Secretary of Agriculture Michael Espy and before that Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York.[1]
Mr. Ray submitted the independent counsel's final reports on
Monica Lewinsky scandal (2002-03-06)
Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan Association (2001-01-05)
Anthony Marceca (2000-03-16)
Bernard Nussbaum (2000-03-16)
William David Watkins (2000-06-22)
Hillary Rodham Clinton (2000-06-22)
Under independent counsel Donald Smaltz head prosecuted Mike Espy, and then worked for Ken Starr.
He was an unsuccessful candidate for a non-partisan school board in Brooklyn, New York 1993 and 1996, on the "children's slate". He was briefly a candidate in the United States Senate elections, 2002 in New Jersey.[1][2][3]
He is the father of three children.
As of 2008 he is in private practice, a partner in the Pryor Cashman law firm.
Ray received his A.B. from Princeton University in 1982, and his J.D. cum laude from the Washington and Lee University School of Law in 1985. He was a clerk for Honorable Frank X. Altimari in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.


http://www.chuckbaldwinlive.com/read.bribery.html
Excerpt:

http://www.chuckbaldwinlive.com


Jerome Ziefman accuses Clinton of Bribery
Jerome Zeifman, Drafting Counsel for Nixon Impeachment, Drafts Clinton Impeachment

Ziefman Memo to Rep. Barr on Clinton Impeachment


















 JEROME M. ZEIFMAN
MEMORANDUM TO : Bob Barr, Member
     House Judiciary Committee
FROM   : Jerome M. Zeifman
     Former Chief Counsel, House Judiciary Committee (1973-1974)
DATE    : November 18, 1998
SUBJECT   : Memorandum of Law and Facts on Bribery as an Impeachable Offense   


 PREFACE  As described in chapter 18 of my book, "Without Honor:  The Impeachment of President Nixon and the Crimes of Camelot," in the summer of 1974 the House Judiciary Committee reported out three articles of impeachment.  As characterized by then-Committee member William Hungate, the drafting of the articles was "[a] distillation of the thought of many members from many areas, and of differing philosophies."
 As I also described in chapter 18, the actual drafting of the articles was done by two drafting teams of the members themselves.  One team was comprised of Democrats, headed by Representative Jack Brooks of Texas and Don Edwards of California.  The other was referred to in the press as the "Swing Seven" and was comprised of three conservative Democrats from the south, and three moderate Republicans.  Although in my book I gave the members of both groups credit themselves as the draftsmen, Tom Mooney (your present General Counsel) was the drafting counsel for the Swing Seven, and I the drafting counsel for the Democrats.
 Tracking the language and format of the Nixon articles as closely as possible, I am submitting for your consideration the text of my recommendations for a proposed Article of Impeachment against President Clinton for bribery, which follows:
 
BRIBERY
In his conduct of the office of President of the United States, William J. Clinton has given or received bribes with respect to one or more of the following:
 (1)  Approving, condoning, or acquiescing in the surreptitious payment of  bribes for the purpose of obtaining the silence or influencing the testimony  of Webster Hubbell as a witness or potential witness in criminal proceedings;
 (2)  Approving, condoning, or acquiescing in the use of political influence by  Vernon Jordan in obtaining employment for the purpose of obtaining the  silence or influencing the testimony of Monica Lewinsky as a witness or  potential witness in civil or criminal proceedings; and
 (3) Approving, condoning or acquiescence in the receipt of bribes in  connection with the issuance of an executive order which had the effect of  giving Indonesia a monopoly on the sale of certain types of coal.
LEGAL AUTHORITY
 
