Clinton Rebuttal (4)
1. Bronston and Literal Truth.
In United States v. Bronston, 409 U.S. 352 (1973), the
leading case on the law of perjury, the United States Supreme
Court addressed whether a witness may be convicted of perjury for
an answer, under oath, that is literally true but not responsive
to the question asked and arguably misleading by negative
implication. Id. at 352. The Court directly answered the
question no. It made absolutely clear that a literally truthful
answer cannot constitute perjury, no matter how much the witness
intended by his answer to mislead.
Bronston involved testimony taken under oath at a
bankruptcy hearing. At the hearing, the sole owner of a bankrupt
corporation was asked questions about the existence and location
of both his personal assets and the assets of his corporation.
The owner testified as follows:
Q: Do you have any bank accounts in Swiss banks, Mr.
Bronston?
A: No, sir.
Q: Have you ever?
A: The company had an account there for about six months in
Zurich.
Q: Have you any nominees who have bank accounts in Swiss banks?
A: No, sir.
Q: Have you ever?
A: No, sir.
Id. at 354. The government later proved that Bronston did in fact
have a personal Swiss bank account that was terminated prior to
his testimony. The government prosecuted Bronston on the theory
that in order to mislead his questioner, [Bronston] answered the
second question with literal truthfulness but unresponsively
addressed his answer to the company's assets and not to his
ownÐ-thereby implying that he had no personal Swiss bank account
at the relevant time. Id. at 355.
The Supreme Court unanimously rejected this theory of
perjury. It assumed for purposes of its holding that the
questions referred to Bronston's personal bank accounts and not
his company's assets. Moreover, the Court stated, Bronston's
answer to the crucial question was not responsive, and indeed
an implication in the second answer to the second question [is]
that there was never a personal bank account. Id. at 358. The
Court went so far as to note that Bronston's answers were not
guileless but were shrewdly calculated to evade. Id. at 361.
However, the Court emphatically held that implications alone do
not rise to the level of perjury, and that Bronston therefore
could not have committed perjury. [W]e are not dealing with
casual conversation and the statute does not make it a criminal
act for a witness to willfully state any material matter that
implies any material matter that he does not believe to be true.
Id. at 357-58. The Court took pains to point out the irrelevance
of the witness's intent: A jury should not be permitted to engage
in conjecture whether an unresponsive answer, true and complete on
its face, was intended to mislead or divert the examiner. Id. at
359.
The Supreme Court in Bronston provided several
rationales for its holding that literally true, non-responsive
answers are by definition non-perjurious, regardless of their
implications. First, the Court noted that the burden always rests
squarely on the interrogator to ask precise questions, and that a
witness is under no obligation to assist the interrogator in that
task. The Court perceive[d] no reason why Congress would intend
the drastic sanction of a perjury prosecution to cure a
testimonial mishap that could readily have been reached with a
single additional question by counsel alert Ð as every counsel
ought to be-Ðto the incongruity of petitioner's unresponsive
answer. Id. at 359. Moreover, the Court noted that because of
the adversarial process, perjury is an extraordinary sanction that
is almost always unwarranted, since a prosecution for perjury is
not the sole, or even the primary safeguard against errant
testimony. Id. at 360. The perjury statute cannot be invoked
Òsimply because a wily witness succeeds in derailing the
questioner Ð so long as the witness speaks the literal truth.
Id.
Bronston is just one of scores of cases across the
federal circuits that make clear that the definition of perjury
must be carefully limited because perjury prosecutions are
dangerous to the public interest since they discourage witnesses
from appearing or testifying. Id. at 359.{23} For instance, in
United States v. Earp, 812 F.2d 917 (4th Cir. 1987), the
defendant, a member of the Ku Klux Klan, had stood guard during
the attempted burning of a cross on the lawn of an interracial
couple, and further evidence demonstrated that he had personally
engaged in other attempts to burn crosses. During questioning
before a grand jury, however, he denied ever having burned crosses
on anyone's lawn. He was convicted of perjury, but the United
States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed his
conviction, because like the witness in Bronston, [the
defendant's] answers were literally true although his second
answer was unresponsive. Id. at 919. That is, the defendant had
not actually succeeded in his cross-burning attempts, so it was
literally true that he had never burned crosses on anyone's lawn.
