Starr's Testimony Before the House Judiciary Committee
Prepared Opening Statement
November 19, 1998
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I welcome this opportunity to appear before the committee and
to provide information relating to the committee's inquiry into possible impeachable
offenses by the president of the United States. This is my first opportunity to publicly
report on certain issues related to our investigation. I look forward to doing so and
assisting the committee.
I. Introduction
I appreciate both the seriousness of the committee's work and the gravity of its
assignment. I have reviewed the statements made by the 37 committee members in the Oct. 5
hearing. Any citizen who watched that hearing would have been impressed by the depth and
breadth of the discussion that day, and proud of the diligence with which members of this
committee are approaching this extraordinarily difficult and unwelcome task. I appear
before you today, therefore, fully recognizing the solemnity and importance of this
process.
As you know, in January of this year, Attorney General Reno petitioned the three-judge
panel that oversees independent counsels to authorize our office to investigate whether
Monica Lewinsky or others committed federal crimes relating to the sexual harassment
lawsuit brought by Paula Jones against President Clinton. Our office conducted a swift yet
thorough investigation. We completed the primary factual investigation in under eight
months, notwithstanding a number of obstacles in our path.
The law requires an independent counsel to report to the House of Representatives
substantial and credible information that may constitute grounds for an impeachment. On
Sept. 9, pursuant to our statutory duty, we submitted a referral and backup documentation
to the House. I am here today at your invitation in furtherance of our statutory
obligation.
I recognize that the House of Representatives -- not an independent counsel -- has the
sole power to impeach. My role here today is to discuss our referral and our
investigation.
II. Lewinsky Investigation
A. Overview
Let me begin with an overview. As our referral explains, the evidence suggests that the
president made false statements under oath and otherwise thwarted the search for truth in
the Jones v. Clinton case. The evidence further suggests that the president made false
statements under oath to the grand jury on Aug. 17.
That same night, the president publicly acknowledged an inappropriate relationship, but
maintained that his testimony had been legally accurate. The president also declared that
all inquiries into the matter should end because, he said, it was private.
Shortly after the president's Aug. 17 speech, Sens. Lieberman, Kerrey, and Moynihan
stated that the president's actions were not a private matter. In our view, they were
correct. Indeed, the evidence suggests that the president repeatedly tried to thwart the
legal process in the Jones case and the grand jury investigation. That is not a private
matter. The evidence further suggests that the president, in the course of these efforts,
misused his authority and power as president and contravened his duty to faithfully
execute the laws. That, too, is not a private matter.
The evidence suggests that the misuse of presidential authority occurred in the
following 10 ways:
First. The evidence suggests that the president made a series of premeditated false
statements under oath in his civil deposition on Jan. 17, 1998. The president had taken an
oath to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. By making false
statements under oath, the president, the chief executive of our nation, failed to adhere
to that oath and to his presidential oath to faithfully execute the laws.
Second. The evidence suggests that, apart from making false statements under oath, the
president engaged in a pattern of behavior during the Jones litigation to thwart the
judicial process. The president reached an agreement with Ms. Lewinsky that each would
make false statements under oath. He provided job assistance to Ms. Lewinsky at a time
when the Jones case was proceeding and Ms. Lewinsky's truthful testimony would have been
harmful. He engaged in an apparent scheme to conceal gifts that had been subpoenaed from
Ms. Lewinsky. He coached a potential witness, his own secretary Betty Currie, with a false
account of relevant events.
Those acts constitute a pattern of obstruction that is fundamentally inconsistent with
the president's duty to faithfully execute the laws.
Third. The evidence suggests that the president participated in a scheme at his
deposition in which his attorney, in his presence, deceived a United States district judge
in an effort to cut off questioning about Ms. Lewinsky. The president did not correct his
attorney's false statement. A false statement to a federal judge in order to prevent
relevant questioning is an obstruction of the judicial process.
Fourth. The evidence suggests that on Jan. 23, 1998, after the criminal investigation
had become public, the president made false statements to his Cabinet and used his Cabinet
as unwitting surrogates to publicly support the president's false story.
Fifth. The evidence suggests that the president, acting in a premeditated and
calculated fashion, deceived the American people on Jan. 26 and on other occasions when he
denied a relationship with Ms. Lewinsky.
Sixth. The evidence suggests that the president, after the criminal investigation
became public, made false statements to his aides and concocted false alibis that these
government employees repeated to the grand jury. As a result, the grand jury received
inaccurate information.
Seventh. Having promised the American people to cooperate with the investigation, the
president refused six invitations to testify to the grand jury. Refusing to cooperate with
a duly authorized federal criminal investigation is inconsistent with the general
statutory duty imposed on all executive branch employees to cooperate with criminal
investigations. It also is inconsistent with the president's duty to faithfully execute
the laws.
