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- <text id=93TT2553>
- <title>
- Jan. 03, 1994: The Nightmares Before Christmas
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 03, 1994 Men of The Year:The Peacemakers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE PRESIDENCY, Page 62
- The Nightmares Before Christmas
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Cheer was hard to find at the White House after episodes from
- Bill Clinton's past came to haunt him
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett and Michael Duffy/Washington
- and Jay Peterzell/Little Rock
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton is usually a great off-the-cuff speaker, able to
- answer complicated questions smoothly and with a sure command
- of detail. But at times last week he found himself struggling
- for words. The worst moment came when a radio reporter questioned
- the President on vivid new charges about a painful old subject:
- extramarital affairs. "So none of this actually happened?" the
- reporter asked. The President answered in the tones of a man
- stumbling through thickets of misgiving. "I have nothing else
- to say," he declared. "We...we did, if, the, the, I, I,
- the stories are just as they have been said." Finally he arrived
- at the assertion he might have begun with: "They're outrageous,
- and they're not so."
- </p>
- <p> This was not the way the White House was planning to greet the
- holidays. After a turbulent but ultimately productive first
- year, polls were showing that the President's approval rating
- had jumped to a gratifying 58%. White House aides, looking forward
- to a long-overdue breather, had lined up a series of Yuletide
- photo ops and year-end interviews that would let the President
- and Mrs. Clinton focus on the budget victory, the come-from-behind
- NAFTA triumph and next year's campaign on health care.
- </p>
- <p> The week opened instead with two painful blasts from the past,
- one about sex, the other about money. The twin controversies
- prodded back to life old campaign questions about Clinton's
- judgment, character and trustworthiness. "We've been having
- acid flashbacks," groaned one official. The most titillating
- charges, which came to light in the conservative monthly the
- American Spectator and in the Los Angeles Times, portrayed Clinton
- as a reckless, obsessive womanizer who used state troopers to
- arrange trysts even after the presidential election and then
- tried to bribe potential squealers with offers of federal jobs.
- The portrayal seemed perilously close to the old "Slick Willie"
- caricature, potentially the kind of story that could seriously
- damage Clinton's hard-won image as a steadfast, effective leader.
- Yet the sex stories were probably the lesser of Clinton's headaches
- last week, because the most credible of them took place before
- he began to run for President, a period during which he had
- already admitted that he had caused "pain in my marriage."
- </p>
- <p> Far more swampy were new suspicions that the Clintons, as First
- Couple of Arkansas, had somehow acted improperly while a real
- estate partner ruined a savings and loan institution that eventually
- cost taxpayers $47 million to bail out. The Justice Department
- is investigating the now defunct S&L and the Clinton partnership
- to see whether money from the thrift was diverted to support
- faltering real estate schemes, including a development company
- called Whitewater in which the Clintons had invested, and to
- finance politicians--Clinton among them. At week's end the
- President decided to give Justice all personal documents related
- to Whitewater, a move that may satisfy investigators for the
- moment. But the potential conflicts of interest in the case
- are sure to invite further scrutiny: Hillary Clinton did legal
- work for the failed thrift, and a Clinton friend served as chief
- thrift regulator.
- </p>
- <p> The shock and gravity of last week's potential scandals had
- a visible impact on the Clintons. The First Lady reacted defiantly,
- standing by her man and accusing their accusers of a political
- conspiracy. "I find it not an accident," she said, "that every
- time he is on the verge of fulfilling his commitment to the
- American people and they are responding, out comes yet a new
- round of these outrageous, terrible stories that people plant
- for political and financial reasons." Mrs. Clinton threw herself
- into her work with fresh vigor, but her husband seemed somber
- and distracted in private meetings. In public he was unusually
- careful in his words. "I just don't want to do anything to prolong
- this," he said.