The court noted that while he no doubt knew full well that he had
on that occasion tried to burn a cross, he was not specifically
asked either about any attempted cross burnings. Id. Literally
every federal court of appeals in the nation concurs in this
reading of Bronston.{24}
2.Fundamentally Ambiguous Questions Cannot Produce Perjurious
Answers.
When a question or a line of questioning is
Òfundamentally ambiguous, the answers to the questions posed are
insufficient as a matter of law to support a perjury conviction.
See, e.g., United States v. Finucan, 708 F.2d 838, 848 (1st Cir.
1983); United States v. Lighte, 782 F.2d 367, 375 (2d Cir. 1986);
United States v. Tonelli, 577 F.2d 194, 199 (3d Cir. 1978); United
States v. Bell, 623 F.2d 1132, 1337 (5th Cir. 1980); United States
v. Wall, 371 F.2d 398, 400 (6th Cir. 1967); United States v.
Williams, 552 F.2d 226, 229 (8th Cir. 1977). In other words, when
there is more than one way of understanding the meaning of a
question, and the witness has answered truthfully as to his
understanding, he cannot commit perjury. Many courts have
emphasized that defendants may not be assumed into the
penitentiary by sustain[ing] a perjury charge based on [an]
ambiguous line of questioning." Tonelli, 577 F.2d at 199.
United States v. Lattimore, 127 F. Supp. 405 (D.D.C.
1955), is the key case dealing with ambiguous questions in the
perjury context. In Lattimore, a witness was questioned before
the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee about his ties to the
Communist party. He was asked whether he was a follower of the
Communist line, and whether he had been a promoter of Communist
interests. He answered no to both questions, and was
subsequently indicted for committing perjury. The United States
District Court for the District of Columbia found that the witness
could not be indicted on charges so formless and obscure as those
before the Court. Id. at 413. The court held that 'follower of
the Communist line' is not a phrase with a meaning about which men
of ordinary intellect could agree, nor one which could be used
with mutual understanding by a questioner and answerer unless it
were defined at the time it were sought and offered as testimony.
Id. at 110. As the court explained further:
[The phrase] has no universally accepted definition.
The Government has defined it in one way and seeks to
impute its definition to the defendant. Defendant has
declined to adopt it, offering a definition of his own.
It would not necessitate great ingenuity to think up
definitions differing from those offered either by the
Government or defendant. By groundless surmise only
could the jury determine which definition defendant had
in mind.
Id. at 109.
Many other cases stand for the proposition that a
witness cannot commit perjury by answering an inherently ambiguous
question. For instance, in United States v. Wall, 371 F.2d 398
(6th Cir. 1967), a witness was asked whether she had been on
trips with Mr. X, and she answered no. The government could
prove that in fact the witness, who was from Oklahoma City, had
been in Florida with Mr. X.Ó However, the government could not
prove that the witness had traveled from Oklahoma City to Florida
with Mr. X. The court noted (and the government conceded) that
the phrase been on trips could mean at least two different
things: That a person accompanied somebody else travelling with,
or it can mean that they were there at a particular place with a
person. The court then stated that [t]he trouble with this case
is that the question upon which the perjury charge was based was
inarticulately phrased, and, as admitted by the prosecution, was
susceptible of two different meanings. In our opinion, no charge
of perjury can be based upon an answer to such a question. Id.
at 399-400.
Similarly, in United States v. Tonelli, 577 F.2d 194 (3d
Cir. 1978), the defendant answered negatively a question whether
he had handled any pension fund checks. The government then
proved that the defendant had actually handled the transmission of
pension fund checks by arranging for others to send, mail, or
deliver the checks. The government charged the defendant with
perjury. The court held that perjury could not result from the
government's ambiguous question. The court explained:
It is clear that the defendant interpreted the
prosecutor's questions about handling' to mean touching' .
. . To sustain a perjury charge based on the ambiguous line
of questioning here would require us to assume [defendant]
interpreted handle' to include more than touching.' The
record will not allow us to do so and as the Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit has observed [e]specially in perjury
cases defendants may not be assumed into the penitentiary.