Eighth. The president and his administration asserted three different governmental
privileges to conceal relevant information from the federal grand jury. The privilege
assertions were legally baseless in these circumstances. They were inconsistent with the
actions of Presidents Carter and Reagan in similar circumstances. And they delayed and
impeded the investigation.
Ninth. The president made false statements under oath to the grand jury on Aug. 17,
1998. The president again took an oath to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth. The evidence demonstrates that the president failed to adhere to that oath and
thus to his presidential oath to faithfully execute the laws.
Tenth. The evidence suggests that the president deceived the American people in his
speech on Aug. 17 by stating that his testimony had been legally accurate.
In addition to those 10 points, it bears mention that well before January 1998, the
president used government resources and prerogatives to pursue his relationship with
Monica Lewinsky. The evidence suggests that the president used his secretary Betty Currie,
a government employee, to facilitate and conceal the relationship with Monica Lewinsky.
The president used White House aides and the United States ambassador to the United
Nations in his effort to find Ms. Lewinsky a job at a time when it was foreseeable -- even
likely -- that she would be a witness in the Jones case. And the president used a
government attorney -- Bruce Lindsey -- to assist his personal legal defense during the
Jones case.
In short, the evidence suggests that the president repeatedly used the machinery of
government and the powers of his office to conceal his relationship with Monica Lewinsky
from the American people, from the judicial process in the Jones case, and from the grand
jury.
B. Sexual Harassment Law
Let me turn, then, to the legal context in which the Lewinsky issues first arose. At
the outset, I want to emphasize that our referral never suggests that the relationship
between the president and Ms. Lewinsky in and of itself could be a high crime or
misdemeanor. Indeed, the referral never passes judgment on the president's relationship
with Ms. Lewinsky. The propriety of a relationship is not the concern of our office.
The referral is instead about obstruction of justice, lying under oath, tampering with
witnesses, and misuse of power. The referral cannot be understood without appreciating
this vital distinction.
This case raises the following initial question: Is a plaintiff in a sexual harassment
lawsuit entitled to obtain truthful evidence from the defendant, and from associates of
the defendant, in order to support her claim? That should be easy to answer. No citizen
who finds himself accused in a sexual harassment case, or in any other kind of case, can
lie under oath or otherwise obstruct justice and thereby prevent the plaintiff from
discovering evidence and proving her case.
Paula Jones, a former Arkansas state employee, filed a federal sexual harassment suit
against President Clinton in 1994. The president denied those allegations. We will never
know whether a jury would have credited Ms. Jones' allegations. We also will never know
whether the ultimate decision-maker would have found that the alleged facts, if true,
constitute sexual harassment. When the president and Ms. Jones settled the case last week,
the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals was still considering the preliminary legal question
whether the facts as alleged could constitute sexual harassment.
After the suit was first filed in 1994, the president attempted to delay the trial
until his presidency was over. The president claimed a temporary presidential immunity
from civil suit. The case proceeded to the Supreme Court. At oral argument, the
president's attorney specifically warned our nation's highest court that if Ms. Jones won,
her lawyers would be able to investigate the president's relationships with other women,
as is common in sexual harassment cases. The Supreme Court rejected the president's
constitutional claim -- and did so by a nine to zero vote. The court concluded that the
Constitution did not provide such a temporary immunity from suit.
The idea was simple and powerful: No one is above the law. The Supreme Court sent the
case back for trial with words that warrant emphasis: ``Like every other citizen who
invokes'' the District Court's jurisdiction, Ms. Jones ``has a right to an orderly
disposition of her claims.''
After the Supreme Court's decision, the parties started to gather the facts. The
parties questioned relevant witnesses in depositions. They submitted written questions.
They made requests for documents.
Sexual harassment cases are often ``he said-she said'' disputes. Evidence reflecting
the behavior of both parties can be critical -- including the defendant's relationships
with other employees in the workplace.
Such questions can be uncomfortable, but they occur every day in courts and law offices
around the country. Individuals take an oath to tell the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth. And no one is entitled to lie under oath simply because he or she
does not like the questions or because he believes the case is frivolous or financially
motivated or politically motivated. The Supreme Court has emphatically and repeatedly
rejected the notion that there is ever a privilege to lie. The court has stated that there
are ways to object to questions; lying under oath is not one of them.
During the fact-gathering process, Judge Susan Webber Wright followed the standard
principles of sexual harassment cases.
Over repeated objection from the president's attorneys, the judge permitted inquiries
into the president's relationships with government employees. On Jan. 8, 1998, for
example, Judge Wright stated that questions as to the president's relationships with other
employees ``are within the scope of the issues in this case.''
In making these rulings, Judge Wright recognized that the questions might prove
embarrassing. She stated that ``I have never had a sexual harassment case where there was
not some embarrassment.'' She also stated that she could not protect the parties from
embarrassment.
