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<text id=94TT1043>
<title>Aug. 15, 1994: Whitewater:Culture of Deception</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 15, 1994 Infidelity--It may be in our genes
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WHITEWATER, Page 14
Culture of Deception
</hdr>
<body>
<p> A tale of manipulation emerges from the fog of testimony--and a new special prosecutor arrives
</p>
<p>By Michael Duffy/Washington--With reporting by Nina Burleigh and Suneel Ratan/Washington
and Michael Kramer/New York
</p>
<p> For the 29 current and former officials of the Clinton Administration
who raised their right hands and swore to tell the whole truth
and nothing but the truth, last Friday was supposed to be an
end, not a beginning. They had already been interviewed by federal
attorneys, testified to a grand jury, told their stories to
a government ethics board and explained their actions to the
White House counsel. In every instance, they had been cleared
of wrongdoing. As they completed their disjointed testimonies
in congressional hearings last week, senior White House officials
were relieved to have put the half-year of scrutiny behind them.
</p>
<p> But then, just hours after the hearings had come to a close,
the nightmare began again. A three-judge panel in Washington
stunned the White House by replacing independent counsel Robert
Fiske, who had been chosen by Attorney General Janet Reno in
January, with Kenneth Starr, a tough, conservative lawyer who
served as solicitor general under George Bush. The panel, acting
under a law passed by Congress earlier this year, wanted to
guarantee that the Whitewater investigation would be truly independent.
</p>
<p> While congressional Republicans had praised Fiske when he was
first appointed, lately many of them have complained about a
lack of aggressiveness in Fiske's investigation and his ties
to some members of the Administration. Leading the chorus was
Senator Lauch Faircloth of North Carolina, who pointed out last
week that former White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum had once
recommended Fiske for a job with the Iran-contra independent
counsel.
</p>
<p> The investigation's fresh start is certain to distract the already
embattled Clinton Administration for another six months and
to push the probe's conclusion into the middle of Clinton's
1996 re-election campaign. The official White House reaction
to Starr's arrival was a polite, two-sentence statement of welcome.
The real reaction was different. "This is awful," said a Clinton
adviser.
</p>
<p> Starr's arrival could also mean that the White House officials
whom Fiske cleared of criminal wrongdoing in June may find themselves
under fresh scrutiny. More time may have to be spent preparing
for depositions. More money may have to be raised for legal
fees. Contact between officials in different departments will
remain out of bounds. "Jesus," said one of last week's key witnesses,
"a new prosecutor means I might have to go all through this
again." Another witness said simply, "It's Kafkaesque."
</p>
<p> In fact, the tangled web was spun by the Administration itself.
What emerged from more than 100 hours of complex testimony about
the Whitewater scandal was evidence of a persistent pattern
of deception among White House staff members. By last week it
was clear that both Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill
felt they had been misled by the Clinton White House. Roger
Altman demanded that lawmakers believe his own recollections
of meetings, rather than those of seven other officials who
contradicted him under oath. Joshua Steiner, the 28-year-old
Treasury chief of staff, insisted that his diary was no longer
a reliable source of information. Senior policy adviser George
Stephanopoulos, whose memory is legendary among his colleagues,
used the expression "I don't remember" 31 times in his Senate
deposition. The parade of failed memories, studied evasions
and half-truths by White House aides goes a long way toward
explaining why Clinton's presidency has stalled and why so many
voters--as well as the lawmakers on Capitol Hill who control
the fate of his agenda--don't trust the President or his men.
</p>
<p> As seen on TV last week, the endless bits and pieces of testimony
tended to give viewers a chaotic picture of what happened among
Administration staff members. While many Americans think something
improper took place, their appreciation of just how much of
it went on has been blurred by White House accounts designed
to keep the story contradictory and confusing. But when testimony
and events uncovered by Senate investigators are assembled into
a running narrative, the story paints a complex but disturbing
portrait of a White House gripped by a culture of deception.
