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<text id=93TT0519>
<title>
Nov. 15, 1993: Packwood Vs. Packwood
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE SENATE, Page 53
Packwood Vs. Packwood
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Now the Senator's colleagues suspect that he tried to use his
clout to get a better deal in his divorce case
</p>
<p>By JILL SMOLOWE--Reported by Julie Johnson/Washington and John Snell/Portland
</p>
<p> First it was just his diaries that were laid open. In recent
weeks lawyers for the Senate ethics committee have combed through
5,000 pages of Senator Robert Packwood's private journal. "Are
there personal things in there?" Packwood lamented last week.
"Sure. Family heartaches. Disappointments. Irritation with the
car repairman." There was more than that: word emerged from
the committee that the diaries, which of course range far beyond
the scope of the sexual-misconduct charges he faces, may in
fact contain evidence of unrelated criminal violations. Last
Monday Packwood responded to such reports by insisting, "For
the life of me I do not understand...whatever this other
thing may be that may be criminal." But within 24 hours he reversed
himself, allowing, "The issue was employment opportunities for
my wife and whether there was some quid pro quo on legislation."
</p>
<p> And now an equally intimate record of Packwood's life is drawing
scrutiny: his divorce papers. The papers, combined with his
diaries, address the suggestion that he illegally used his position
to get his ex-wife Georgie a job in order to save himself hefty
alimony payments.
</p>
<p> The Senate, doggedly pursuing the remaining 3,200 pages of Packwood's
diaries, voted 94 to 6 last week to authorize the ethics committee
to seek a federal court order compelling the Senator to turn
over the journals. If the committee gets hold of those pages
and finds sufficient evidence, Packwood may soon be in his deepest
trouble yet. Although the sexual-harassment charges under investigation
by the committee carry no threat of criminal prosecution, the
same cannot be said for the allegations surrounding his possible
misuse of office. Last week Packwood denied ever wrongfully
soliciting work for his ex-wife, but the six members of the
bipartisan committee seem bent on investigating and reaching
their own conclusion.
</p>
<p> The Packwoods' divorce papers shed light on the Senator's discussions
about his wife's employment. The records, filed with the circuit
court in the Multnomah County courthouse in Oregon, show that
while Georgie did not want the marriage to end, she could not,
under state law, contest her husband's petition citing "irreconcilable
differences." After the couple separated in January 1990, they
wrangled about alimony. Packwood claimed that he was virtually
broke and proposed monthly payments of $500. Georgie demanded
$4,000. Eventually the court settled on $2,500, based in part
on a calculation of Georgie's earning ability. At the time,
she was running Plain 'n Fancy, a $12,000-a-year antiques business
based in her Washington home.
</p>
<p> In the year between the Packwoods' separation and their divorce
trial, Georgie received job offers from four of the Senator's
friends. "I had not asked any of these people for a job," Georgie
told the Washington Post last week. Those offers came from two
Washington lobbyists, each of whom had approached Packwood on
behalf of clients; an investment banker who had gone to law
school with Packwood and raised campaign funds for him; and
a businessman who once served on Packwood's staff.
</p>
<p> During the divorce trial, Packwood testified that he had no
hand in any of the job offers. "In all these cases, they made
the initial approach to Georgie or they asked me if it would
be O.K. if they approached Georgie," he said. "I didn't initiate
the calls myself." According to the divorce documents, Packwood
criticized his wife for not accepting any of the offers and
charged that she was unwilling to work.
</p>
<p> Packwood's former wife told the Post that she had no reason
to think that Packwood had offered his friends any political
favors in exchange for job offers--a quid pro quo that could
be illegal. She told the Oregonian newspaper, however, that
when one of the lobbyists, Steven Saunders, called Packwood
to see if his offer of work might present the Senator with a
conflict of interest, Packwood's response surprised Saunders.
"Bob wanted to know, `How much money do you think you could
pay her? How much money could she earn a year?'" she said.
"Bob got coercive and manipulative, and Steve backed off. He
was uncomfortable with Bob's ethics."
</p>
<p> What has exasperated Packwood's colleagues most is his inept
handling of the ethics committee's inquiry. First he concealed
the existence of his diaries from the committee. When the committee
demanded all 8,200 pages, he tried to intimidate fellow Senators
by warning that the release of further pages would expose other
legislators' sexual dalliances.
</p>
<p> His performance on the Senate floor last week was no better.
On Monday, summoned to debate the diaries, Senators listened
to Packwood deliver a rambling, ranting soliloquy that basically
charged the committee with prying into his private life. Maryland
Senator Barbara Mikulski countered, "We are not the Senate Select
Committee on Voyeurism." When the droning debate tied up Senate
business for a second full day, legislators grew impatient.
Finally Tuesday evening, Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia
implored his embattled colleague to sacrifice himself for the
larger good: "None of us is without flaws. But when those flaws
damage the institution of the Senate, it is time to have the
grace to go."
</p>
<p> Many other Senators, who are still smarting from Packwood's
veiled threat of two weeks ago, privately agree that he should
resign. That step not only would bring a rapid end to the ethics
committee's sexual-misconduct inquiry, prompted by allegations
by at least 26 women, but would also spare the Senate the discomfort
of deciding what punitive action to take if the charges prove
convincing (although his resignation would not prevent the women
from pursuing lawsuits). If he fails to resign, the ethics committee
may decide to push forward shortly with open hearings on the
sexual-harassment charges. A colleague could also call for Packwood's
expulsion from the Senate--but as yet no Senator has shown
such an inclination. Only 15 Senators have been expelled from
the Senate, all for treason.
</p>
<p> Packwood vows to serve out his fifth term and fight the subpoena
for his diaries. Although the federal court is expected to move
quickly on the Senate's request, if Packwood is not satisfied
with the outcome, he threatens an appeal that "could take years."
If he runs out the appeals process and still refuses to comply,
Packwood could face civil contempt penalties. Meanwhile, he
creates an opportunity for the committee to delve further into
the possibility of criminal misconduct. Packwood's unfortunate
pattern is that each attempt he makes to preserve his privacy
seems to turn up the wattage of scrutiny even further.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>