12/19/09
from My Way News
Book: Prosecutors were prepared to indict Clintons
By ADAM GOLDMAN
NEW YORK (AP) - Prosecutors investigating Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton were
prepared to seek indictments of them for their roles in the Whitewater and
Monica Lewinsky affairs, an explosive new book about the former president's
scandals charges.
In "The Death of American Virtue: Clinton vs. Starr," due out in February,
author Ken Gormley also says that Lewinsky believed Bill Clinton lied about
their affair during grand jury testimony about his relationship with the White
House intern.
The Associated Press on Friday obtained a copy of the book by Gormley, a
Duquesne University law professor, about the scandals that enveloped the final
years of the former president's second term. Excerpts from the book were first
reported Thursday on the Politico news Web site.
Calls seeking comment from now-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and the
former president's foundation weren't immediately returned Friday.
Gormley didn't return AP calls seeking comment; his publicist, Penny Simon, said
Friday Gormley wouldn't speak about the book until its Feb. 16 release.
Former independent counsel Kenneth Starr's office spent millions in the 1990s on
a probe of Clinton's affair with Lewinsky and efforts to cover it up, which led
to the president's impeachment by the House. Starr's five-year probe also
investigated the Clintons' Whitewater business dealings, the suicide of deputy
White House counsel Vincent Foster, firing of White travel office workers and
charges that White House officials misused FBI files.
After Starr left office, his successor, Robert Ray, sent a message to the
ex-president that he was prepared to prosecute Bill Clinton. The books says Ray
"took steps to instill the fear of God in the White House."
"I wanted them to know I was coming," Ray said. "I was fully of the view that if
I was not prepared to carry out the threat, it wasn't worth making."
Lewinsky told Gormley that Clinton lied in grand jury testimony about the sexual
affair they had.
"There was no leeway on the veracity of his statements because they asked him
detailed and specific questions to which he answered untruthfully," Lewinsky
said this year, according to the book.
Starr prosecutors in 1998 proposed to formally indict Hillary Rodham Clinton on
charges she and a former law partner lied about her business dealings with
Madison Guaranty, a failed savings and loan connected to friends James and Susan
McDougal, Gormley wrote.
The indictment was drafted against Clinton and Webster Lee Hubbell to be filed
in Arkansas federal court, the book said.
"Yet the consensus was that any effort to prosecute Mrs. Clinton would be
extremely risky," Gormley wrote. Prosecutors believed that "getting an Arkansas
or a Washington grand jury to indict the First Lady seemed like a long shot."
Starr prosecutors instead decided to focus efforts on charges against the former
president, the book says.
In a deal with prosecutors on his last full day as president, Clinton
acknowledged that he gave false testimony in the Lewinsky scandal, heading off
the threat of indictment. As part of the deal, the president said he gave false
answers in a January 1998 deposition, but he insisted he didn't do so knowingly,
an important element of the crime of perjury.
In Gormley's new book, former Secret Service Director Lewis Merletti says that
the FBI was suspicious that he had colluded with Clinton in order to get the
agency's top job. Merletti claimed an FBI agent accused him of concealing
Clinton's indiscretions. The FBI agent denied the accusation.
Gormley interviewed the former president, Starr, Lewinsky, Susan McDougal - who
spent 18 months in prison for refusing to testify before a Whitewater grand jury
- and ex-Arkansas state worker Paula Jones who filed a sexual harassment lawsuit
against Bill Clinton.
He did not interview the former first lady.