TIME has reconstructed events of the key month of February to
show how half a dozen Clinton aides, including those closest
to the President and his wife, pressed officials at the Treasury
Department and the Resolution Trust Corporation earlier this
year to maintain or wrest control of the RTC's probe of Madison
Guaranty, a failed Arkansas savings and loan linked to the Clintons.
</p>
<p> At the end of that month, on March 1, after 28 days of maneuvering
by sundry officials, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Harold
Ickes forwarded a memorandum to the First Lady that sheds light
on a central question of the Whitewater affair: What deep, dark
secret would compel so many senior Administration officials
to attempt intervention in a probe that should have been immune
from politics? The memo, written by White House associate counsel
Neil Eggleston, warned that the RTC could sue "the President
and Mrs. Clinton" if Clinton's 1984 campaign "knowingly received
diverted Madison assets" or if "the Clintons knowingly received
other diverted Madison Guaranty assets through Whitewater."
</p>
<p> Most likely, not a single White House official knows whether
that happened. But just because it may be true, the Clintons'
campaign-tested damage-control team swung into action in February.
Even White House counsel Lloyd Cutler got into the act, withholding
the Eggleston memo from lawmakers until last Monday night, releasing
it only under pressure from Congress.
</p>
<p> Like so much else about the Clinton operation, the February
effort to steer the RTC probe was informal, haphazard and sometimes
desperate. It appeared to accelerate every time Altman, who
oversaw the RTC, tried to remove himself from management of
the Madison probe. The key events:
</p>
<p> FEB. 1. The Clinton damage-control team had one opening advantage:
Roger Altman, a longtime friend of the President. As acting
CEO of the RTC Altman was nominally independent, but as Deputy
Treasury Secretary he was answerable to Clinton. On this day,
however, Altman was about to tell White House officials he would
recuse himself from any oversight of the Madison investigation.
The reason was obvious: staying in place would create a conflict
of interest as the RTC investigated a case involving his friend,
the President. But stepping aside would mean that responsibility
for the investigation would fall entirely to RTC general counsel
Ellen Kulka, who had no ties to the Clintons. Kulka and Treasury
counsel Jean Hanson had urged Altman to recuse himself. Treasury
Secretary Lloyd Bentsen agreed but left the decision to Altman.
</p>
<p> FEB. 2. Altman went to the White House, where he intended to
present his recusal at the conclusion of a meeting designed
to bring Clinton aides up to speed on procedural aspects of
the Madison investigation. But White House counsel Nussbaum
urged Altman to stay. Nussbaum worried aloud that Kulka was
a smart, tough lawyer. At the hearings last week, Hanson recalled
Nussbaum saying that Altman, if he did not recuse, could impose
"discipline on the process and lead to a fairer result." After
the meeting, Nussbaum pulled Hanson aside and asked how Kulka
had been hired. (During the hearings, Nussbaum denied making
such an inquiry.)
</p>
<p> FEB. 3. Altman called Margaret Williams, Mrs. Clinton's chief
of staff, and asked her to assemble a group of people quickly
so he could inform them of his decision. At a meeting in Williams'
office, Altman told Nussbaum, Ickes and Eggleston he would not
recuse himself. Hanson arrived at the meeting late, after Altman
left, and learned then of her boss's decision. Hanson recalled
that Ickes asked her how many people were aware that she had
advised Altman two days earlier to step aside. When Hanson replied
that only three people knew, Hanson said, Ickes pronounced this
good. "If it gets out," she recalled him saying, "it will look
bad." (Testifying under oath, Ickes could not recall saying
this.) Later in the day, Altman told Hanson to tell Kulka to
brief the Clintons' private attorney, David Kendall, on the
RTC's probe. Kulka refused. Sometime that day, Nussbaum called
Hanson and asked why Kulka's hiring had not been cleared with
him.