Let me summarize the five points that explain how the president's relationship with Ms.
Lewinsky -- what was otherwise private conduct -- became a matter of concern to the
courts. This is critical to fully understand the nature of the committee's inquiry.
One. The president was sued for sexual harassment, and the Supreme Court ruled that the
case should go forward.
Two. The law of sexual harassment and the law of evidence allow the plaintiff to
inquire into the defendant's relationships with other women in the workplace, which in
this case included President Clinton's relationship with Ms. Lewinsky.
Three. Applying those settled legal principles, Judge Susan Webber Wright repeatedly
rejected the president's objections to such inquiries. The judge, instead, ordered the
president to answer the questions.
Four. It is a federal crime to commit perjury and obstruct justice in civil cases,
including sexual harassment cases. Violators are subject to a sentence of up to 10 years
imprisonment for obstruction and up to five years for perjury.
Five. The evidence suggests that the president and Ms. Lewinsky made false statements
under oath and obstructed the judicial process in the Jones case by preventing the court
from obtaining the truth about their relationship.
At his grand jury appearance, the president invoked a Supreme Court justice's
confirmation hearings as a comparison to his current situation. The president's use of the
analogy did not fit the facts in the Monica Lewinsky matter, however. The president's
having raised the analogy, let me make it more fitting to the case here.
Suppose that there is a nominee for a high government position. Assume that there is an
allegation of sexual harassment. Suppose that several women other than the accuser who
have worked with the nominee testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Suppose that
the nominee confers with one of those women ahead of time, and that they agree that they
will both lie to the Judiciary Committee about their relationship. Assume further that
they both do lie under oath about their relationship. And suppose further that a criminal
investigation develops and the nominee again lies under oath to the grand jury. If that
were proved to have happened, what would the Senate Judiciary Committee do?
Suppose that the lying under oath and obstruction of justice occurs in a sexual
harassment suit brought against the nominee. Suppose further that the false statements and
obstruction continue into a subsequent criminal investigation. What would this committee
do with compelling evidence of perjury and obstruction of justice committed by, for
example, a justice of the Supreme Court in a sexual harassment suit in which he was the
defendant?
Those hypotheticals -- which track the facts of this case -- put in relief the issue
before the Committee. Let me again stress that the House, not an independent counsel, has
the sole power to impeach. I am suggesting that consideration of our referral be focused
on the issues actually presented by the referral.
C. The President's Actions: Dec. 5-Jan. 17
I will next turn to some of the essentials of the referral. That will include the
specifics of Ms. Lewinsky's involvement in the Jones case and the president's actions in
response to that involvement.
The key point about the president's conduct is this. On at least six different
occasions -- from Dec. 17, 1997, through Aug. 17, 1998 -- the president had to make a
decision. He could choose truth, or he could choose deception. On all six occasions, the
president chose deception -- a pattern of calculated behavior over a span of months.
On Dec. 5, 1997, Ms. Jones's attorneys identified Ms. Lewinsky as a potential witness.
Within a day, the president learned that Ms. Lewinsky's name was on the witness list.
After learning this, the president faced his first critical decision. Would he and
Monica Lewinsky tell the truth about their relationship? Or would they provide false
information -- not just to a spouse or to loved ones -- but under oath in a court of law?
Eleven months ago, the president made his decision. At approximately 2 a.m. on Dec. 17,
1997, he called Ms. Lewinsky at her Watergate apartment and told her that she was on the
witness list. This was news to Ms. Lewinsky. And it bears noting that the president -- not
his lawyer -- made this call to the witness.
During this 2 a.m. conversation, which lasted approximately half an hour, the president
could have told Ms. Lewinsky that they must tell the truth under oath. The president could
have explained that they might face embarrassment but that, as a citizen and as president,
he could not lie under oath and he could not sit by while Monica did so. The president did
not say anything like that.
On the contrary, according to Ms. Lewinsky, the president suggested that she could sign
an affidavit and use -- under oath -- deceptive cover stories that they had devised long
ago to explain why Ms. Lewinsky had visited the Oval Office area. The president did not
explicitly instruct Ms. Lewinsky to lie. He did not have to. Ms. Lewinsky testified that
the president's suggestion that they use the pre-existing cover stories amounted to a
continuation of their pattern of concealing their intimate relationship. Starting with
this conversation, the president and Ms. Lewinsky understood, according to Ms. Lewinsky,
that they were both going to make false statements under oath.
The conversation between the president and Ms. Lewinsky on Dec. 17 was a critical
turning point. The evidence suggests that the president chose to engage in a criminal act
-- to reach an understanding with Ms. Lewinsky that they would both make false statements
under oath. At that moment, the president's intimate relationship with a subordinate
employee was transformed into an unlawful effort to thwart the judicial process. This was
no longer an issue of private conduct.
