Salon Magazine













T A B L E+T A L K

Why do the U.S. media ignore the rest of the world? Discuss America's isolationist policy of reporting in the International Issues area of Table Talk


D A I L Y+Q U O T E

Dave Matthews' scatalogical muse


R E C E N T L Y

Vets declare "war" on CNN
By Francis Pisani
The sarin gas story is more than a PR disaster for CNN; it is the biggest case yet of how networked organizing by a motivated group can overwhelm the power of traditional institutions
(07/24/98)

Bomb fugitive's family to make appeal?
By Jeff Stein
Relatives of Eric Rudolph, the suspect in a fatal 1998 abortion-clinic bombing, may ask him to turn himself in
(07/24/98)

Reno under fire
By Jonathan Broder
Janet Reno may soon face a Draconian attempt by Senate Republicans to force her to turn over control of the campaign finance probe
(07/23/98)

The Year of Dreaming Dangerously
By Stephen Talbot
This is the 30th anniversary of a series of tumultuous events that shaped a generation. To understand the activists of the '60s, you have to revisit 1968 and consider what it was like to those who lived through it
(07/22/98)

The attack judge
By Jonathan Broder
One federal jurist has shocked even hardened Washington insiders by suggesting that Clinton has declared "war" on the U.S. in his battle with Ken Starr
(07/21/98)

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Browse the
Newsreal Archives

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -



Salon Newsreal[ Money: The real promise of financial infomercials ]
spacer

VICTIM OF CIRCUMSTANCE

Rose Law Firm


Overlooked during the endless Whitewater probe is the damage that's been done to Little Rock's venerable Rose Law Firm, which, contrary to reports, stands innocent of all wrongdoing.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
BY MOLLIE DICKENSON

During the four-and-a-half-year Whitewater probe of the Clinton administration, dozens of innocent individuals and entities have been swept up into independent counsel Kenneth Starr's and congressional Republicans' investigative machinery -- only to emerge with tarnished reputations, huge legal bills and the inability to do anything about their predicament.

Nowhere have so many people been tainted as in Little Rock, the close-knit Arkansas state capital, where subpoenas, depositions, indictments, convictions -- and acquittals -- have touched hundreds of lives.

One institution left reeling from a multitude of media and congressional allegations is the once-venerable Rose Law Firm, where Hillary Rodham Clinton used to practice law. Three of her partners, Vincent Foster, William Kennedy III and Webster Hubbell, joined the Clintons in Washington after their 1992 victory, but only Kennedy, who was Foster's associate White House counsel, escaped back to Little Rock -- and the firm -- with comparatively minimal damage.

The Rose firm itself was accused of having a conflict of interest between its (and Hillary Clinton's) representation of Jim McDougal's Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan and the firm's later representation of the U.S. government against Madison's auditor. It was also accused, falsely, of having "shredded" Madison and Whitewater documents -- a story that led the national news shows when broken in 1994 by the conservative Washington Times newspaper.

The Rose firm was again falsely implicated when Hillary Clinton's infamous "missing" billing records turned up in the White House in January 1996, two years after they were subpoenaed.

And while an independent investigation into all the Rose charges eventually determined there was virtually no substance to them, the firm -- the oldest west of the Mississippi River, established in 1820 -- has been seriously, and permanently, damaged.

One charge frequently leveled by Clinton detractors is that the White House is continually putting roadblocks in the way of Starr's investigation. At the top of this list are the missing Rose firm billing records of Hillary Clinton's 60 hours of work over 15 months for McDougal, which had been removed from firm files in order to answer New York Times reporter Jeff Gerth's questions in March 1992, during the presidential campaign.

Ignored by the media and Clinton critics is the fact that when they did surface, the records substantiated Hillary Clinton's public and sworn statements.

Sworn testimony given in deposition by both President Clinton's personal lawyer, David Kendall, and White House Special Counsel Jane Sherburne, who were the first to question White House secretary Carolyn Huber after she located the records, tells a largely unreported story.

Sherburne, who was hired in January 1995 from the Washington law firm Wilmer Cutler & Pickering to manage the response to all Whitewater investigations, says that Huber was at first "very unsure about when or where she had found the records in the book room," a catch-all storage room in the family quarters of the White House. When Huber later testified, her story had become "precise," says Sherburne. She surmises that Huber, a former Rose Law Firm secretary, "had packed them up in the governor's mansion in Little Rock before the Clintons moved to Washington."

All the Clintons' boxes were stored elsewhere, says Sherburne, and then brought, a few at a time, to the book room, where Huber unpacked them and determined what should be done with the contents.

"But in the rush to clear out the book room in 1995 to make office space for the people who were going to help Mrs. Clinton write her book, ["It Takes a Village"], Carolyn probably threw the billing records she had unpacked into a box along with the old shoes and empty hangers that were also in the box, and moved it to her office to deal with later."

So much for the "mystery."

N E X T+P A G E+| The FBI searching the president's private living quarters?

PHOTO AP/WIDE WORLD



Salon | Search | Archives | Contact Us | Table Talk | Ad Info

Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus

Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.

[ Money: The real promise of financial infomercials ] [ Off your chest: Zorro ...  is a hero who rises from the masses andtriumphs ]