United States v. Bell, 623 F.2d 1132, 1137 (5th Cir. 1980),
is yet another example of this doctrine. In Bell, a witness was
asked before a grand jury, Whether personal or business do you
have records that are asked for in the subpoena, and the witness
answered, No, sir, I do not. It was later established that the
witness's files clearly contained relevant records. Nonetheless,
the court held that the question was ambiguous, and therefore
incapable of yielding a perjurious answer. The witness
interpreted the question to ask whether he had brought the records
with him that day, and not whether he had any records anywhere
else in the world.{25}
3.A Perjury Case Must Not Be Based Solely Upon the
Testimony of a Single Witness.
The law is clear that in a perjury prosecution under 18
U.S.C. ¤ 1621, the falsity of a statement alleged to be perjurious
cannot be established by the testimony of just one witness. This
ancient common law rule, referred to as the Òtwo-witness rule,Ó
has survived repeated challenges to its legitimacy, and has been
judicially recognized as the standard of proof for perjury
prosecutions brought under ¤ 1621. See, e.g., Weiler v. United
States, 323 U.S. 606, 608-610 (1945) (discussing the history and
policy rationales of the two-witness rule); United States v.
Chaplin, 25 F.3d 1373, 1377-78 (7th Cir. 1994) (two-witness rule
applies to perjury prosecutions). The Department of Justice
recognizes the applicability of the two-witness rule to perjury
prosecutions brought under ¤ 1621. See Department of Justice
Manual, 1997 Supplement, at 9-69.265.
The crux of the two-witness rule is that Òthe falsity of
a statement alleged to be perjurious must be established either by
the testimony of two independent witnesses, or by one witness and
independent corroborating evidence which is inconsistent with the
innocence of the accused.Ó Department of Justice Manual, 1997
Supplement, at 9-69.265 (emphasis in original). The second
witness must give testimony independent of the first which, if
believed, would Òprove that what the accused said under oath was
false.Ó Id.; United States v. Maultasch, 596 F.2d 19, 25 (2d Cir.
1979). Alternatively, the independent corroborating evidence must
be inconsistent with the innocence of the accused and Òof a
quality to assure that a guilty verdict is solidly founded.Ó
Department of Justice Manual, 1997 Supplement, at 9-69.265; United
States v. Forrest, 639 F.2d 1224, 1226 (5th Cir. 1981). It is
therefore clear that a perjury conviction under ¤ 1621 cannot lie
where there is no independent second witness who corroborates the
first, or where there is no independent evidence that convincingly
contradicts the testimony of the accused.
While 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1623 does not incorporate the
Òtwo-witness rule,Ó it is nonetheless clear from the case law that
perjury prosecutions require a high degree of proof, and that
prosecutors should not, as a matter of reason and practicality,
even try to bring perjury prosecutions based solely on the
testimony of a single witness. In Weiler v. United States, 323
U.S. 606, 608-09 (1945), the United States Supreme Court observed
that Ò[t]he special rule which bars conviction for perjury solely
upon the evidence of a single witness is deeply rooted in past
centuries.Ó The Court further observed that Òequally honest
witnesses may well have differing recollections of the same
event,Ó and hence Òa conviction for perjury ought not to rest
entirely upon Ôan oath against an oath.'Ó Id. at 609 (emphasis
added). Indeed, the common law courts in seventeenth-century
England required the testimony of two witnesses as a precondition
to a perjury conviction, when the testimony of a single witness
was in almost all other cases sufficient. See Chaplin, 25 F.3d at
1377, citing Wigmore on Evidence ¤ 2040(a), at 359-60 (Chadbourne
rev. 1978). The common law courts actually adopted the
two-witness rule from the Court of Star Chamber, which had
followed the practice of the ecclesiastical courts of requiring
two witnesses in perjury cases. Id. The English rationale for
the rule is as resonant today as it was in the seventeenth
century: Ò[I]n all other criminal cases the accused could not
testify, and thus one oath for the prosecution was in any case
something as against nothing; but on a charge of perjury the
accused's oath was always in effect evidence and thus, if but one
witness was offered, there would be merely . . . an oath against
an oath.Ó Id. And, as noted above, no perjury case should rest
merely upon Òan oath against an oath.Ó
B. The Jones Deposition
Without knowledge of the OIC's specific allegations it
is impossible to address why any particular claim of perjury fails
although we are confident that no colorable claim of perjury can
be made out. However, illegal leaks and speculation make clear
that there are certain misperceptions about this testimony that
can immediately be laid to rest. For example,
Allegation: The President falsely testified in his Jones
deposition that he was never alone with Ms. Lewinsky.