</p>
<p> FEB. 4. Nussbaum called Hanson again, this time with a new idea:
Isn't it true, he asked, that the RTC could transfer its civil
probe of Madison into the hands of special prosecutor Fiske,
who had been chosen two weeks earlier by Reno to launch the
criminal inquiry into Whitewater? If so, Nussbaum told Hanson,
she might want to inform Altman, still fully in charge of the
Madison case, that such a transfer was possible under Fiske's
charter. (Under oath, Nussbaum recalled suggesting this to Hanson,
but insisted that he did so to help Altman get out of his conflict-of-interest
problems.)
</p>
<p> FEB. 5. Hanson called the RTC's Kulka at home the next day with
Nussbaum's request. Kulka brushed her off, telling Hanson that
while Nussbaum was correct about the charter, Fiske didn't want
any part of the civil case.
</p>
<p> THE WEEK OF FEB. 14. New worries emerged. Clinton aides began
to hear that the RTC had hired the law firm of Pillsbury, Madison
& Sutro to investigate the Madison civil case. The White House
was particularly interested in the participation of Pillsbury
partner Jay Stephens, a former federal prosecutor appointed
by Ronald Reagan and a vocal critic of the Clinton Administration.
</p>
<p> FEB. 23. More bad news. Two weeks earlier Congress had extended
until December 1995 the statute of limitations for civil lawsuits
against those associated with the collapse of insolvent thrifts--a group that potentially included the Clintons. At this point,
Altman told Ickes he would be stepping down as interim RTC chief
when his term expired March 30. With the deadline for lawsuits
extended, the White House had only five weeks to find a suitable
replacement for Altman.
</p>
<p> FEB. 24. In testimony before the Senate Banking Committee, Altman
was asked to list the contacts between Treasury and White House
officials about the Madison case. Though the actual number was
more than 20 by this point, Altman recounted only the Feb. 2
session, omitting the fact that his recusal came up in that
session. Hanson, who had had more of these contacts than Altman,
sat behind her boss and failed to correct his testimony. Eggleston,
who also attended the Feb. 2 session, left the hearing and called
the White House with a report on the shortcomings in Altman's
testimony.
</p>
<p> Senate investigators believe Altman's performance triggered
a White House reaction. During the next 24 hours, Hanson recalls,
she had at least three separate conversations with Steiner and
a fourth with Eggleston regarding the Madison probe. Neither
Hanson nor Senate investigators can pinpoint the order or the
timing of the calls, but Hanson maintained last week that Steiner
told her that his calls were prompted by the White House. As
Hanson said in her deposition, "I don't know who."
</p>
<p> Eggleston phoned Hanson to ask how Stephens was hired; Steiner
called Hanson to ask if there was anything "irregular" in the
way Stephens was hired. At this point, Hanson testified last
week, Steiner reported to her that the White House wanted Stephens
disqualified. (Last week Steiner could neither remember nor
deny the conversation.) Yet another time, Hanson testified,
Steiner told Hanson that he thought Kulka should be fired for
hiring Stephens.
</p>
<p> FEB. 25. Faced with losing control over the RTC probe, White
House panic reached a peak. In a conversation with a New York
Times editorial-page editor, Altman announced publicly that
he was recusing himself from the Madison case immediately--a month earlier than the end of his term. This put Kulka, the
lawyer Nussbaum feared, in charge. Meanwhile, Stephens, the
hated Republican, was doing some of the legwork, and there was
no deadline in sight for filing a case. An angry Stephanopoulos
called Steiner and complained about the manner of Altman's recusal
as well as the Stephens appointment. Steiner reported in his
diary a few days later, "George then suggested to me that we
needed to find a way to get rid of ((Jay Stephens)). Persuaded
George that firing him would be incredibly stupid and improper."
</p>
<p> It was around this time that Ickes, in a one-on-one chat, told
Clinton about Stephens' new role as RTC sleuth. Clinton, Ickes
admitted in his deposition, was "gravely concerned." In testimony
last week, Ickes hastened to add that Clinton did not direct
him or anyone else to do anything about Stephens' appointment.