Recall that the Supreme Court had concluded that Paula Jones was entitled to an
``orderly disposition'' of her claims. The president's action on Dec. 17 was his first
direct effort to thwart the Supreme Court's mandate.
The story continued: The president faced a second choice. On Dec. 23, 1997, the
president submitted under oath a written answer to an interrogatory. The request stated in
relevant part: ``Please state the name ... of (federal employees) with whom you had sexual
relations when you (were) ... president of the United States.'' In his sworn answer, the
president stated ``None.''
On Dec. 28, the president faced a third critical choice. On that day, the president met
with Ms. Lewinsky at the White House. They discussed the fact that Ms. Lewinsky had been
subpoenaed for gifts she had received from the president. According to Ms. Lewinsky, she
raised the question of what she should do with the gifts. Later that day, the president's
personal secretary, Betty Currie, drove to Ms. Lewinsky's Watergate home. Ms. Lewinsky
gave Ms. Currie a sealed box that contained some of the subpoenaed gifts. Ms. Currie then
stored the box under her bed at home.
In her written proffer on Feb. 1, four weeks after the fact, Ms. Lewinsky stated that
Ms. Currie had called her to retrieve the gifts. If so, that necessarily meant that the
president had asked Ms. Currie to call. It would directly and undeniably implicate him in
an obstruction of justice. Ms. Lewinsky later repeated that statement in testimony under
oath. Ms. Currie, for her part, recalls Ms. Lewinsky calling her. But even if Ms. Lewinsky
called Ms. Currie, common sense and the evidence suggest some presidential knowledge or
involvement, as the referral explains.
Let me add another point about the gifts. In his grand jury appearance in August, the
president testified that he had no particular concern about the gifts in December 1997
when he had talked to Ms. Lewinsky about them. And he thus suggested that he would have
had no reason to take part in December in a plan to conceal the gifts. But there is a
serious problem with the president's explanation. If it were true that the president in
December was unconcerned about the gifts, he presumably would have told the truth under
oath in his January deposition about the large number of gifts that he and Ms. Lewinsky
had exchanged. But he did not tell the truth. At that deposition, when asked whether he
had ever given gifts to Monica Lewinsky, and he had given her several on Dec. 28, the
president stated ``I don't recall. Do you know what they were?''
In short, the critical facts to emphasize about the transfer of gifts are these: First,
the president and Ms. Lewinsky met and discussed what should be done with the gifts
subpoenaed from Ms. Lewinsky. Second, the president's personal secretary Ms. Currie drove
later that day to Ms. Lewinsky's home to pick up the gifts. Third, Ms. Currie stored the
box under her bed.
Meanwhile, the legal process continued to unfold, and the president took other actions
that had the foreseeable effect of keeping Ms. Lewinsky ``on the team.'' The president
helped Ms. Lewinsky obtain a job in New York. His efforts began after the Supreme Court's
decision in May 1997 -- at a time when it had become foreseeable that she could be an
adverse witness against the president. These job-related efforts intensified in December
1997 after Ms. Lewinsky's name appeared on the witness list.
Vernon Jordan, who had been enlisted in the job search for Ms. Lewinsky, testified that
he kept the president informed of the status of Ms. Lewinsky's job search and her
affidavit. On Jan. 7, 1998, Mr. Jordan told the president that Ms. Lewinsky had signed the
affidavit. Mr. Jordan stated to the president that he was still working on getting her a
job. The president replied, ``Good.'' In other words, the president, knowing that a
witness had just signed a false affidavit, encouraged his friend to continue trying to
find her a job. After Ms. Lewinsky received a job offer from Revlon on Jan. 12, Vernon
Jordan called the president and said: ``Mission accomplished.
As is often the situation in cases involving this kind of financial assistance, no
direct evidence reveals the president's intent in assisting Ms. Lewinsky. Ms. Lewinsky
testified that no one promised her a job for silence; of course, crimes ordinarily do not
take place with such explicit discussion. But federal courts instruct juries that
circumstantial evidence is just as probative as direct evidence. And the circumstantial
evidence here is strong. At a bare minimum, the evidence suggests that the president's job
assistance efforts stemmed from his desire to placate Ms. Lewinsky so that she would not
be tempted -- under the burden of an oath -- to tell the truth about the relationship.
Monica Lewinsky herself recognized that at the time, saying to a friend, ``Somebody could
construe or say, 'Well, they gave her a job to shut her up. They made her happy.'''
And given that the president's plan to testify falsely could succeed only if Ms.