Not so. The President acknowledged in his deposition that he met
with Ms. Lewinsky on up to five occasions while she worked at the
White House. (p. 50). He then referred back to that testimony
when asked if he ever was alone with her in the Oval Office (p.
52), and again when asked whether he was alone with her in any
room in the White House. (p. 59). The Jones lawyers did not
follow up and ask the President to describe the nature of any
physical contact that may have occurred on these occasions.
Allegation: The President falsely testified in his Jones
deposition that he never had any improper physical
contact of any kind with Ms. Lewinsky.
Not so. The President was asked whether he had Òan extramarital
sexual affairÓ with Ms. Lewinsky (p. 78) and responded that he did
not. That term was undefined and ambiguous. The President
understood the term Òsexual affairÓ to involve a relationship
involving sexual intercourse. He had no such relationship with
Ms. Lewinsky.
The President also was asked whether he had Òsexual
relationsÓ with Ms. Lewinsky, Òas that term is defined in
Deposition Exhibit 1, as modified by the Court.Ó (p. 59). The
Court explicitly directed the President's attention to Definition
Number 1 on Exhibit 1, which the President had circled.
The President denied he had Òsexual relationsÓ with Ms.
Lewinsky under this definition. Although the President's counsel,
Mr. Bennett, had invited the Jones lawyers to ask specific
questions about the President's conduct--ÒWhy don't they ask the
President what he did, what he didn't do, and then we can argue in
Court later about what it means?Ó (p. 21)--the Jones lawyers
declined to do so, relying instead on the definition. The
President was not asked any specific questions at all about his
physical contact with Ms. Lewinsky, and in particular he was not
pointedly asked whether he had engaged in any of the conduct
outside the definition provided. The President's testimony in
response to these questions was accurate. He did not have sexual
intercourse with Ms. Lewinsky or otherwise engage in sexual
conduct covered by the definition, as provided by plaintiff and
narrowed by the Court.
The President also testified in the Jones deposition
that Ms. Lewinsky's affidavit, in which she stated she had never
had a Òsexual relationshipÓ with the President, was accurate (p.
204). He believed this testimony to be truthful. The term
Òsexual relationshipÓ was not defined in the affidavit or in the
deposition. The definition of the different term Òsexual
relationsÓ utilized by the Jones lawyers did not apply to that
question. The term Òsexual relationship,Ó like sexual affair, has
no definitive meaning. To the President, that term reasonably
requires sexual intercourse as a necessary component of the
relationship. Since his relationship with Ms. Lewinsky did not
involve intercourse, he truthfully answered that the affidavit was
accurate.
Allegation: The President falsely testified in his Jones
deposition that his relationship with Ms. Lewinsky was
the same as that with any other White House intern.
Not so. The President's answers left no doubt that he had a
special relationship with Ms. Lewinsky. He acknowledged knowing
how she had gotten her internship at the White House. He
acknowledged meeting with her and knowing where she worked after
leaving the White House. He acknowledged exchanging small gifts
with her. He acknowledged that he knew she was moving to New York
and that her mother had moved there. He acknowledged knowing
about her job search in New York, and that she had had an
interview with (then) U.N. Ambassador Bill Richardson. He
acknowledged that Mr. Jordan reported on his meeting with Ms.
Lewinsky about her New York job search. He acknowledged receiving
cards and notes from her through Ms. Betty Currie. The Jones
lawyers received affirmative responses to particular questions.
Had they opted to ask precise questions on other matters, they
would have received truthful responses. They did not do so.
VIII. THE LEWINSKY EXPANSION OF THE WHITEWATER INVESTIGATION
The expansion of the Independent Counsel's jurisdiction
to encompass the Jones case and Ms. Lewinsky did not occur by
accident or easily. The OIC deliberately and purposefully sought
this expansion on an emergency basis. Media accounts that the
Attorney General herself requested this expansion are highly
misleading.