- </p>
- <p> The Spectator article, long on damaging detail but short on
- corroboration, was based largely on interviews with two Arkansas
- state troopers, Larry Patterson and Roger Perry, assigned to
- Clinton's security detail in the 1980s. They picture the Clintons
- as a pinstripe Jiggs and Maggie--him often tiptoeing home
- past midnight, her sometimes greeting him on his return with
- a mouthful of four-letter words and a temper that Patterson
- says once resulted in a smashed cupboard door. Their relationship,
- author David Brock wrote, "is more a business relationship than
- a marriage."
- </p>
- <p> As to the working methods of Clinton's alleged womanizing, Perry
- and Patterson claim he sometimes visited mistresses when he
- was supposed to be out jogging, then splashed himself with water
- to give the impression that he was sweating from a long run.
- Other women were supposedly dallied with in parked cars, where
- Patterson says he twice saw a woman perform oral sex on Clinton.
- The troopers were around to wipe makeup off his shirt collar
- or arrange hotel-room encounters or sneak women into the Governor's
- mansion while Mrs. Clinton slept. The affairs continued after
- the election, the article claims, citing a case in which a trooper
- stood guard while Clinton carried on with a woman in the basement
- recreation room of the Governor's mansion.
- </p>
- <p> Brock, the author of the best-selling The Real Anita Hill, claims
- the troopers came forward out of a public-spirited concern that
- Clinton's behavior, if he continued it as President, could endanger
- national security by making him vulnerable to blackmailers.
- His sources were also motivated, he admits, by "an element of
- score settling and self-interest." Patterson claims Clinton
- promised him a job transfer but never delivered. "We lied for
- him and helped him cheat on his wife, and he treated us like
- dogs," he complained in the story.
- </p>
- <p> The Spectator article gained some credibility by forcing the
- hand of the Los Angeles Times, which went to print with an article
- its reporters had been researching for several months. The Times
- reporters had found telephone records showing that as Governor,
- Clinton had been a prodigious caller of at least one of the
- women the troopers identified as his sexual partners. The records,
- reviewed last week by TIME, showed that Clinton had called the
- woman at least 59 times over two years, including one call from
- a hotel in Charlottesville, Virginia, that began at 1:23 in
- the morning and lasted 94 minutes.
- </p>
- <p> By far the most inflammatory charge in the Times, however, was
- Perry's claim that President Clinton called Danny Ferguson,
- one of two troopers who had originally tried to remain anonymous,
- and offered federal jobs to Ferguson and Perry in exchange for
- their silence. If true, the accusation could open Clinton to
- charges of bribery or other criminal misuses of office. The
- White House acknowledged that Clinton had called the troopers
- in September, but heatedly rejected the claim that any job offers
- were made. Last week Ferguson came forward to deny Perry's story.
- At the prompting of Clinton adviser Bruce Lindsey and former
- campaign aide Betsey Wright, he issued a signed affidavit in
- which he insisted that neither he, Perry nor Patterson was offered
- jobs by Clinton in return for silence.
- </p>
- <p> Ferguson and his attorney Robert Batton added an ambiguous wrinkle:
- in a September phone talk with Clinton, Ferguson asked if the
- President had ever received a memo from Perry requesting a position
- on one of the President's councils on drugs. Batton said Clinton
- was unaware of the request but offered to try to track it down.
- According to Batton, he asked Ferguson to get in touch with
- Perry to find out the content of Perry's memo and to get back
- in touch with Clinton. Batton said no further discussions took
- place.
- </p>
- <p> As the week went on, the troopers' stories, which were unsupported
- by notes or documents, proved almost impossible to verify. Every
- one of Clinton's alleged mistresses who could be identified
- and reached either denied the troopers' claims or refused to
- speak. In one allegation, Patterson claimed to have escorted
- a woman he identifies as a judge's wife to a send-off ceremony
- at the Little Rock airport before Clinton's Inaugural. At the
- airport, he said, Hillary Clinton recognized the woman as one
- of her husband's mistresses and furiously ordered the trooper
- to take her away.