Stephanopoulos and Ickes later called Altman from Stephanopoulos'
office and complained about "the manner" of Altman's recusal.
During this conversation, Altman maintained last week, Ickes
and Stephanopoulos pressed Altman to remove Stephens. Later
Altman told Steiner, who was in the room during the call, that
Ickes and Stephanopoulos must be "crazy" to try to pressure
him to remove Stephens. Testifying under oath last week, both
Stephanopoulos and Ickes denied telling Altman to get rid of
Stephens. "I never directed anyone to impede with that investigation
in any way," said Stephanopoulos.
</p>
<p> FEB. 28. With Altman out and Stephens not budging, the hunt
for a new RTC chief began. Associate counsel Eggleston completed
a six-page memo, addressed to Ickes but bound for Hillary Clinton,
in which he asked, "Now that Mr. Altman has recused himself
from further involvement in the Madison Guaranty matters, who
at the RTC will be the decision maker on whether to bring a
civil action arising out of the failure of Madison Guaranty?"
Noting that the White House would soon nominate a replacement
for Altman, Eggleston added, "If the person refuses to recuse
and is confirmed, then that person will become the decision
maker." (Eggleston said last week that he presumed anyone Clinton
appointed would "be forced" to recuse himself.)
</p>
<p> Veteran bank regulator John Ryan is now the acting chief of
the RTC and Bentsen has promised to name a permanent CEO quickly.
But there are likely to be farewells soon. Altman is a marked
man, seeming too anxious to please his White House superiors
but less than candid with the Banking Committee. Also departing
soon may be Hanson, too slow to correct Altman's Senate testimony
and too quick to do Nussbaum's bidding. Steiner's odds of survival
are better, but Treasury Secretary Bentsen may want to sweep
clean.
</p>
<p> What got the White House in trouble in the first place was that
it worried too much about people it could not control at the
RTC: first Altman, then Kulka, then Stephens. Now, partly as
a result of seeking control, the White House has lost control.
And it has Kenneth Starr to worry about.
</p>
<p>POLL:
</p>
<p> Do you believe what the Clintons have said about their
role in Whitewater, or do you think they are hiding something?
<table>
<row><cell type=a>Believe them<cell type=i>35%
<row><cell>Hiding something<cell>51%
</table>
</p>
<p> Were the contacts between the Treasury Department and the White
House proper or improper?
<table>
<row><cell type=a>Proper<cell type=i>31%
<row><cell>Improper<cell>46%
</table>
</p>
<p> From a telephone poll of 600 adult Americans taken for
TIME/CNN on Aug. 4 by Yankelovich Partners Inc. Sampling error
is plus or minus 4%. Not Sures omitted.
</p>
<p>WHITEWATER: The Flow Toward the Hearings
</p>
<p> The original lines of inquiry: Were funds from Madison Guaranty,
an S&L run by Clinton business partner James McDougal, illegally
diverted to the Whitewater real estate venture, which was partially
owned by the Clintons? Was Madison money funneled to one of
Bill Clinton's gubernatorial campaigns?
</p>
<p> The current lines of questioning in Congress: Did the White
House violate ethics rules by trying to be kept apprised of
the Madison investigation? And did offcials of the Treasury
Department lie to or mislead the Senate on the subject of White
House contacts?
</p>
<p>-- September 1993 to March 1994
</p>
<p> Three dozen or so contacts between the White House and Treasury
Department.
</p>
<p>-- September 27, 1993
</p>
<p> William Roelle, then Resolution Trust Corporation senior vice
president, informs Treasury general counsel Jean Hanson that
the Clintons' names are mentioned in referrals from the RTC
to the Justice Department relating to possible criminal conduct
by Madison Guarantys operators. He said he warned her the information
was confidential. By RTC rules, it should not be shared with
the White House.