On January 16, 1998, upon the OIC's request, the Special
Division of the Court of Appeals for the Purpose of Appointing
Independent Counsels expanded the OIC's jurisdiction to allow it
to investigate "whether Monica Lewinsky or others suborned
perjury, obstructed justice, intimidated witnesses, or otherwise
violated federal law . . . in dealing with witnesses, potential
witnesses, attorneys, or others concerning the civil case Jones v.
Clinton." Order, Div. No. 94-1 (Jan. 16, 1998) (Div. for Purpose
of Appointing Independent Counsel) (D.C. Cir.). The series of
events that led to this expansion of authority raise serious
questions as to the motivations and manipulations of the OIC in
securing this expanded jurisdiction.
Under the Independent Counsel statute, if the
"independent counsel discovers or receives information about
possible violations of criminal law by [covered persons], which
are not covered by the prosecutorial jurisdiction of the
independent counsel, the independent counsel may submit such
information to the Attorney General." 28 U.S.C. ¤ 593 (c)(2)(A).
The Attorney General is then to conduct a preliminary
investigation. 28 U.S.C. ¤ 592. The statute did not give the OIC
authority to conduct its own preliminary investigation in order to
gather or create evidence to present to the Attorney General to
support a request for an expansion of jurisdiction.
According to media reports, Ms. Linda Tripp contacted
the OIC on Monday, January 12, 1998. There was no particular
logic to this contact, and she could easily have taken her
concerns to state or federal authorities. In any event, the OIC
arranged for Ms. Tripp to wear an F.B.I. recording device and tape
surreptitiously a conversation that she had with Ms. Lewinsky the
next day, Tuesday, January 13, 1998 (Ms. Lewinsky had not yet
filed an affidavit in the Jones case). On Friday, January 16,
1998, at the OIC's request, Ms. Tripp lured Ms. Lewinsky to a
meeting, where she was apprehended by OIC agents, who confronted
her and attempted to pressure her into doing surreptitious taping
herself. She was informed that an immunity agreement was
contingent on her not contacting her lawyer.{26}
That same day, the Special Division agreed to expand the
OIC's authority, based upon the Independent Counsel's earlier
application to the Attorney General and on the tapes that the OIC
had already created: "In a taped conversation with a cooperating
witness, Ms. Lewinsky states that she intends to lie when deposed.
In the same conversation, she urges the cooperating witness to lie
in her own upcoming deposition. . . . Independent Counsel Starr
has requested that this matter be referred to him.Ó (Text of
Attorney General's Petition to Special Division, The Associated
Press, January 29, 1998.)
The Independent Counsel later suggested that the
expansion of authority prior to the taping was unnecessary, as it
was already within his jurisdiction. However, the Lewinsky matter
had no connection whatsoever to the Whitewater activities, or any
other activities, then being investigated by the OIC. In
addition, the Attorney General specifically stated in her referral
to the Special Division that she was seeking an expansion of the
Independent Counsel's jurisdiction. Or, as former independent
counsel Michael Zeldin pointed out, "If he had jurisdiction to
investigate it when he wired her, why did he have to go to court
to get it afterward? In some ways, he is talking out of both
sides of his mouth. . . . It seems to me arguable that he
obtained evidence unlawfully . . . ." Chicago Tribune, January
25, 1998. And former independent counsel Lawrence Walsh declared,
"A prosecutor has no business getting into that case [Paula Jones]
unless there's something terrible happening. I question Starr's
judgment in going into it so hard." Chicago Tribune, January 25,
1998.
Furthermore, the sequence of events suggests that
Independent Counsel Starr deliberately delayed requesting the
expansion of jurisdiction. Neither Monica Lewinsky nor President
Clinton had made any statements under oath in the Jones case (at
least that had been filed with any court) when Linda Tripp
approached the OIC on January 12. The only evidence the OIC
possessed at that time were tapes illegally created by Tripp. The
OIC itself proceeded to tape the Tuesday, January 13 conversation
between Tripp and Lewinsky. Ms. Lewinsky's affidavit was not
filed in the Jones case until January 16, and the OIC had
petitioned the Attorney General the day before for an expansion of
authority based on the evidence (the Tripp tapes and the OIC's
tape) that he had acquired without any authority to do so.
