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America : Clinton
Impeachment
Independent counsel threatens to indict Clinton
Starr sends a message: the political coup will continue
By Barry Grey
2 February 1999
Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr has once again intervened
into the Senate impeachment trial, leaking to the New York
Times a report that he is considering seeking the indictment,
trial and conviction of Bill Clinton during Clinton's tenure as
president.
Starr's latest salvo came barely a week after he went to court
to force Monica Lewinsky to submit to questioning by the House
managers who are prosecuting the case against Clinton in the Senate.
This new provocation underscores the fact that the Senate proceedings
are the constitutional trappings of a political conspiracy.
The Times ran articles on Sunday and Monday based on
information from Starr "associates." These pieces were
the latest in a stream of press reports using information leaked
by Starr's office, in violation of laws requiring that grand jury
proceedings be kept secret. From the outset of his investigation,
Starr has used illegal leaks to a compliant media in an attempt
to sway public opinion, fortify the resolve for removing Clinton
within the Republican Party, and intimidate opponents of impeachment,
beginning with the White House.
The threat of prosecution has been an essential part of his
modus operandi, and already dozens of individuals have been harassed,
humiliated and financially ruined by Starr's witch-hunting methods.
He has issued multiple indictments against former Clinton Justice
Department official Webster Hubbell, jailed Susan McDougal for
18 months, and most recently indicted Julie Hiatt Steele on bogus
perjury and obstruction of justice charges. The real "crime"
of these individuals is their refusal to provide Starr with testimony
damaging to the White House.
The Times cited several associates of Starr "who
spoke on condition of anonymity." According to these sources,
Starr has concluded he has the constitutional authority to indict
and bring to trial a sitting president, but has as yet made no
decision on whether to use that authority against Clinton. The
Times reported that a group of prosecutors within Starr's
office is lobbying for the independent counsel to ask his grand
jury, shortly after the conclusion of the impeachment trial in
the Senate, to indict Clinton on charges of perjury and obstruction
of justice.
One option which Starr is considering is to seek an indictment
in the coming months, but keep it under seal. Outside of Starr's
office, his grand jury and the judge, nobody, including Clinton,
would be informed of the existence of such an indictment until
Starr decided to make it known.
Starr's contention that a sitting president is subject to criminal
indictment flies in the face of more than 200 years of American
history--which has never witnessed such an event--and the overwhelming
consensus of constitutional scholars. Starr cannot even legitimately
cite as a precedent the May 1997 Supreme Court ruling that ordered
the Paula Jones sexual harassment suit to go forward. That ruling
argued that Clinton could not delay the case since it was a civil,
not criminal, action, and concerned personal matters that occurred
prior to his becoming president, not alleged offenses committed
during his tenure in the White House.
The timing of Starr's latest maneuver suggests two basic motives.
The first is to put the Senate on notice that whatever the outcome
of its proceedings, Starr's office has the power to continue the
political attack on the White House, and has every intention of
using it.
Starr is responding to pledges from Senate Republicans that
the impeachment trial will be wound up by February 12. He is speaking
for the extreme right-wing forces that have promoted five years
of investigations and the first-ever impeachment of an elected
president.
These forces--the Christian right, racist and anti-Semitic
groups, their spokesmen in the leadership of the Republican Party
and their allies in the judiciary and the media--are letting it
be known they plan to continue their provocations until Clinton
is either removed from office or forced to resign, or his administration
is reduced to a shambles. Their aim is to irrevocably alter the
forms of rule in the US, trampling on democratic rights and establishing
an authoritarian state. They do not intend to be deterred by parliamentary
votes.
At the same time Starr is responding to new reports detailing
the connections between his office and the network of right-wing
lawyers and millionaire donors who organized the Paula Jones provocation,
as well as threats from Clinton's lawyers to use the Senate proceedings
to expose the political conspiracy and Starr's role in it.
On January 24 the Times published a front-page article
outlining the collusion between Starr and the Jones camp. Not
a single Democrat has publicly referred to the exposé,
but the January 31 article in the Times reporting Starr's
threat to indict Clinton contains the following significant sentence:
"Mr. Kendall [Clinton's chief personal lawyer] also threatened
to seek testimony from witnesses in the Senate trial to explore
what he says was improper collusion between Ms. Jones' lawyers
and Mr. Starr's prosecutors in late 1997."
Under the procedures adopted by the Republican majority in
the Senate, Clinton's lawyers are required to submit over the
next several days a list of any witnesses they wish to call. At
this critical juncture, Starr, via the Times, is putting
the White House on notice: should they pursue the matter of collusion
and conspiracy, he is prepared to use his power to prosecute.
Judging from the reaction of the White House and the Democratic
Party to Starr's threats, the independent counsel has little to
fear from these quarters. Starr's unprecedented challenge to the
presidency has evoked the most feeble and cowardly response. Neither
Clinton nor any other Democratic official has dared to call for
Starr's dismissal. Nor have they issued a call for an investigation
into the Office of Independent Counsel and its ties to the reactionary
swamp that sponsored the Jones suit.
The only response of the White House was to file a motion in
the US District Court in Washington asking for Starr to be held
in contempt for violating grand jury secrecy. This is the very
court that has been sitting for months on a mountain of evidence
that Starr's office illegally leaked information to the media.
The Los Angeles Times characterized as "one of
the harshest reactions" the following whimper from Democratic
Senator Carl Levin on the television program Face the Nation:
"I just think it shows terrible judgment on the part of that
office."
The prostration of Clinton and the Democrats is not simply
a matter of personal cravenness. The further the impeachment process
has progressed, the more it has become focused on the attempt
by both parties to conceal from the American people what is well
known within the political establishment--that the trial in the
Senate is the facade for a right-wing putsch. The White House
and the Democratic Party are at the very heart of this conspiracy
within a conspiracy.
See Also:
In frame-up of Julie Hiatt Steele
Judge issues gag order sought by Starr
[2 February 1999]
Senate approves anti-democratic
rules
Impeachment trial procedure violates due process
[30 January 1999]
The Senate impeachment trial:
Starr intervenes to salvage House Republicans' case against Clinton
[25 January 1999]
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