 Currently, the federal bribery statute, section 201 of the Criminal Code (Title 18), reaches the giving, receiving or acceptance of anything of value for contemplated acts by public officials or witnesses in judicial or congressional proceedings as well as for acts already performed.  The essence of the offense is the giving, solicitation or receipt of the bribe.  The giving, solicitation or receipt may be accomplished through an intermediary who need not be a public official.  Conspiracy to commit bribery may be a separate criminal offense (18 USC 371).
 The crime of bribery consists of the voluntary giving or receipt of benefits in corrupt attempts to influence the actions of public officials or testimony of witnesses.  The crime is completed on the giving, solicitation or receipt of the bribe itself, and there need be no delivery of the "quid pro quo" in order to convict.
 Under section 201 it is not necessary to show the official or witness who gave, solicited or received the bribe possessed criminal intent.  Under a series of Supreme Court decisions, to obtain a conviction, it is only necessary to show the official or his intermediary or the witness gave, solicited, received or agreed to receive, something of value with knowledge that the donor was compensating him or her for an official act or for testimony (or, non-testimony) as a witness in a judicial or congressional proceeding.
 More recent decisions of the Supreme Court have imposed even stricter prohibitions on public officials than those in existence at the time of the Nixon impeachment inquiry. In its 1992 opinion, Evans v. United States, the Court interpreted section 1951 of the criminal code (the Hobbs act), holding:
 "Passive acceptance of a benefit by a public official is sufficient to form the basis of a Hobbs Act violation if the official knows that he is being offered the payment in exchange for a specific requested exercise of his official power.  The official need not take any specific action to induce the offering of the benefit." [HE483]
 
 In my view -- based on several centuries of impeachment precedents which I analyzed and published as Chief Counsel to the House Judiciary Committee during the Nixon impeachment inquiry, as well as Supreme Court decisions relating both to bribery and the complicity of government officials in the abuse of political influence -- there is now clearly sufficient evidence already on the public record to impeach President Clinton for giving and receiving bribes.  My understanding of the facts already on the public record follows.
 FACTS
Bribery Involving Whitewater and Webster Hubbell
 
 When Bill Clinton first ran for President, Whitewater became a national political issue.  On March 8, 1992 during the Democratic primary campaign, reporter Jeff Gerth of the New York Times revealed the Clintons had received improper loans and filed false income tax returns; claiming deductions for interest they had not paid.  During the same period, referring to Bill Clinton as the "scandal-a-week candidate," former California governor Jerry Brown made similar Whitewater-related charges.
 As was later learned by congressional investigators, to help the Clintons respond to inquiries from the press and charges from other candidates, Vincent Foster, Mrs. Clinton's then-law partner, who was soon to become Bernard Nussbaum's Deputy White House Counsel, assembled  all the information he could on Whitewater.  Webster Hubbell, who was then also Mrs. Clinton's law partner and Bill Clinton's closest friend, secretly removed the firm's only copies of files relating to Madison Guaranty as well other Rose Law Firm clients for whom Mrs. Clinton performed legal services.
 The files, which were legally the property of the clients, were removed without the firm's consent and were later stored in Hubbell's Washington home after he was appointed Associate Attorney General.  In addition, Hubbell and Foster were able to obtain computer print-outs of the Rose Law Firm's billing records relating to Hillary Clinton's representation of Madison Guaranty.
 
 The records were later subpoenaed by Independent Counsel Robert Fiske in early 1994, and by the Senate Whitewater Committee in October 1995.  But they were no longer to be found.  As was noted in the report of the Whitewater Committee: "At every important turn crucial files and documents 'disappeared' or were withheld from scrutiny whenever questions were raised."  [HE2 p40, 41]
 Among Hillary Clinton's billing records that "disappeared" were those relating to another questionable land deal and loan exchange scheme of McDougal's, known as Castle Grande.  The project benefitted Webster Hubbell's father-in-law, Seth Ward.  In 1988, bank regulators had charged Castle Grande was a "sham" that cost federal taxpayers $4 million. [HE2 p40, 41]
 In 1992 and 1993 Hillary Clinton had denied she had done any legal work for McDougal or Madison.  In April 1994 it was learned some of the Rose Law Firm Whitewater-related documents had been shredded.  When asked by reporters what she knew about the shredding, Mrs. Clinton said: "Nothing...[It] didn't happen, and I know nothing about any other such stories...Absolutely not."
 In May 1995, Mrs. Clinton provided federal investigators written responses under oath.  She denied any knowledge of Castle Grande; stating she had "no recollection" of doing legal work for Seth Ward.  [HE2 p40, 41]
 In January 1996, the First Lady admitted in written answers to federal banking officials that in 1988 -- the year in which regulators first began investigating Castle Grande -- she had ordered the shredding of three Castle Grande files, stating: "It appears that I cooperated with this effort [to dispose of the files]."
 As for the files that had not been shredded, Hillary Clinton was eventually to state through her attorney she "may have" reviewed them during the 1992 campaign, but denied any knowledge of their whereabouts.  Hubbell was later to testify he last saw the records during the 1992 presidential campaign in the possession of Vincent Foster.
 