Ms. Tripp remained through the day at the hotel where
Ms. Lewinsky was apprehended by the OIC on Friday, January 16,
1998.{27} During that day, Ms. Jones' lawyers repeatedly tried to
contact Ms. Tripp for a meeting, but she was unavailable. Ibid.
Late in the afternoon, when it became clear that Ms. Lewinsky
would not cooperate in the surreptitious taping of others, the
Jones lawyers received a call arranging a meeting with Ms. Tripp
for that night, so she could help them prepare for the President's
deposition next day. Ibid.{28} It seems probable that Ms. Tripp,
who was acting as the OIC's agent under an immunity agreement,
must have gotten approval for this briefing from the OIC. Ms.
Tripp met with the Jones lawyers at her home in Maryland that
night and briefed them on the illegal tapes she had made of Ms.
Lewinsky{29}, so they could use the contents of those tapes in their
questioning of the President.{30} Ms. Tripp is under investigation
in the state of Maryland because she secretly recorded Ms.
Lewinsky and then shared the existence and contents of those tapes
with the Jones lawyers. It is a crime in that state, punishable
by imprisonment up to five years and a fine of up to $10,000, for
a person to "wilfully" record a conversation without the consent
of both parties or to "wilfully" disclose the contents of such an
illegally recorded conversation. Md. Code Ann. ¤ 10-402 (1997).{31}
On January 17, armed with the information obtained from
Ms. Tripp, Ms. Jones' attorneys deposed President Clinton in great
detail regarding Ms. Lewinsky. At about this time, the OIC sought
to prevent press coverage of its attempt to have Ms. Lewinsky
cooperate in secret taping.{32}
This entire sequence of events--the OIC's delay in
requesting jurisdiction, the OIC's pressure on reporters to
withhold public disclosure of the matter,{33} the OIC's unwillingness
to permit Ms. Lewinsky to contact her lawyer, and the OIC's
dispatch of Ms. Tripp to brief the Jones lawyers about the fruits
of her illegal taping the day before they were to depose the
President--suggests an intention by the OIC to ensure that the
expansion of jurisdiction was kept a secret until the President
and Ms. Lewinsky had given testimony under oath and (if Ms.
Lewinsky could be so persuaded) she had been enlisted to do
surreptitious taping. In other words, rather than taking steps to
defer or avoid any possible interference with the Jones case, the
OIC did everything in its power--and some things outside its
authority--to set up a case against the President.
FOOTNOTES********************************
{1} 2 Max Farrand, The Records of the Federal Convention of
1787 550 (Rev. ed. 1966).
{2}/ See Raoul Berger, Impeachment: The Constitutional Problems,
67-73 (1973).
{3} Michael J. Gerhardt, The Constitutional Limits to
Impeachment and Its Alternatives, 68 Tex. L. Rev. 1, 82
(1989) (emphasis added).
{4} Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution ¤ 745 (1st
Ed. 1833); Federalist 65 at 331.
{5} Of course that election takes place through the
mediating activity of the Electoral College. See U.S.Const.
art. II, ¤ 1, cl.2-3 and amend. XII.
{6} At the time of the Constitution's framing, Ò[c]ognizable
Ôhigh Crimes and Misdemeanors' in England, . . . generally
concerned perceived malfeasanceÐ-which may or may not be
proscribed by common law or statuteÐ-that damaged the state
or citizenry in their political rights.Ó Julie O'Sullivan,
The Interaction Between Impeachment and the Independent
Counsel Statute, 86 Geo. L.J. 2193, 2210 (1998) (emphasis
added) (forthcoming).
{7} John R. Labovitz, Presidential Impeachment 94 (1978).
{8} Berger, Impeachment at 61.
{9} Ronald D. Rotunda, An Essay on the Constitutional
Parameters of Federal Impeachment, 76 Ky. L.J. 707, 724
(1987/1988).
{10} Gerhardt, 68 Tex. L. Rev. at 85.
{11} Charles L. Black, Impeachment: A Handbook 38-39 (1974).