Lewinsky went along, the president naturally had to be concerned that Ms. Lewinsky at any
time might turn around and decide to tell the truth. Indeed, some wanted her to tell the
truth. For example, one friend talked to Ms. Lewinsky about the Dec. 28 meeting with the
president. The friend stated that she was concerned because she ``didn't want to see
(Monica) being like Susan McDougal'' and did not want Monica to lie to protect the
president. Needless to say, any sudden decision by Ms. Lewinsky to tell the truth, whether
out of anger at the president or simple desire to be law-abiding, would have been very
harmful to the president. That helps to explain his motive in providing job assistance.
In mid-January, Ms. Lewinsky finalized her false affidavit with her attorney, who sent
it to Judge Wright's Court. The affidavit falsely denied a sexual relationship with the
president and essentially recounted the cover stories they had discussed in their
middle-of-the-night conversation on Dec. 17.
Let me turn to the president's Jan. 17 deposition. Some have suggested that the
president might have been surprised or ambushed at his deposition. Those suggestions are
wrong. The president had clear warning that there would be questions about Monica
Lewinsky. She had been named on the Dec. 5 witness list. On Jan. 12, only five days before
the deposition, Ms. Jones' attorneys identified Ms. Lewinsky as a trial witness. In
response, Judge Wright approved her as a witness. Two days later, on Jan. 14, the
president's private attorney asked Ms. Lewinsky's attorney to fax Ms. Lewinsky's
affidavit. During the deposition itself, the president's attorney stated that the
president was ``fully familiar'' with Ms. Lewinsky's affidavit.
At the outset of his Jan. 17 deposition, therefore, the president faced a fourth
critical decision. Fully aware that he would likely receive questions about Ms. Lewinsky,
would the president continue to make false statements under oath -- this time in the
presence of a United States District judge?
At the start of the deposition, Judge Susan Webber Wright administered the oath. The
president swore to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. As his
testimony began, the president, in response to a question from Ms. Jones' attorneys,
stated that he understood he was providing his testimony under the penalty of perjury.
The president was asked a series of questions about Ms. Lewinsky. After a few
questions, the president's attorney -- Mr. Bennett -- objected to the questioning about
Ms. Lewinsky, referring to it as ``innuendo.'' Mr. Bennett produced Ms. Lewinsky's false
affidavit. Mr. Bennett stated to Judge Wright that Ms. Lewinsky's affidavit indicated that
``there is absolutely no sex of any kind in any manner, shape, or form.'' Mr. Bennett
stated that the president was ``fully aware of Ms. Lewinsky's affidavit.'' During Mr.
Bennett's statements, the president sat back and let his attorney mislead Judge Wright.
The president said not a word -- to the judge or, so far as we are aware, to his attorney.
Judge Wright overruled Mr. Bennett's objection. The questioning continued. In response,
the president made false statements not only about his intimate relationship with Ms.
Lewinsky, but about a whole host of matters. The president testified that he did not know
that Vernon Jordan had met with Ms. Lewinsky and talked about the Jones case. That was
untrue. He testified that he could not recall being alone with Ms Lewinsky. That was
untrue. He testified that he could not recall ever being in the Oval Office hallway with
Ms. Lewinsky except perhaps when she was delivering pizza. That was untrue. He testified
that he could not recall gifts exchanged between Ms. Lewinsky and him. That was untrue. He
testified -- after a 14-second pause -- that he was ``not sure'' whether he had ever
talked to Ms. Lewinsky about the possibility that she might be asked to testify in the
lawsuit. That was untrue. The president testified that he did not know whether Ms.
Lewinsky had been served a subpoena at the time he last saw her in December 1997. That was
untrue. When his attorney read Ms. Lewinsky's affidavit denying a sexual relationship, the
president stated that the affidavit was ``absolutely true.'' That was untrue.
The evidence thus suggests that the president -- long aware that Ms. Lewinsky was a
likely topic of questioning at his deposition -- made not one, or two, but a series of
false statements under oath. The president further allowed his attorney to use Ms.
Lewinsky's affidavit, which the president knew to be false, to deceive the court. This
evidence suggests that the president directly contravened the oath he had taken -- as well
as the Supreme Court's mandate, in which the court had stated that Ms. Jones was entitled,
like every other citizen, to a lawful disposition of her case.
D. The President's Actions: Jan. 17-21
As our referral outlines, the president's deposition did not mark the end of the scheme
to conceal. During his deposition testimony, the president referred to his secretary Betty
Currie. The president testified, for example, that Ms. Lewinsky had come to the White
House to see Ms. Currie, not him; that Ms. Currie had been involved in assisting Ms.
Lewinsky in her job search; and that Ms. Currie had communicated with Vernon Jordan about
Mr. Jordan's assistance to Ms. Lewinsky. In response to one question at the deposition,
the president said he did not know the answer and ``you'd have to ask Betty.''
Given the president's repeated references to Ms. Currie and his suggestion to Ms.
Jones' attorneys that they contact her, the president had to know that Ms. Jones'
attorneys might want to question Ms. Currie. Shortly after 7 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 17 --
just two and a half hours after the deposition -- the president attempted to contact Ms.
