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Politics : Clinton's Scandals: Is this corruption the worst ever? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: MulhollandDrive who wrote (4490)9/10/1998 12:56:00 PM
From: Zoltan!  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13994
 
Starr is working on a second report to the three
judges who oversee his probe. The charges in the
judges' report won't be as titillating, but they will make
Clinton vulnerable to prosecution should he leave
office.

Charges to the judges will include racketeering, a legal
term that means a series of crimes committed in an
organized fashion. Since this statute is usually applied
to mobsters, it will be shocking to the public and
harmful to Clinton.



THE QUICKER IT'S OVER,
THE BETTER FOR WALL
STREET


By JOHN CRUDELE

WALL STREET has to hope the 36 boxes of
information on impeachable offenses Kenneth Starr
delivered to Congress doesn't lead to marathon
hearings on whether Bill Clinton should stay in office.

But that's exactly what's likely to happen.

The stock market showed just how vulnerable it is to
the upcoming political turmoil yesterday, when the
Dow fell 156 points, giving up almost 40 percent of
the gains of the previous day.

And the loss could be blamed on nothing but the Starr
report - first, rumors of its imminent arrival and then
the delivery late in the day

It's becoming apparent Clinton won't remain in office
to the end of his term. The only question that remains
now is: How long will it take?

Obviously, as far as investors are concerned, the
quicker this thing is over the better. Wall Street can
take a sudden shock. But it can't take another lingering
problem on top of the Asian economic turmoil.

News organizations have reported that the militants in
the White House have seized the day and are vowing
to counterattack Starr relentlessly.

Others are expecting a quick end to this impeachment
matter because leaders of the Democratic party will
step in and convince Clinton to quit.

Both those views miss reality.

Here are the problems:

Clinton can't quit unless he is given a full pardon for
the alleged crimes reported to Congress - and those
excluded from the report. Otherwise, private citizen
Clinton could end up in jail.

Ken Starr accused Bill Clinton of a double-digit
number of felonies in his report to Congress. So the
offenses aren't merely an annoyance.

The charges are narrow in scope - related to his
personal life and cover-ups of such things.

The report probably focused mainly on Monica
Lewinsky, but it wouldn't be surprising if incidents
from the Paula Jones suit were also mentioned.

Starr's staff decided not too long ago to concentrate
on these limited matters in the Congressional version.

There are also other women and other cases of
obstruction of justice, mainly involving the moving of
these people to cushy jobs. Most of the jobs were in
the Department of Defense and the Pentagon, but
others were with Hollywood firms. The intention was
for these women to become inaccessible.

In one instance, a source says, a woman's record was
expunged from the Pentagon's files to cover up her
transfer.

By limiting the scope of the report to these things, it
leaves Clinton legally vulnerable to a lot of crimes that
aren't going to be revealed to Congress.

As if all this weren't enough:

Starr is working on a second report to the three
judges who oversee his probe. The charges in the
judges' report won't be as titillating, but they will make
Clinton vulnerable to prosecution should he leave
office.

Charges to the judges will include racketeering, a legal
term that means a series of crimes committed in an
organized fashion. Since this statute is usually applied
to mobsters, it will be shocking to the public and
harmful to Clinton.

There are stories of sexual oddities in the report that
was sent to Congress, some of which haven't yet
surfaced. As much as the Republicans might be
inclined to get this impeachment process over with, the
temptation to embarrass Clinton and the Democrats as
much as possible will be too great.

All of this is a formula for a long, protracted period of
tension for America and for an already nervous stock
market.
nypost.com