{12} Id.
{13} Labovitz at 26.
{14} Rotunda at 726.
{15} Id.
{16} Julie O'Sullivan, The Interaction Between Impeachment
and the Independent Counsel Statute, 86 Geo. L.J. at 2220.
{17} Clinton v. Jones, ___ U.S. ___, 117 S.Ct. 1636 (1997).
{18} See, e.g., "Starr Probes Clinton Personal
Life--Whitewater Prosecutors Question Troopers About Women,"
The Washington Post (June 25, 1997), at A1.
{19} Cf. United States v. Lundwall, 1 F. Supp. 2d 249, 251-54
(S.D.N.Y. 1998) (noting that "[c]ases involving prosecutions
for document destruction during civil pre-trial discovery are
notably absent from the extensive body of reported ¤ 1503
case law," and that "there are a great many good reasons why
federal prosecutors should be reluctant to bring criminal
charges relating to conduct in ongoing civil litigation," but
concluding that systematic destruction of documents sought
during discovery should satisfy ¤ 1503).
{20} The term "talking points" refers to a document
apparently provided by Ms. Lewinsky to Ms. Tripp in January
1998 regarding possible testimony in the Jones case.
{21} "Perjury" was not even in the original grant of
jurisdiction to the OIC but reportedly is now the crux of the
OIC's case.
{22}/ There are two basic federal perjury statutes: 18 U.S.C. ¤
1621, and 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1623. Section 1621 applies to all
material statements or information provided under oath Òto a
competent tribunal, officer, or person, in any case in which
a law of the United States authorizes an oath to be
administered.Ó Section 1623, in contrast, applies only to
testimony given before a grand jury and other court proceedings.
Although there are differences between the two statutes, the four
basic elements of each are substantially the same.
{23}/ While Bronston involved a perjury conviction under the
general perjury statute, 18 U.S.C. ¤ 1621, lower federal
courts have uniformly relied on it in reviewing perjury
convictions under ¤ 1623(a), which makes it unlawful to make
any false material declaration Òin any proceeding before or
ancillary to any court or grand jury of the United States.Ó
See, e.g., United States v. Porter, 994 F.2d 470, 474 n. 7
(8th Cir.1993); United States v. Reveron Martinez, 836 F.2d
684, 689 (1st Cir.1988); United States v. Lighte, 782 F.2d
367, 372 (2d Cir.1986).
{24}/ See also United States v. Finucan, 708 F.2d 838, 847 (1st
Cir. 1983) (intent to mislead is insufficient to support
conviction for perjury); United States v. Lighte, 782 F.2d
367, 374 (2d Cir. 1986) (literally true answers by definition
non-perjurious even if answers were designed to mislead);
United States v. Tonelli, 577 F.2d 194, 198 (3d Cir. 1978)
(perjury statute is not to be invoked because a "wily witness
succeeds in derailing the questioner"). United States v.
Abroms, 947 F.2d 1241, 1245 (5th Cir. 1991) (unambiguous and
literally true answer is not perjury, even if there was
intent to mislead); United States v. Eddy, 737 F.2d 564, 569
(6th Cir. 1984) (ÒAn Ôintent to mislead' or Ôperjury by
implication' is insufficient to support a
perjury conviction.Ó); United States v. Williams, 536 F.2d 1202,
1205 (7th Cir. 1976) (literally true statement cannot form basis
of perjury conviction even if there was intent to mislead); United
States v. Robbins, 997 F.2d 390, 394 (8th Cir. 1993); United
States v. Boone, 951 F.2d 1526, 1536 (9th Cir. 1991) (literally
true statement is not actionable); United States v. Larranaga,
787 F.2d 489, 497 (10th Cir. 1986) (no perjury where answer
literally truthful and prosecutor's questioning imprecise); United
States v. Shotts, 145 F.3d 1289, 1297 (11th Cir. 1998) (ÒAn answer
to a question may be non-responsive, or may be subject to
conflicting interpretations, or may even be false by implication.
Nevertheless, if the answer is literally true, it is not
perjury.Ó); United States v. Dean, 55 F.3d 640, 662 (D.C. Cir.