Currie at her home. The president asked Ms. Currie to come to the White House the next
day, which she did, although it was unusual for her to come in on a Sunday. According to
Ms. Currie, the president appeared concerned and made a number of statements abut Ms.
Lewinsky to Ms. Currie. The statements included:
``You were always there when she was there, right? We were never really alone.''
``You could see and hear everything.''
Ms. Currie concluded that the president wanted her to agree with him when he made these
statements. Ms. Currie stated that she did in fact indicate her agreement -- although she
knew that the president and Ms. Lewinsky had been alone and that she could not hear or see
them when they were alone.
Ms. Currie further testified that the president ran through the same basic statements
with her again on January 20 or 21.
What is important with respect to these two episodes is that at the time the president
made these statements, he knew that they were false. He knew he had been alone with Ms.
Lewinsky. He knew Ms. Currie could not see or hear everything. The president thus could
not have been trying to refresh his recollection, as he subsequently suggested. That
raises the question: Is there a legitimate explanation for the president to have said
those things in that manner to Ms. Currie? The circumstances suggest not. The facts
suggest that the president was attempting to improperly coach Ms. Currie, at a time when
he could foresee that she was not a potential witness in Jones v. Clinton.
E. The President's Actions: Jan. 21-Aug. 17
The president's next major decision came in the days immediately after Jan. 21. On the
21st, The Washington Post publicly reported the story of Ms. Lewinsky's relationship with
the president. After the public disclosure of his relationship with Ms. Lewinsky and the
ongoing criminal investigation, the president faced a decision. Would he admit the
relationship publicly, correct his testimony in Ms. Jones' case, and ask for the
indulgence of the American people? Or would he continue to deny the truth?
For this question, the president consulted others. According to Dick Morris, the
president and he talked on Jan. 21. Mr. Morris suggested that the president publicly
confess. The president replied ``But what about the legal thing? You know, the legal
thing? You know. Starr and perjury and all.'' Mr. Morris suggested they take a poll. The
president agreed. Mr. Morris called with the results. He stated that the American people
were willing to forgive adultery but not perjury or obstruction of justice. The president
replied, ``Well, we just have to win, then.''
Over the next several months, it became apparent that the strategy to win had many
prongs. First, the president denied the truth publicly and emphatically. Second, he
publicly promised to cooperate with the investigation. Third, the president deflected and
diverted the investigation by telling aides false stories that were then relayed to the
grand jury. Fourth, he refused invitations to testify to the grand jury for over six
months. Fifth, his administration delayed the investigation through multiple privilege
claims, each of which has been rejected by the federal courts. Sixth, surrogates of the
president attacked the credibility and legitimacy of the grand jury investigation.
Seventh, surrogates of the president attempted to convince the Congress and the American
people that the matter was unimportant.
The first step was for the president to deny the truth publicly. For this, political
polling led to Hollywood staging. The president's California friend and producer Harry
Thomason flew to Washington and advised that the president needed to be very forceful in
denying the relationship. On Monday, Jan. 26, in the Roosevelt Room, before members of
Congress and other citizens, the president provided a clear and emphatic public statement
denying the relationship.
The president also made false statements to his Cabinet and aides. They then spoke
publicly and professed their belief in the president.
The second step was to promise cooperation. The president told the American people on
several television and radio shows on Jan. 21 and 22 that ``I'm going to do my best to
cooperate with the investigation.''
The third step was the president's refusal to provide testimony to the grand jury
despite six invitations to do so and despite his public promise to cooperate. Refusing
invitations to provide information to a grand jury in a federal criminal investigation
authorized by the attorney general of the United States -- and one in which there is a
high national interest in prompt completion -- was inconsistent with the president's
initial January promise to cooperate and with the general statutory duty of all government
officials to cooperate with federal criminal investigations.
As a fourth step, the president not only refused to testify himself, but he authorized
the use of various governmental privileges to delay the testimony of many of his
taxpayer-paid assistants. The extensive use of governmental privileges against grand jury
and criminal investigations has, of course, been a pattern throughout the administration.
Most notably, the White House cited privilege in 1993 to prevent Justice Department and
Park Police officials from reviewing documents in Vincent Foster's office in the days
after his death.
In the Lewinsky investigation, the president asserted two privileges, executive
privilege and a government attorney-client privilege. A subordinate administration
official, without objection from the president, claimed a previously unheard-of privilege
that was called the protective function privilege. The privileges were asserted to prevent
the full testimony of several White House aides and the full testimony of the sworn law
enforcement officers of the Secret Service.
In asserting executive privilege, the president was plowing headlong into the Supreme
Court's unanimous decision 24 years ago in United States v. Nixon. There, the Supreme
Court ruled that executive privilege was overcome by the need for relevant evidence in
criminal proceedings. And thus, it came as no surprise that Chief Judge Norma Holloway
Johnson rejected President Clinton's effort to use executive privilege to prevent
disclosure of relevant evidence.