 On July 17, 1993 Foster was found dead in Washington's Fort Marcy Park and had apparently committed suicide.  On the same day in Little Rock, the FBI had obtained a warrant to search the office of David Hale as part of its investigation of Capital Management Services, the company through which Hale had loaned Susan McDougal $300,000 at the request of James McDougal and then-governor Clinton.
 
 Following the discovery of Foster's body, White House Counsel Bernard Nussbaum initially promised Deputy Attorney General Philip Heymann and Justice Department investigators full access to the files in Foster's office.  However, the First Lady insisted investigators be denied "unfettered access" to Foster's files. After talking to one of Hillary Clinton's closest advisers, Susan Thomases, Nussbaum reversed himself, reneged on his promise to the Justice Department, and began to impede the investigation.
 
 Requests by the Justice Department and Park Police to seal-off Foster's office were ignored, giving White House aides an opportunity to remove some of Foster's files. Nussbaum also asserted he alone would first examine Foster's files and decide which documents to make available to Justice Department investigators.  He also asserted as White House Counsel he would be present at interrogations of witnesses by the FBI and the police.
 Congressional investigators learned that after Nussbaum had initially searched Foster's brief case he had declared it empty.  Later, one of Nussbaum's aides purportedly searched the brief case and found torn-up pieces of a note by Foster expressing bitterness about his life in Washington.  When Nussbaum met with investigators and produced an envelope containing the pieces of the note, the pieces fell out of the envelope on to the floor.
 Nussbaum and the White House soon clashed with Deputy Attorney General Heymann, who later quietly resigned to return to a teaching position at the Harvard Law School. Later, in sworn testimony to the Senate Whitewater Committee Heymman said he had objected to Nussbaum's conduct and asked him,"Bernie are you hiding something?"  Heymann also testified that, because of the obstruction of the investigation, he warned the Clinton White House of a "major disaster brewing."
 Heymann had argued Nussbaum "should not decide ... alone"  which papers in Foster's office could be reviewed by authorities, and that "White House lawyers should not sit in on interviews of witnesses."  Explaining that "the player with significant stakes in the process cannot be a referee," Heymann testified he was "very angry and very adamant" in telling Nussbaum that career Justice Department officials should review the documents.
 As congressional investigators continued to probe events related to Foster's death, they learned that in 1993 the Clintons were aware of a pending criminal investigation of McDougal's Madison Bank by the Resolution Trust Corporation, a federal regulatory agency that named Arkansas Governor Jim Guy Tucker as a target and the Clintons as witnesses to, and beneficiaries of, illegal actions. [3/roadmap]
 Foster was engaged in preparing responses to expected Whitewater questions.  He was also given the responsibility for the preparation of the Clintons' tax returns for 1992 to reflect properly the sale of their shares in Whitewater.
 Congressional investigators were also able to obtain evidence that Nussbaum was not alone in searching Foster's unsealed office on the night of his death.  Others included President Clinton's aide Patsy Thomasson, and Margaret Williams,  Mrs. Clinton's Chief of Staff.  Although each denied under oath they had removed any documents, Ms. Williams testimony was contradicted by a Secret Service agent who testified he saw her leave Foster's office on the night of his death with a stack of thick file folders.
 Five days after Foster's death Nussbaum, without preparing an inventory, turned over a number of files to Ms. Williams who transferred them to the White House residence.  In the ensuing effort to obtain the missing files, a number of subpoenas were issued by congressional committees and independent counsel Kenneth Starr.  Under subpoena to produce her billing records relating to the Madison Bank, Mrs. Clinton stated through her personal counsel she "may have" seen them during the 1992 campaign but did not know their present whereabouts.
 In August 1995 the missing billing records were eventually found by presidential aide Carolyn Huber, in the "book room" next to Mrs. Clinton's office in the White House residence.   Mrs. Huber was later to testify she did not realize what they were until she looked at them again five months later in sorting out several boxes of documents in her office.  It was not until January 1996 -- two years after they were first subpoenaed -- that the billing records were turned over by personal counsel for the President and Mrs. Clinton.  Mrs. Clinton then denied knowing how the records got to the book room, where access was limited mostly to the Clintons and several selected friends.
 The billing records contain handwritten notes and questions to Mrs. Clinton from both Foster and Hubbell. They also contradict public statements and sworn testimony by Mrs. Clinton that she had done little or no legal work for Madison and had no knowledge of Castle Grande.  The records show she billed Madison for at least 60 hours of legal services over 15 months, had numerous meeting with Hubbell's father-in-law, Seth Ward, and talked with Ward on the phone at least 14 times.
