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


To: Zoltan! who wrote (8550)10/19/1998 9:36:00 AM
From: Rick Slemmer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13994
 
Somebody tell me one more time how "mean-spirited" the Republicans are....

Dogs and horses

Clinton apologist James Carville visited the campus of the University of Nevada at Las Vegas in hopes of motivating his Democratic audience to turn out on Election Day.

"While his expected attacks on Republicans moved the naive college-aged crowd to their feet," notes a spokesman for the Nevada GOP, "Nevada Republicans were less than impressed with [Mr. Carville's] tired and inflammatory rhetoric."

"The kind of things [he] says are much like what you'd expect from Jerry Springer," said Nevada GOP Chairman John Mason.

Which makes us wonder how well Mr. Carville's soon-to-be released book, "... And the Horse He Rode In On: The People V. Kenneth Starr" (Simon & Schuster, $14.95), will be received by the public.

We start with the introduction, and you be the judge:

"You know something? I don't like Ken Starr. I don't like one damn thing about him. I don't like his politics. I don't like his sanctimony. I don't like his self-piety. I don't like the people he runs with. I don't like his suck-up, spit-down view of the world, how he kisses up to the powerful and abuses the life out of regular people. I don't like his private legal clients. I don't like the folks who work for him -- or the people who apologize for him, either. I don't like the way he always smiles at the wrong time."

Mr. Carville goes on and on, but we don't have the room here.


washtimes.com



To: Zoltan! who wrote (8550)10/19/1998 12:31:00 PM
From: Who, me?  Respond to of 13994
 
Memos From Jones Lawsuit Released

By James Jefferson
Associated Press Writer
Monday, October 19, 1998; 9:15 a.m. EDT

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -- In written answers in the Paula Jones
lawsuit made public today, President Clinton testified that he had not had
''sexual relations'' with any women who worked for the federal
government or the state of Arkansas since 1986, a time frame set by the
judge.

Clinton's one-word answer to that question -- ''none'' -- was included in
hundreds of pages of previously secret documents released on the Internet
by U.S. District Judge Susan Webber Wright, who oversaw the case.

The release comes as a settlement remains elusive and lawyers on both
sides prepare to make arguments Tuesday before a federal appeals court
in St. Paul, Minn., that is considering whether to reinstate Mrs. Jones'
lawsuit accusing the president of sexual harassment.

Clinton's legal team on Sunday rejected an offer from Mrs. Jones to settle
the case for $2 million -- $1 million each from Clinton and New York real
estate developer Abe Hirschfeld, who volunteered his own money --
sources close to the case said today.

The documents mostly detail the behind-the-scenes maneuvers by lawyers
in the case, from bickering over details of questions to efforts by some
witnesses to avoid having to testify.

The documents include several written answers by the president. In one
set of answers in November 1997, Clinton testified he could not recall
ever meeting Mrs. Jones but denied her allegation that he made a crude
sexual advance and exposed himself to her in an Arkansas hotel room in
May 1991.

Clinton initially refused to answer broadly worded questions about
whether he ever had sex with any women other than his wife or engaged in
liaisons arranged by Arkansas state troopers. His lawyers argued the
questions exceeded the grounds of decency and the scope of the case, the
documents show.

''President Clinton objects to this request for admission in that it is
intended solely to harass, embarrass and humiliate the president and the
office he occupies,'' his lawyers wrote.

Wright ordered Clinton in December to answer the question but narrowed
it to a period of five years prior to the alleged episode involving Mrs.
Jones, starting in May 1986, through the present. The judge also limited
the question to those women ''who were state or federal employees, and
those whose liaisons with Governor Clinton were procured, protected,
concealed, and/or facilitated by state troopers assigned to the governor.''

Clinton complied with the judge's order. ''None,'' he answered to the
question.

Clinton has since admitted to having an intimate relationship and sexual
contacts with Monica Lewinsky, a former White House intern, but has
said he understood the term ''sexual relations'' to cover only intercourse.

Other documents released today include:

--The court filing in which Ms. Lewinsky, dubbed Jane Doe No. 6 by the
court, tried to avoid testifying in the sexual harassment lawsuit by claiming
she ''does not have any relevant information.''

''Plaintiff seeks to depose Jane Doe 6 to unreasonably invade her privacy
and subject her to harassment through questioning, disrupt her personal
life, as well as cause her to pay unnecessary counsel fees and costs,'' Ms.
Lewinsky's lawyer argued in a motion filed Jan. 20, 1998, the day before
the story of her affair with the president became public.

Attached to the motion was Ms. Lewinsky's previously disclosed affidavit
denying a sexual relationship with Clinton -- a document that landed her in
the throes of Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr's investigation.

--Affidavits from White House counsel Charles F.C. Ruff; Clinton's
private lawyer, Robert Bennett; and Mrs. Jones and her lawyers denying
they leaked Clinton's deposition in the Jones case to the news media.

--Court filings showing that the custodian of records for Mrs. Jones' legal
defense fund, which raised money for her legal bills, fought a subpoena
seeking records from the fund.

The documents didn't include a transcript of that deposition in which
Clinton denied having sexual relations with Ms. Lewinsky. Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr has accused the president of perjury in that
deposition.

The deposition behind the House's impeachment inquiry into Clinton's
conduct was widely believed to be among the evidence Wright would
release. But the judge said Friday that no transcript of the president's
deposition was on file with the court.

Portions of the deposition were filed in Mrs. Jones' written pleadings
before the court and already have been made public. There was no
explanation why the complete deposition wasn't among the 214 sealed
documents at the court.

Mrs. Jones claims Clinton propositioned her in a Little Rock hotel room in
1991, when she was a state employee and he was governor of Arkansas.
Clinton says he doesn't recall meeting Mrs. Jones and has denied anything
improper happened.

In dismissing the sexual harassment lawsuit, Wright concluded that no
matter what occurred between Mrs. Jones and Clinton, Mrs. Jones did
not prove she was harmed emotionally or in her career as she contended.

The Internet address for the court is are.uscourts.gov

search.washingtonpost.com