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- <text id=93TT0986>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: Under Fire at the FBI
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW ENFORCEMENT, Page 42
- Under Fire at the FBI
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Accused of abusing the perks of his job, the director fiercely
- defended himself. But he has succeeded only in sparking a rebellion
- from within.
- </p>
- <p>By ANDREA SACHS--With reporting by Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Long past midnight, top government officials worked feverishly
- inside the FBI's Washington headquarters to launch an assault
- by the elite Hostage Rescue Team. At stake were the lives of
- nine employees at the Talladega federal prison, in Alabama,
- who were being held captive by a mob of prisoners armed with
- spears, knives and crossbows. Suddenly FBI Director William
- Sessions walked in and began marching around the room, "making
- noise, strutting around, being somewhat pompous, and engaging
- in non sequiturs," as one official recalls. Instead of dealing
- with the crisis at hand, the officials were forced to humor
- Sessions, who was oblivious to their nine days of planning.
- "He blew in at the 59th minute of the 11th hour," gripes another
- participant.
- </p>
- <p> Such tales of incompetence and self-indulgence on the part of
- the bureau's dihave pushed the organization into a state of
- near mutiny. The director is locked in a contentious fight to
- keep his job, a battle that may be resolved as early as this
- week. Antagonism toward Sessions, who was appointed by Ronald
- Reagan in 1988 and serves at the pleasure of the President,
- flared into public view last month after the Justice Department's
- Office of Professional Responsibility issued a 161-page report
- finding that Sessions has abused the privileges of his job.
- The charges range from the serious (not paying taxes on business
- travel that was later deemed to be personal) to the trivial
- (hauling his dog Pete in an FBI car). Adding to the theatrics
- is the director's wife Alice, who enjoyed many of the disputed
- perks and has accused FBI officials of plotting against her.
- </p>
- <p> Since the report was issued, Sessions has warred openly with
- his most senior deputies. Some of them have suggested privately
- to Sessions that he has lost the confidence of his agents. President
- Clinton may want Sessions to leave, but so far the Administration
- has only dropped hints. Now that Clinton has nominated a new
- Attorney General, who as chief of the Justice Department supervises
- the FBI, the process of replacing Sessions is likely to speed
- up.
- </p>
- <p> During his first few years at the agency, Sessions generated
- little controversy. Even his critics concede that he is a cheerful,
- generous man who reveres the Constitution and is dedicated to
- social justice and civil rights. But after the Justice report
- was released, Sessions did a poor job of responding to the charges,
- attacking FBI agents and other government officials. Questions
- about his competence and his integrity began to proliferate.
- In a letter accompanying the Justice report, former Attorney
- General William Barr accused Sessions of "a clear pattern of
- your taking advantage of the government." The report charged
- that Sessions:
- </p>
- <p> Allowed his wife to accompany him on plane flights to 111 locations
- without compensating the FBI for her travel.
- </p>
- <p> Used an FBI plane to haul firewood from New York City to Washington.
- (Sessions acknowledges flying the wood, but says it was only
- four pieces of white birch that his wife needed for decorating
- their house.)
- </p>
- <p> Carried an unloaded gun in the trunk of his car in order to
- classify it as a "law-enforcement vehicle" so he could avoid
- paying taxes on the cost of driving to work.
- </p>
- <p> Went to great lengths to find business reasons to travel to
- San Francisco (11 trips), where his daughter lives, and San
- Antonio, Texas (17 trips), his hometown.
- </p>
- <p> May have obtained a sweetheart deal from a Washington bank on
- a $375,000 home mortgage.
- </p>
- <p> Sessions denies any wrongdoing and has offered to compensate
- the FBI for some of the disputed travel expenses. Vice President
- Gore said last week that Sessions may have been targeted by
- Barr because of Sessions' plan to probe charges that the Justice
- Department was involved in a cover-up of the Iraqgate scandal.
- "We owe him a fair review of the allegations," said Gore. But
- agents who feel that Sessions has brought shame on the FBI have
- breached the bureau's traditional code of secrecy. Agents openly
- refer to Sessions as "Director Concessions," "the empty suit"
- and "Chauncey Gardiner," after the simpleminded hero of the
- Jerzy Kosinski novel Being There. "The vast majority of agents
- are embarrassed by him," says Francis Mullen Jr., who served
- as the FBI's No. 2 official under William Webster, Sessions'
- predecessor.
- </p>
- <p> Many G-men disparagingly compare the FBI director's wife to
- the eccentric Martha Mitchell, who while her husband John was
- Attorney General was resented for getting entangled in Justice
- Department politics during the Watergate scandal. According
- to the ethics report, Mrs. Sessions used bureau cars as transportation
- to get her hair and nails done. She also barged into official
- business in an unhelpful way, agents say. An FBI official describes
- her coming into a confidential meeting in Sessions' office at
- the FBI "in a housecoat and slippers," turning on the TV and
- thereby ending the briefing. Mrs. Sessions has responded that
- "the old-boy network" at the FBI can't accept strong-minded
- women. "They've never really had a director with a wife," she
- complained to the Washington Post this month. "They've never
- had a woman executive there."
- </p>
- <p> When they get to talking, G-men gripe about a certain goofiness
- in Sessions' demeanor. Gary Penrith, former chief of the FBI's
- Newark, New Jersey, office, remembers briefing Sessions on a
- major racketeering case. Suddenly, Penrith says, Sessions burst
- into song, chirping the lyrics of an old advertising jingle:
- "Brylcreem, a little dab will do ya." Penrith, who quit last
- year, regards his former boss with contempt. "He loses it,"
- said Penrith.
- </p>
- <p> The Sessionses have not been been shy about taking their case
- to the press. In late January, after the Justice Department
- report was issued, Sessions invited a dozen reporters to his
- office. He engaged in a bitter soliloquy in which he asserted
- that his nemesis Barr "was in league with others" to do him
- in. Although Sessions declined to be interviewed for this story,
- his wife told TIME, "All I have done is stand by my honest man.
- I know what Bill Sessions is, and I know what he does and doesn't
- do. We were raised middle-class Midwest and that makes us pioneer
- people, with values that we still have."
- </p>
- <p> To pull him through the crisis, Sessions has pinned his hopes
- on his allies on Capitol Hill. He is still well liked by some
- key Democrats on the Judiciary and Intelligence committees,
- who view him as a forthright man. Congressman Don Edwards of
- California, a frequent critic of the bureau, calls Sessions
- the best director ever. But the FBI's internal revolt is well
- under way. The ethics charges against Sessions have led to intense
- resentment of a double standard in the tightly disciplined agency,
- where agents are routinely punished for minor infractions.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton, who has been determined to give Sessions a fair hearing
- before taking action, has delegated White House counsel Bernard
- Nussbaum to conduct his own probe. Among the items Nussbaum
- will consider are the Justice Department's final report on the
- matter, due any day now, as well as Sessions' detailed response
- to the charges. Even if Nussbaum finds the Justice report skewed
- against Sessions, the Administration may decide that the director
- has alienated his troops beyond repair.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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