 The complicity of Hillary Clinton, Nussbaum, and other aides to the President in the obstruction of the investigations of Whitewater by Congress and the independent counsel now has a sad irony.  Twenty years earlier on the House Judiciary Committee's impeachment inquiry staff, both Hillary Rodham and Bernard Nussbaum were aware the role of Nixon's White House counsel, John Dean, in the cover-up of Watergate was a basis for charging Nixon with an impeachable offense.
 In 1972, following the arrest of Watergate burglar Howard Hunt and others,  John Dean alone had personally examined the contents of Hunt's White House safe,  and had sat in on the interrogation of witnesses by the Justice Department.  For his acts, Dean was charged with the felony of obstructing justice and served a prison term.  In 1993, as Dean's successor, Nussbaum similarly interposed himself between the Justice Department's investigation of the files in the White House office of Vincent Foster.
 At the time of Watergate, Nussbaum and Hillary Rodham were  aware that for his complicity in Dean's acts and those of other White House aides, President Nixon was charged with an impeachable offense by the House Judiciary Committee and named as an "unindicted co-conspirator" by Watergate special prosecutor Leon Jaworski.  They were also aware of the legal principles of complicity relied on both by the Judiciary Committee and by Watergate prosecutor Jaworski.  Under those principles, if the President establishes a policy of obstructing investigations, he becomes accountable for the acts of his aides in the pursuit of that policy.
 Under the same principles, President Clinton now warrants impeachment for bribery; as well as for the cover-up of Whitewater by Bernard Nussbaum, Hillary Clinton, other White House aides, and the President's best friend, Webster Hubbell.  As concluded in the 650-page final report of the Senate Whitewater Committee released on June 18, 1996:
 "By the time of Vincent Foster's death in July 1993, the Clintons had established a pattern of concealing their involvement with Whitewater and the McDougals' Madison Guaranty S&L.  The actions of senior White House officials and other close Clinton associates in the days and weeks following Mr. Foster's death ... were but part of a pattern that began in 1988 of concealing, controlling and even destroying damaging information concerning the Whitewater real estate investment and the Clintons' ties to James and Susan McDougal and the Madison Savings and Loan. Indeed, at the time of Mr. Foster's death, the Clintons and their associates were aware that the Clintons' involvement with Whitewater land deal, the McDougals, and the Madison S&L might subject them to civil liability and even criminal investigation."
 In 1997, further evidence came to light that was also reminiscent of the Nixon impeachment proceedings.  Based in part on the arrangement by White House aides of payments of "hush money" to Howard Hunt and other Watergate burglars, the first article of impeachment adopted by the Judiciary Committee at the time of Watergate, charged President Nixon with nine offenses, two of which included:
 "Approving, condoning, and acquiescing in the surreptitious payment of substantial sums of money for the purpose of obtaining the silence or influencing the testimony of witnesses, potential witnesses, or individuals who participated in...illegal activities; and
 Making false or misleading public statements for the purpose of deceiving the people of the United States into believing that...with respect to allegations of misconduct on the part of personnel of the executive branch of the United States and personnel of the Committee for the Re-election of the President and that there was no involvement of such personnel in such misconduct."
 Similarly, there is now compelling evidence that, after Webster Hubbell resigned as Associate Attorney General to face criminal charges of fraud, President Clinton also acted through White House aides to arrange payments of "hush money" to Mr. Hubbell.  There is likewise persuasive evidence that to deceive the public, President Clinton has made false statements.
 Early in 1994, then-Whitewater Independent Counsel Robert Fiske discovered Hubbell had overbilled his clients at the Rose law firm $482,410, and that he owed $143,437 in unpaid federal income taxes.  [he2 p24]  Initially, it was reported that in the nine months between his resignation and his guilty plea, Hubbell received payments of $400,000, of which $100,000 came from the Riadys.  Later, House investigators found evidence that Hubbell received $1 million or more, of which $300,000 came from the Riadys.
 When the first reports of the Riady payments to Hubbell appeared in the press in January 1997, President Clinton was asked at a White House news conference whether he found the Riady payment unusual or suspicious, and what steps he had taken to find out whether it had been hush money.  His response was:
 "I can't imagine who could have ever arranged to do something improper like that and no one around here knew about it.  We did not know anything about it, and I can tell you categorically that did not happen.  I knew nothing about it.  None of us did before it happened.  I didn't personally know anything about it until I read about it in the press." [HE2 p26, 27; 3/roadmap]
 