</p>
<p>-- September 29
</p>
<p> Hanson says that, at Deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman's
direction, she told White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum about
the Madison criminal referrals. Altman now denies that. Hanson
said that she did not know Nussbaum personally and would never
have made an approach to so highly placed a White House offcial
without Altman's go-ahead.
</p>
<p>-- September 30
</p>
<p> Hanson writes a memo to Altman, letting him know she informed
the White House and Secretary of the Treasury Lloyd Bentsen
about the investigation.
</p>
<p>-- October 14
</p>
<p> Nussbaum has a Treasury-White House summit meeting in his office
to discuss how to handle press inquiries on Whitewater. Meeting
includes Mark Gearan and Bruce Lindsey from the White House
and chief of staff Joshua Steiner and Hanson from Treasury.
</p>
<p>-- Early January 1994
</p>
<p> Altman, in his diary, mentions that Hillary Rodham Clinton's
chief of staff, Margaret Williams, told him that Hillary is
"paralyzed" by Whitewater.
</p>
<p>-- January 20
</p>
<p> Robert Fiske appointed Whitewater special prosecutor in criminal
investigation
</p>
<p>-- February
</p>
<p> Steiner notes his meetings with Altman in his diaries and mentions
that Altman is "under intense pressure" from the White House
not to recuse himself.
</p>
<p>-- February 2
</p>
<p> Altman briefs White House staff on impending statute-of- limitations
deadline of the Madison case and allegedly on the progress of
the case. Meeting includes Hanson, Nussbaum, Williams and Harold
Ickes, White House deputy chief of staff. Nussbaum tries to
dissuade Altman from recusing himself. The next day Altman decides
not to remove himself.
</p>
<p>-- February 24
</p>
<p> Before the Senate Banking Committee, Altman says only "one substantive
contact" with the White House took place, on Feb. 2. He does
not mention the debate over recusal. Hanson, who sat behind
him at the hearing, does not correct him.
</p>
<p>-- February 25
</p>
<p> Altman recuses himself from the Madison inquiry. Clinton adviser
George Stephanopoulos complains to Steiner about this and the
decision to hire former U.S. Attorney Jay Stephens as an investigator
in the RTC probe of Whitewater. Stephanopoulos and Ickes in
a conference call with Altman castigate him for not giving the
White House advance notice of his decision.
</p>
<p>-- March 4
</p>
<p> Grand jury subpoenas go out to 10 White House aides, including
Nussbaum, Williams and Ickes.
</p>
<p>-- March 5
</p>
<p> Nussbaum resigns.
</p>
<p>QUOTABLES
</p>
<p>"...not anyone at Treasury and no one at the White House attempted
to intervene."
</p>
<p> -- Treasury General Counsel Hanson
</p>
<p>"I was surprised that (Altman) had not testified about the recusal
aspect."
</p>
<p> -- White House Associate Counsel Eggleston
</p>
<p>"I would never talk about Mrs. Clinton's state of mind to anyone."
</p>
<p> -- First Lady's Chief of Staff Williams
</p>
<p>"I don't have total recall."
</p>
<p> -- Treasury Secretary Bensten
</p>
<p>"I have no recollection of asking Ms. Hanson to go to the White
House last fall."
</p>
<p> -- Deputy Treasury Secretary Altman
</p>
<p>"There was a strong concern that (Altman's) testimony be corrected."
</p>
<p> -- White House Staff Secretary Podesta
</p>
<p>"I don't remember making that statement."
</p>
<p> -- White House Senior Adviser Stephanopoulos
</p>
<p>"I told Ms. Hanson that I didn't think this was the appropriate
time to (brief Clinton's lawyer)."
</p>
<p> -- RTC General Counsel Kulka
</p>
<p>"I wish that my diary was more accurate."
</p>
<p> -- Treasury Chief of Staff Steiner
</p>
<p>"I've watched none of these hearings."
</p>
<p> -- President Clinton
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>