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Starr drops threat to retry McDougal, Steele
By Jerry White
27 May 1999
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Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr announced Tuesday that he
would not seek to retry Susan McDougal and Julie Hiatt Steele,
two women whom Starr failed to convict earlier this spring for
allegedly obstructing his investigation of President Bill Clinton.
The special prosecutor's decision comes as political pressure
is building on him to shut down the five-year, $40 million legal
investigation that failed to remove Clinton from office.
Starr's decision leaves only one defendant left resulting from
his investigation, Webster Hubbell, a former Justice Department
official and friend of the Clintons who is being charged with
tax evasion and false testimony.
The outcome of the two trials was a debacle for Starr. A Little
Rock, Arkansas jury in April acquitted Susan McDougal on an obstruction
charge and failed to reach a verdict on two contempt counts. The
proceeding turned into a virtual trial of Starr's office, with
McDougal's attorney presenting extensive evidence about the intimidation
of witnesses and other prosecutorial abuse. On the stand McDougal
said she refused to answer questions put by Starr in 1996 because
the special prosecutor insisted she lie in order to implicate
Bill and Hillary Clinton in the loan scheme. Other witnesses,
including Julie Hiatt Steele and Steve Smith, an Arkansas lawyer
and former Clinton aide, testified about being bullied by Starr's
office.
Interviews conducted with jurors after the trial indicated
they sided with McDougal because of their contempt for Starr's
witch-hunt against the president and his undemocratic methods.
Starr alluded to the admiration for McDougal in the Arkansas capital
in explaining his reasons for not seeking a retrial. In a letter
to the federal judge Starr cited the near impossibility
of seating an impartial jury in Little Rock.
McDougal, who had already served 18 months in prison, said,
I'm glad its over, but it should have always been over.
It never should have happened. The taxpayers should be given their
[money] back, and I should be given my life back. Her Los
Angeles-based attorney, Mark Geragos, added, I love Little
Rock, and I would love to have gone back there and had some more
fun with Starr. But I think somebody gave him some smelling salts
and he came to his senses.
On May 7 Starr's case against Julie Hiatt Steele met a similar
fate. Steele's refusal to corroborate the allegations of her ex-friend
Kathleen Willey, a former White House volunteer who claimed President
Clinton made unwanted sexual advances towards her in 1993, foiled
Starr's attempt to include these claims in his impeachment referral
to the House of Representatives. After failing to break Steele
through threats and intimidation Starr indicted her on four counts
of obstruction and making false statements, charges that threatened
the 52-year-old single mother with 35 years in prison and a $1
million fine.
During the trial, however, Steele's attorneys demonstrated
that Willey had a record of lying. Although Willey testified that
she had sworn to tell Starr's office the truth, she conceded during
cross-examination that she had been granted a second immunity
from prosecution because she had lied to Starr's investigators
previously. Having discredited the Independent Counsel's key witness,
Steele's attorneys rested their case without calling any defense
witnesses. On May 7 the Alexandria, Virginia jury deadlocked on
the charges, forcing the federal judge to declare a mistrial.
Explaining his reasons for not attempting to retry the case,
Starr defended his vindictive prosecution of Steele, but lamented
that the jury had not bitten the bait. The case was appropriate
and proper to indict and present to a trial jury, but the jury's
inability to reach a unanimous verdict is a reality that we have
taken seriously and respectfully. His office said concerns
over resource allocation led to the decision not to
seek a retrial.
The McDougal-Steele cases exposed the character of Starr's
entire investigation, from the time he was appointed to probe
the Whitewater land deal in 1994 to the impeachment proceedings
in Congress. Starr's office intimidated witnesses, concocted evidence
and trampled on democratic rights to set and spring the legal
trap against Clinton. Behind Starr stood extreme right-wing forces
with vast financial resources, and the news media which aided
and abetted his efforts.
Conscious of the deep-seated popular opposition to these methods,
major newspapers, like the New York Times and Washington
Post, which enthusiastically supported the impeachment drive
against Clinton, have indicated that Starr is exhausting his credibility.
In recent weeks several of Starr's key deputies have resigned,
and the Independent Counsel has hinted that he might be willing
to turn over some segments of his investigation to the Justice
Department.
If political conditions change, however, Starr has reserved
the ability to prosecute Clinton, either before or after the president
leaves office, on charges related to the Monica Lewinsky investigation.
See Also:
Mistrial declared in Julie Hiatt Steele
case
[12 May 1999]
McDougal acquittal deals major
blow to Starr investigation
[14 April 1999]
Aftermath
of the impeachment drive
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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