 
 On April 3, 1997, again commenting on White House knowledge of payments to Hubbell, President Clinton stated:
 "Let me remind you of the critical fact.  At the time that it was done, no one had any idea about whether any  --  what the nature of the allegations were against Mr. Hubbell or whether they were true. Everybody thought there was some sort of billing dispute with his law firm. And that's all anybody knew about it. So no, I do not think they did anything improper."
 
 Several days afterwards, in a radio appearance Hillary Clinton stated that in resigning Hubbell had assured her and the President he had done nothing wrong, and that "at the time we had no reason to disbelieve his denials of wrongdoing."  Later, the public record was to include clear and convincing evidence the statements of the President and the First Lady were lies.
 
 It was later learned that after he resigned to face criminal charges Hubbell visited the White House on March 18, 1994.  He had a private meeting with Hillary Clinton in the White House in July 1994.  He also met at least 12 times with Associate White House Counsel William Kennedy, another former partner in the Rose Law Firm.
 In the summer of 1994, Hubbell made at least two trips to Camp David to visit the Clintons and had a golf match with the President and Texas oil man Truman Arnold, who made a payment to Hubbell during that period.  He also met frequently with Gerald Stern, who was then in charge of the division of the Justice Department responsible for prosecuting financial institution fraud, and who later told the Washington Post his meetings with Hubbell were "strictly social."
 
 By May 5, 1997 the evidence the President had lied about is knowledge of the payments to Hubbell was already so compelling the New York Times -- which had long tended to defend the Clintons against charges of wrong doing -- published an article by its editor, A.M. Rosenthal, stating:
 "It [is now] impossible for me to believe it happened  the way President Clinton and his wife said it had.  I [have] rejected, for myself, the story... that neither they nor anybody else at the White House knew that when their good  friend Webster L. Hubbell resigned as Associate Attorney General in  1994 he was facing the likelihood of  criminal accusations that could land him in jail.  They did.
 "If the President did know, then after the resignation he opened himself to possible charges of obstructing justice by approving White House job-hunting for Mr. Hubbell. It would not take a particularly suspicious mind -- let alone a prosecutor's -- to see high-paying jobs as hush money to keep a defendant silent.  Why would he take that risk?
 "In [this] paper Jeff Gerth and Stephen Labaton of the New York Times Washington bureau reported that before Mr. Hubbell resigned, David E. Kendall, the personal lawyer of the Clintons, and James B. Blair,  one of their closest Arkansas confidants, received certain information from the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock....The information was that the firm had "pretty strong proof of wrongdoing" by Mr. Hubbell while he was a partner. The Times account said Mr. Blair then warned the Clintons that  Mr. H

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