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<text id=94TT0307>
<link 94TO0153>
<title>
Mar. 21, 1994: Does Rose Have Something To Hide?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WHITE HOUSE, Page 32
Does Rose Have Something To Hide?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Richard Behar/New York and Suneel Ratan/Little Rock
</p>
<p> The attorneys at the Rose Law Firm of Little Rock have always
liked to operate near the center of power. Their first woman
partner was Hillary Rodham Clinton, who got the title in 1979,
the same year her husband became Governor. When she became First
Lady, she took three other partners with her to Washington,
where Vincent Foster and William Kennedy became White House
counsels and Webster Hubbell was named Associate Attorney General.
The future looked so promising that Rose opened a one-man Washington
operation to explore opportunities for establishing a permanent
office.
</p>
<p> But sometimes it doesn't pay to get too close to the seat of
power. The lawyers at Rose have spent much of the past few weeks
trying to contend with the tributaries of Whitewater that run
straight through their firm--and the whirring noise of a shredder.
Two college students employed as couriers in the Little Rock
office say that in late January, after the special counsel began
his Whitewater investigation, they shredded materials from the
office of Foster, who had handled some of the Clintons' Whitewater
dealings, and who committed suicide last July. Senior attorneys
are said to be watching miserably as the firm's white shoes
are dragged through the mud. "Yeah, it's more tense," says Jeremy
Hedges, one of the shredders. "But then, it's always been tense."
</p>
<p> With roots going back to 1820, the firm takes its name from
U.M. Rose, a founder of the American Bar Association. By the
1980s, when its growth took off under the direction of C. Joseph
Giroir, a securities specialist, it had long been the cream
of Arkansas firms. Its list of present and former clients includes
some of the state's biggest businesses, including Tyson Foods,
Wal-Mart and TCBY, the national yogurt franchiser, as well as
Little Rock Airport Commission and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, which oversees banks.
</p>
<p> That client roster, mixing businesses with government regulators,
sometimes led to conflict-of-interest accusations. In 1988 the
firm and its insurer paid $3 million to settle a conflict charge
stemming from the failure of FirstSouth Savings and Loan. At
the insistence of Senate Republicans, the FDIC has reopened
a conflict-of-interest investigation involving Madison Guaranty,
the failed S&L headed by James McDougal, the Clintons' partner
in Whitewater. In 1989 the firm represented the FDIC in a suit
against Madison's auditors, despite the fact that, four years
earlier, Hillary had dealt with state regulators on Madison's
behalf.
</p>
<p> Spokesmen for the firm say it began shredding to protect confidential
client information during the 1992 primary campaigns, when reporters
were discovered rummaging through office garbage. In late January,
after special counsel Robert Fiske announced the start of his
Whitewater investigation, Hedges and another courier, Clayton
Lindsey, say they spent an hour shredding documents plainly
marked VWF. The only lawyer at the firm with those initials
was Vince W. Foster. At a meeting with managing partner Ronald
Clark and others a few weeks later, they were informed that
they would have to answer FBI questions and testify before the
Whitewater grand jury. Hedges says they were told to tell the
truth and "not to do anything to protect the firm." But when
Hedges informed senior partner Jerry Jones that he would tell
the FBI he had shredded Foster documents, Jones replied, "Don't
assume they were his documents." According to Hedges, when he
answered in turn that he was certain, Jones told him, "Don't
assume that they have anything to do with the investigation."
</p>
<p> Rose partners shrug off the story, insisting, plausibly, that
if they had anything to hide, they would not have gotten two
lower-rung employees to do their dirty work. Hedges says senior
partners would be just as unlikely to risk attracting suspicion
by doing something out of the ordinary--like their own shredding.
"People get suspicious."
</p>
<p> Tired of the spotlight--and of being compared to the fishy
practitioners in The Firm--Rose is showing the strain. Some
members of the firm have knives out for the big names whose
troubles have come back to haunt the firm. They leaked word
that Rose was conducting an internal review of Hubbell to determine
whether he had overbilled clients and misused his expense account.
And politically conservative partners are also said to be itching
to undercut Rose alumni attached to the Democratic White House.
The Washington Times reported last week that in connection with
the expense-account questions, an unidentified group of partners
is thinking of filing an ethics complaint against Hubbell with
the Arkansas Supreme Court.
</p>
<p> The Whitewater fallout is also being felt by Rose's man in Washington,
Allen Bird II. But he predicts Rose will pursue plans to open
"a legislative practice" in Washington, a term for lawyer-lobbyists.
While he promises they won't be selling access, that won't keep
them from picking up the phone: "We decided we would feel free
to contact anyone in the Administration anytime we felt it was
appropriate, legal and ethical." It's hard to know how much
comfort to take from that.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>