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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=89TT1288>
<title>
May 15, 1989: Capitol Offense
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
May 15, 1989 Waiting For Washington
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 38
Capitol Offense
</hdr><body>
<p>A congressional aide's bloody past
</p>
<p> The story -- a brutal attack on a college student in a nearby
Virginia suburb -- was 15 years old, but when the Washington Post
retold it last week, Capitol Hill seemed unable to concentrate on
anything else. The reason went beyond the sheer savagery of the
act: the attacker, John Mack, 35, is now the top aide to
beleaguered Speaker of the House Jim Wright and arguably the most
powerful staffer in Congress.
</p>
<p> That Mack had a criminal record was no secret. Even so, there
was horror at the viciousness and randomness of his crime as it
was recounted by the victim, Pamela Small, the prosecutor and the
surgeons who pieced her back together. Mack was managing an import
store when Small stopped in near closing time to buy window blinds
for her first apartment. Mack led her to a storeroom, where he
grabbed a hammer and without provocation smashed it into her skull
five times. Picking up a steak knife, he stabbed her shoulder and
chest near her heart and slit her throat. He dumped Small in her
car and left her for dead. Then he took in a movie.
</p>
<p> If Small had the bad fortune to be shopping at World Bazaar
that night, Mack had the good luck to have a brother married to
Congressman Jim Wright's daughter. Mack was arrested and pleaded
guilty to malicious wounding with intent to kill, saying stress
made him do it. Mack was offered a job by Wright after sentencing,
and ended up serving 27 months of a 15-year term in the relatively
soft confines of the county jail rather than the state
penitentiary.
</p>
<p> Wright and Majority Whip Tony Coelho, with whom Mack golfs,
support Mack's rehabilitation; they view the dredged-up story as
an indirect attack on Wright, who is under investigation by the
House ethics committee. Others feel that rehabilitation occurred
before adequate retribution. Mack may have satisfied the demands
of the legal system, but his elevation to a position of privilege
may yet offend a larger notion of decency. Should a felon who has
been denied the right to vote be instrumental in making the
nation's laws?
</p>
</body></article>
</text>