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A L S O +T O D A Y


The whaling that wasn't
By David Neiwert
Environmentalists and Indians clash over whether gray whales matter more than native culture and treaty rights


Target: Saddam
By Jeff Stein
Forget inspections. The goal is to bring him down this time, says David Kay, who led the first U.N. inspection team in Iraq

 

 

T A B L E+T A L K

Newt resigns! Mull over the soon-to-be-former speaker's decision in the Headlines area of Table Talk

 

R E C E N T L Y

No mercy
By Mark Herman
California Gov. Pete Wilson is unlikely to grant clemency to a Thai national on death row, despite appeals from jurors, lawyers and the warden of San Quentin
(11/13/98)

Beware of the black CON-servative
By C.D. Ellison
An African-American Republican talks back to David Horowitz
(11/13/98)

He can't go home again
By Marc Cooper
No matter what the House of Lords decides, former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet is finally being held resonsible for the death of President Salvador Allende -- and Chilean democracy
(11/12/98)

The costs of Mitch
By Mary Jo McConahay
Can a hurricane threaten the fragile new democracies of Central America?
(11/12/98)

A day to remember?
By Jeff Stein
Police and federal agents brace for violence as anti-abortion forces observe a new "holiday"
(11/11/98)

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Paula Jones lawsuit settled
CLINTON COUGHS UP $850,000, BUT NO APOLOGIES.

SALON STAFF REPORT | Four years after Paula Jones brought sexual harassment charges against President Clinton -- charges that gave Kenneth Starr legal justification to investigate the Monica Lewinsky affair and Clinton's attempt to cover it up -- the case was settled Friday, with the president agreeing to pay Jones $850,000. The deal, which included no apology or any admission of guilt, allowed all parties to walk away claiming victory.

The Jones case has been complicated by billing squabbles among Jones' various attorneys and disputes over whether an apology by the president would be issued.

The settlement comes on the same day that the White House suffered setbacks on two other legal fronts. Independent counsel Starr indicted Webster Hubbell, a former top Justice Department offical and a former partner of Hillary Clinton's at the Rose Law Firm, for the third time, charging him with 15 felonies. If convicted, Hubbell could face 325 years in prison. Starr also sent new evidence to Congress regarding the president's relationship with former White House volunteer Kathleen Willey.

The text of the legal agreement between Clinton and Jones follows:

Whereas it is the desire of all the parties to end the above-captioned litigation for all purposes, it is hereby stipulated and agreed as follows:

1. The plaintiff, Paula Corbin Jones, will receive and accept a total payment of $850,000 in full satisfaction of all claims for damages, including but not limited to any physical and personal injury, civil rights violations, emotional distress, and any fees and expenses incurred in connection with this litigation or the facts and circumstances underlying it;

2. William Jefferson Clinton will cause said sum to be paid to the plaintiff within 60 days of execution of this agreement;

3. The parties, Paula Corbin Jones, Danny Ferguson and William Jefferson Clinton, hereby unconditionally release each other and their representatives in connection with any claims which have or could be made in or in connection with the litigation or the facts and circumstances underlying it;

4. Upon the execution of this agreement, the parties will jointly file a motion with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, seeking voluntary dismissal of appeal No. 98-2161 EALR, each party to bear his or her own costs;

5. Nothing in this agreement shall be construed to be an admission of liability or wrongdoing by any party;

6. It is understood and agreed that this is the entire and only agreement between the parties and that it will be filed in open court;

7. It is understood and agreed by the parties that the agreement of each of them to this stipulation of settlement and release is not subject to any condition, and that the consideration recited herein is the sole consideration for the parties' agreement to this stipulation.

8. It is understood and agreed that the parties have designated their counsel to execute this agreement on their behalf.

Signed and agreed Nov. 13, 1998, by Robert S. Bennett, counsel to William J. Clinton; William McMillan, counsel to Paula Corbin Jones; Donovan Campbell Jr., counsel to Paula Corbin Jones; and Bill W. Bristow, counsel to Danny Ferguson.


SALON | Nov. 13, 1998
 

 

 

 

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