In asserting protective function and government attorney-client privileges, the
administration was asking the federal courts to make up one new privilege out of whole
cloth and to apply another privilege in a context in which no federal court had ever
applied it before. And thus it again came as little surprise that the federal courts
rejected the administration's claims. Indeed, as to the government attorney-client claim,
the D.C. Circuit and the District Court, like the Eighth Circuit a year ago, stated that
the president's position not only was wrong but would authorize a ``gross misuse of public
assets.'' The Supreme Court refused to grant review of the cases notwithstanding the
administration's two strongly worded petitions.
This point bears emphasis: The administration justified its many privilege claims by
claiming an interest in protecting the presidency, not the president personally. But that
justification is dubious for two reasons. First, Presidents Carter and Reagan waived all
government privileges at the outset of criminal investigations in which they were
involved. The examples set by those two presidents demonstrate that such privilege claims
in criminal investigations are manifestly unnecessary to protect the presidency. Second,
these novel privilege claims were quite weak as a matter of law.
And that raises a question: What was it about the Monica Lewinsky matter that generated
the administration's particularly aggressive approach to privileges? The circumstantial
evidence suggests an answer: delay. Indeed, when this office sought to have the Supreme
Court decide all three privilege claims at once this past June, the Administration opposed
expedited consideration.
Not only did the administration invoke these three losing privileges, but the president
publicly suggested that he had not invoked executive privilege when in fact he had. On
March 24, 1998, while traveling in Africa, the president was asked about executive
privilege. He stated in response: ``You should ask someone who knows. I haven't discussed
that with the lawyers. I don't know.'' But White House Counsel Charles Ruff had filed an
affidavit in federal court only seven days earlier in which he swore that he had discussed
the assertion of executive privilege with the president and the president had approved its
invocation.
After Chief Judge Johnson ruled against the president, the president dropped the
executive privilege claim in the Supreme Court. In August, the president explained to the
grand jury why he dropped it. The president stated: ``I didn't really want to advance an
executive privilege claim in this case beyond having it litigated.''
But this statement -- to the grand jury -- was inaccurate. In truth, the president had
again asserted executive privilege only a few days earlier. And a few days after his grand
jury testimony, the president again asserted executive privilege to prevent the testimony
of Bruce Lindsey. These executive privilege cases continue to this day; indeed, one case
is now pending in the D.C. Circuit.
When the president and the administration assert privileges in a context involving the
president's personal issues; when the president pretends publicly that he knows nothing
about the executive privilege assertion; when the president and the administration rebuff
our office's efforts to expedite the cases to the Supreme Court; when the president
contends in the grand jury that he never really wanted to assert executive privilege
beyond having it litigated -- despite the fact that he had asserted it six days earlier
and will do so again four days afterwards, there is substantial and credible evidence that
the president has misused the privileges available to his office. And the misuse delayed
and impeded the federal grand jury's investigation.
The fifth tactic was diversion and deflection. The president made false statements to
his aides and associates about the nature of the relationship -- with knowledge that they
could testify to that effect to the grand jury sitting here in Washington. The president
did not simply say to his associates that the allegations were false or that the issue was
a private matter that he did not want to discuss. Instead, the president concocted
alternative scenarios that were then repeated to the grand jury.
The final two tactics were related: (i) to attack the grand jury investigation,
including the Justice Department prosecutors in my office -- to declare war, in the words
of one presidential ally -- and (ii) to shape public opinion about the proper resolution
of the entire matter. It is best that I leave it to someone outside our office to
elaborate on the war against our office. But no one really disputes that those tactics
were employed -- and continue to be employed to this day.
F. The President's Actions: Aug. 17
This strategy proceeded for nearly seven months. It changed course in August after
Monica Lewinsky reached an immunity agreement with our office, and the grand jury, after
deliberation, issued a subpoena to the president.
The president testified to the grand jury on Aug. 17. Beforehand, many in Congress and
the public advised that the president should tell the whole truth. They cautioned that the
president could not lie to the grand jury. Senator Hatch, for example, stated that ``So
help me, if he lies before the grand jury, that will be grounds for impeachment.'' Senator
Moynihan stated simply that perjury before the grand jury was, in his view, an impeachable
offense.
The evidence suggests that the president did not heed this senatorial advice. Although
admitting to an ambiguously defined inappropriate relationship, the president denied that
he had lied under oath at his civil deposition. He also denied any conduct that would
establish that he had lied under oath at his civil deposition. The president thus denied
certain conduct with Ms. Lewinsky and devised a variety of tortured and false definitions.
