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WSWS : News
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America : Clinton
Impeachment
In second week of Arkansas trial
Witnesses undermine Starr case against Susan McDougal
By Martin McLaughlin
19 March 1999
The trial of Susan McDougal on criminal contempt and obstruction
of justice charges continued this week in Little Rock, Arkansas
with prosecutors from the Office of Independent Counsel increasingly
on the defensive. McDougal, who has already served nearly two
years in prison for two previous Whitewater-related convictions,
faces yet a a third trial which could result in a prison term
of 10 years and $750,000 in fines.
Much of the week's proceedings consisted of a series of prosecutors
working for Kenneth Starr and grand jurors testifying that they
had not conspired to force McDougal to lie about Bill and Hillary
Clinton, her former partners in the Whitewater Development Co.
Given that admitting such conduct would amount to confessing
to the felony crime of subornation of perjury, the denials were
predictable. But it was nonetheless extraordinary that the prosecution
felt it necessary to preempt the defense argument that McDougal
refused to testify because she believed the Starr investigation
was a politically motivated inquiry and that prosecutors would
indict her for perjury if she did not give them anti-Clinton testimony.
McDougal and her late husband James were partners with the
Clintons in the failed Whitewater real estate development. She
was convicted and sent to prison for receiving an illegal $300,000
loan in the 1980s from a federally backed fund headed by former
Little Rock judge David Hale. Starr's prosecutors claim that Bill
Clinton, then governor of Arkansas, lobbied for the loan, and
that part of the loan was used to retire his Whitewater debts.
The loan was part of a complex scheme engineered by James McDougal
to sustain his failing Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan and other
real estate developments. There is no evidence that any of the
funds went to Whitewater or that either of the Clintons profited
from or was aware of the arrangement. This flimsy case has nonetheless
served as the launching pad for the five-year-long campaign of
political destabilization waged by extreme right-wing groups against
the White House.
McDougal's attorney Mark Geragos was able to elicit damaging
admissions from several witnesses called by the prosecution. FBI
agent Michael Pertkus, who testified at length about the web of
financial dealings by James McDougal, conceded that he would not
have recommended bringing charges over Whitewater against either
Bill or Hillary Clinton on the basis of the testimony of James
McDougal and David Hale, both of whom were convicted con men and
admitted perjurors.
Denise Castleberry, a former grand juror who said she had "warm
feelings" about Starr's prosecutors, admitted that they had
not told the grand jury of material assistance provided to James
McDougal and David Hale in return for their cooperation. McDougal
was provided with housing, while Hale was paid $60,000 for living
expenses by Starr's office--a fact that surely would be significant
in any objective evaluation of his testimony.
A Ft. Smith, Arkansas grand jury is currently investigating
payments made to Hale--allegedly with the knowledge of Starr's
office--by right-wing groups financed by billionaire Richard Mellon
Scaife. These groups include the Arkansas Project, which was set
up by the magazine American Spectator to dig up dirt on
the Clintons.
A second grand juror, Marsha High, revealed that only 12 of
the 19 grand jurors present at an April 1998 session had voted
in favor of reaffirming the court order for Susan McDougal to
testify. This is the order which she is now charged with violating.
Since 15 votes are required to bring a grand jury indictment,
Geragos said that High's admission, which she confirmed from her
contemporaneous notes, might call into question the legality of
the entire proceeding.
As the culmination of the prosecution's case, associate independent
counsel Mark Barrett played 30 minutes of videotape of deposition
testimony from Hillary Clinton. Mrs. Clinton was questioned under
oath about Whitewater for the sixth time on April 25, 1998, less
than one week after Susan McDougal refused to testify. Barrett
contrasted Hillary Clinton's willingness to answer questions with
McDougal's defiant refusal.
Leaving aside the question whether the Clintons themselves
would have been better served, legally and politically, by echoing
Susan McDougal's defiance, any objective examination of the transcript
of Hillary Clinton's testimony refutes the prosecution's argument.
Mrs. Clinton was asked a series of convoluted, and in some instances
nearly incomprehensible, questions about 15-year-old financial
transactions, documents, Rose Law Firm billing records, and conversations.
To each inquiry she responded either that she did not know what
the prosecutor was talking about, had no personal involvement,
or could not remember minute details of these long-ago events.
It is perfectly understandable why a woman in Susan McDougal's
position, facing the power of the Office of Independent Counsel
without the protection of the White House and a battery of lawyers,
would refuse to undergo such an interrogation.
There was another purpose, and a transparently political one,
for the introduction of Mrs. Clinton's testimony. While this evidence
had little relevance to the trial, it put the previously secret
videotape into the public record, to provide ammunition for the
ongoing political campaign against the Clinton White House.
Once again, at least for a day, the American media was full
of reports linking the Clintons to allegedly illegal financial
dealings in Arkansas, focusing on a $27,600 cashier's check, and
a $5,081 personal check from Susan McDougal bearing the notation
"Payoff Clinton." The cashier's check was not endorsed
by Clinton and in 1996 grand jury testimony he denied any knowledge
of it.
See Also:
Aftermath of the US impeachment drive:
Starr presses persecution of Susan McDougal
[13 March 1999]
Right-wing in US mounts
new political provocation
The Wall Street Journal and Juanita Broaddrick
[27 February 1999]
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