1995) (perjury charge cannot be based upon evasive answers or even
misleading answers so long as such answers are literally true).
{25} Many other cases as well hold that ambiguous questions
cannot produce perjurious answers. See, e.g., Lighte, 782
F.2d at 376 (questions fundamentally ambiguous because of
imprecise use of Òyou,Ó Òthat,Ó and ÒagainÓ); United States
v. Farmer, 137 F.3d 1265, 1270 (10th Cir. 1998) (question
ÒHave you talked to Mr. McMahon, the defendant about your
testimony here today?Ó ambiguous because phrase Òhere todayÓ
could refer to ÒtalkedÓ or to Òtestimony;Ó conviction for
perjury could not result from the question); United States v.
Ryan, 828 F.2d 1010, 1015-17 (3d Cir. 1987) (loan application
question asking for ÒPrevious Address (last 5 years)Ó
fundamentally ambiguous because unclear whether ÒaddressÓ
refers to residence or mailing address, and ÒpreviousÓ could
mean any previous address, the most recent previous address,
or all previous addresses; based on ambiguity, perjury cannot
result from answer to question); United States v. Markiewicz,
978 F.2d 786, 809 (2d Cir. 1992) (question Ò[D]id you receive
any money that had been in bingo hallÓ ambiguous, and
incapable of producing perjurious answer, when it did not
differentiate between witness's personal and business
capacities). See also United States v. Manapat, 928 F.2d
1097, 1099 (11th Cir. 1991); United States v. Eddy, 737 F.2d
564, 565-71 (6th Cir.
1984); United States v. Hilliard, 31 F.3d 1509 (10th Cir. 1994).
{26} Time, Feb. 16, 1998, at 49.
{27} "Linda Tripp Briefed Jones Team on Tapes," The
Washington Post, Feb. 14, 1998, at A1.
{28} The Washington Times, Feb. 15, 1998,at A1, reported:
"Yesterday, a source close to Mrs. Jones' legal team
confirmed that on Jan. 16, the day before Mrs. Jones'
lawyers took a deposition from Mr. Clinton, Mrs. Tripp
met for two hours with those lawyers at her suburban
Maryland home and discussed at length what Miss Lewinsky
had said in some 20 hours of secretly recorded
conversations. Mrs. Tripp had already given those tapes
to Mr. Starr's investigators.
With the information from Mrs. Tripp, the
Jones lawyers were able to ask Mr. Clinton in his
deposition specific questions about his relationship
with and gifts to Miss Lewinsky, according to a person
informed about the President's testimony."
{29} Under the Maryland electronic surveillance statute,
which criminalizes taping without the consent of both
parties, it is a violation of the statute simply to disclose
that an illegal tape has been made, since the term
"Contents", as used in the statute to define what may not be
disclosed, is defined to include "any information concerning
the identity of the parties to the communication or the
existence, substance, purport, or meaning of that
communication." Md. Code Ann. ¤ 10-401(7) (1997) (emphasis
added).
{30} There is no doubt that the Jones lawyers believed they
had a significant tactical advantage due to their knowledge
of the Tripp tapes. They may also have known that Ms. Tripp
was an OIC agent. After being asked a highly specific series
of questions about Ms. Lewinsky, the President replied, "I
don't even know what you're talking about, I don't think,"
and one of the Jones lawyers, James Fisher, responded, "Sir,
I think this will come to light shortly, and you'll
understand" (p. 85).
{31} Recent news reports indicate that Ms. Tripp was
specifically warned at the Radio Shack store where she
brought her tape recorder that it was illegal to tape in
Maryland without the consent of the other party. See, e.g.,
"Tripp Was Told of Law at Store," The Baltimore Sun, Aug. 28,
1998, at A1.
{32} "Pressgate", Brill's Content, August 1998, at 128.
{33}/ See, e.g., Stephen Brill, "Pressgate" in Brill's Content
(August 1998) at 127 ("Isikoff says that when he talked to
Starr deputy Jackie Bennett, Jr., on Thursday [January 15],
Bennett begged him to wait until Friday before trying to call
Jordan, the White House, or Lewinsky about his story. ...
Isikoff says he agreed to hold off in exchange for getting a
full report on how the stings had gone.").
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