The president's answers have not been well received. Congressman Schumer, for one,
stated that ``it is clear that the president lied when he testified before the grand
jury.'' Congressman Meehan stated that the president engaged in a ``dangerous game of
verbal Twister.'' Indeed, the president made false statements to the grand jury and then
that same evening spoke to the nation and criticized all attempts to show that he had done
so as invasive and irrelevant. The president's approach appeared to contravene the oath he
took at the start of the grand jury proceedings. It also disregarded the admonitions of
those members of Congress who warned that lying to the grand jury would not be tolerated.
It also discounted Judge Wright's many orders in which she had ruled that this kind of
evidence was relevant in the Jones case.
And thus ended the over-eight-month journey that had begun on Dec. 5, 1997, when Monica
Lewinsky's name appeared on the witness list. The evidence suggests that the eight months
included false statements under oath, false statements to the American people, false
statements to the president's Cabinet and aides, witness tampering, obstruction of
justice, and the use of presidential authority and power in an effort to conceal the truth
of the relationship and to delay the investigation.
III. Jurisdiction
Given the serious nature of perjury and obstruction of justice, regardless of its
setting, it is obvious that the actions of the president and Ms. Lewinsky to conceal the
truth warranted criminal investigation. Let me explain how the investigation came to be
handled by our office rather than by the Department of Justice or some new independent
counsel. The explanation is straightforward.
On January 8, an attorney in my office was informed that Linda Tripp, who had been a
witness in prior investigations, had information she wanted to provide. A message was
conveyed back that she should provide her information directly. Ms. Tripp called our
office on Jan. 12. In that conversation and later, she provided us a substantial amount of
information.
Let me pause here and emphasize that our office, like most law enforcement agencies,
has received innumerable tips about a wide variety of matters over the past four years --
from Swiss bank accounts to drug smuggling. You name it. We have heard it. In each case,
we must make an initial assessment whether it is a serious tip or a crank call, as well as
an assessment of jurisdictional issues.
We handled the information from Ms. Tripp in this same manner. When we confirmed that
the information appeared credible, we reached out to the Department of Justice, as we have
done regularly during my tenure as independent counsel. We contacted Deputy Attorney
General Eric Holder within 48 hours after Ms. Tripp provided us information. The next day,
we fully informed the deputy attorney general about Ms. Tripp's information. About Ms.
Tripp's tapes and the questions concerning their legality under state law. About the
consensual FBI recording of Ms. Tripp and Ms. Lewinsky. About the indications that Vernon
Jordan was providing employment assistance to a witness who had the potential to harm the
president -- a fact pattern that we had seen in the Webster Hubbell investigation, as I
shall describe presently.
We discussed jurisdiction. We noted that it is in everyone's interest to avoid
time-consuming jurisdictional challenges. We stated that the Lewinsky investigation could
be considered outside our jurisdiction as then constituted. We stressed that someone
needed to work the case: the Justice Department or an independent counsel.
Later that evening, the deputy attorney general telephoned and reported that the
attorney general had tentatively decided to assign the matter to us. Before her decision
was final, we reviewed the evidence in detail with two experienced career prosecutors in
the department. One senior Justice Department prosecutor listened to portions of the FBI
tape. The attorney general made her final decision on Friday, Jan. 16. That day, through a
senior career prosecutor, the attorney general asked the three-judge special division to
expand our jurisdiction. The special division granted the request that day.
In short, our entry into this investigation was standard, albeit expedited, procedure.
IV. Referral Standards
Seven months later, after conducting the factual investigation and after the
president's grand jury testimony, the question we faced was what to do with the evidence.
Section 595(c) of Title 28 in the independent counsel statute requires an independent
counsel investigating possible crimes to provide to the House of Representatives -- in the
words of the statute -- ``substantial and credible information that may constitute grounds
for an impeachment.''
This reporting provision suggests a statutory preference that possible criminal
wrongdoing by the president be addressed in the first instance by the House of
Representatives. It also requires an analysis of the law of impeachment.
As we understood the text of the Constitution, its history, and relevant precedents, it
was clear that obstruction of justice in its various forms, including perjury, ``may
constitute grounds for an impeachment.'' Even apart from any abuses of presidential
authority and power, the evidence of perjury and obstruction of justice required us to
refer this information to the House.
Perjury and obstruction of justice are, of course, serious crimes. In 1790, the first
Congress passed a criminal law that banned perjury. A violation was subject to three
years' imprisonment. Today, federal criminal law makes perjury a felony punishable by five
years' imprisonment.
In cases involving public officials, courts treat false statements with special
condemnation. United States District Judge Royce Lamberth recently sentenced Ronald
Blackley, former chief of staff to the former secretary of agriculture, to 37 months'
imprisonment for false statements. The court stated that it "has a duty to send a message
to other high-level government officials that there is a severe penalty to be paid for
providing false information under oath.
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