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Politics : Mr. Clinton, would you please step down! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: c.r. earle who wrote (6)12/27/1998 2:34:00 AM
From: Bob Lao-Tse  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20
 
>>You state in your opening thread that anyone else who perjured themselves would be in jail, well no one else in the world would have been placed in that position because of an affair.

Check your facts. There is, right now, a woman in Idaho who is in prison for perjuring herself on the subject of an affair with a co-worker. The precedent has already been established.



To: c.r. earle who wrote (6)12/27/1998 8:20:00 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20
 
c.r.,

Please explain to me, in a logical manner if possible, how expecting the president to be held accountable equally under the law, is in any way "self-righteous."

BK



To: c.r. earle who wrote (6)2/19/1999 8:05:00 PM
From: Gary E. Johnson  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 20
 
Ya, it is JUST about sex ! How corrupt do you want him to get our system of laws? Once sex hits the courts, the OATH takes over. It has not just been a couple of encounters. This man is corrupt ! Do you seriously want your children to look up to him?
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Lindsey Graham and the Jane Doe Secrets
Rep. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) called alleged Clinton rape victim Juanita Broaddrick repeatedly last month as House trial managers secretly debated whether to request her testimony during the President's impeachment trial, Inside Cover has learned exclusively.
"He never encouraged her to come forward," a source close to Broaddrick revealed. "But Lindsey said he wanted her to know they'd support her whatever she decided to do."
A civil war has broken out among House members over whether to release secret material now stored in D.C.'s Gerald Ford Building on "Jane Does" linked to Clinton, internet sleuth Matt Drudge reported Saturday night.
Reports indicate that Juanita Broaddrick, aka Jane Doe # 5, is a main point of contention.
On Saturday, the St. Petersburg Times reported that trial manager Asa Hutchinson met with Broaddrick but ultimately decided against bringing her explosive account into the trial; a move advocated by Graham and manager-colleague James Rogan.
On Jan. 2, 1998, Broaddrick filed an affidavit with Paula Jones' attorneys denying any "unwanted sexual contact" with Clinton, a denial she later recanted to Ken Starr's investigators. But she did not claim she was pressured to make that denial, according to accounts from House probers.
In the absence of any direct evidence that Broaddrick was intimidated, House trial managers were reluctant to delve into Broaddrick's 21 year-old rape charge against Clinton.
One Arkansas insider contacted by House staffers was told that Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott "went ballistic" at the mere mention of Broaddrick's name.
But, as Inside Cover reported exclusively on Friday, House Democrat Robert Wexler has hinted that a House vote to release the explosive sealed material could come soon.
Several congressman have told the New York Times and other mainsteam outlets that the Ford Building evidence was "alarming and very unsettling", leaving them horrified, nauseated and tearful.
Graham's confidential pledge of support to Broaddrick has been put to the test by NBC's decision to deep-six her interview with the network's Lisa Myers, which Broaddrick was told was tentatively scheduled for broadcast on Jan. 29 -- during the height of the impeachment trial.
Graham's press spokesperson was not available late Saturday to respond to questions about whether the congressman's pledge to Broaddrick spurred the debate on whether to release the secret Ford Building evidence.
Saturday, February 13, 11:29 AM