- </p>
- <p> Reached last week by TIME, the woman insisted that the story
- was "totally false...I have never had a relationship with
- Bill Clinton outside of a friendship and a professional relationship."
- Meanwhile, the woman who allegedly had the 94-minute, late-night
- conversation with Clinton came forward anonymously last week
- to tell the New York Daily News that "there was no sex involved"
- in their relationship. Clinton had been calling, she insisted,
- to "help her through a personal crisis."
- </p>
- <p> Other doubts about the President's accusers sprang up. Both
- troopers acknowledged that they had been caught cheating on
- their own wives in the past. Patterson was once suspended from
- his trooper job for allegedly beating his wife. The pair is
- also being sued by an insurance company, which charges that
- Patterson lied about a one-car collision, in which he hit a
- tree while driving a state car; Perry and a female officer were
- passengers. Patterson and Perry both admit lying about the incident
- in depositions.
- </p>
- <p> One reason it was important for the White House to head off
- any erosion in public trust is that Clinton may well need it
- in weeks to come as he faces the questions surrounding former
- real estate partner James McDougal and the S&L he operated,
- Madison Guaranty. Clinton joined with McDougal and the two men's
- wives in a partnership to develop land along the White River.
- Though it was among the largest investments in their portfolio,
- the Clintons have described their involvement in Whitewater
- Development as mostly passive, with McDougal making all the
- decisions. Based on a campaign lawyer's report prepared in early
- 1992, the Clintons claim to have made no return on their investment
- of at least $68,900 in the partnership. Said Clinton last week:
- "We were clearly losing money, and we never knew, until obviously
- the accountant closed the books out, exactly how much we had
- lost." Whether the Clintons actually lost their entire investment,
- however, remains in dispute.
- </p>
- <p> In recent weeks the Justice Department has been stepping up
- a three-month-old investigation into Madison Guaranty's collapse.
- One question that investigators want answered is whether the
- failed thrift received favorable treatment by Arkansas state
- regulators, including one, Beverly Basset Schaffer, who was
- appointed by Clinton. That line of pursuit could also produce
- questions for Hillary, who as an attorney represented Madison
- in its bid to launch an adventurous stock scheme at a time when
- Clinton was Governor.
- </p>
- <p> More trouble may come from Capitol Hill. For months Representative
- Henry Gonzalez, the Texas Democrat who is chairman of the House
- Banking Committee, has been resisting calls to step up a laggard
- investigation of Madison by his committee. But last week's disclosures
- provide ammunition for Jim Leach of Iowa, the committee's ranking
- Republican, who has been pushing for a more vigorous investigation.
- Says Newt Gingrich, House minority whip: "If we had a Republican
- President, there would be full-blown committee hearings in January.
- What you're seeing here is Democrats banding together to cover
- up, ignore and minimize."
- </p>
- <p> In the Senate, Alfonse D'Amato of New York, ranking Republican
- on the Senate Banking Committee, has called for hearings as
- well. But so far the committee's Democratic chairman, Donald
- Riegle of Michigan, has said he would rather let the Justice
- Department's investigation run its course. In the same vein,
- Attorney General Janet Reno rejected calls last week for her
- to appoint a special counsel to take over her department's investigations
- into Guaranty. She explained that since anyone appointed by
- her would still be seen as her operative, it would be better
- for experienced department investigators to carry on. With Reno's
- blessing, Justice officials picked a prosecutor with impeccable
- Republican credentials--Donald Mackay, a fraud-section lawyer
- who was once a Nixon-appointed U.S. attorney--to direct the
- criminal investigation of Madison and Whitewater.
- </p>
- <p> Which of these scandals will dog the President? Perhaps not
- the sexual imbroglio--Americans knew Clinton had sinned but
- elected him anyway. Says William E. Leuchtenburg, professor
- of history at the University of North Carolina: "It's one question
- if this sort of thing arises during a campaign, and we have
- to wonder what sort of President this person will be. It's another
- thing entirely now that he's President, and we know the job
- he's doing." However, the financial morass surrounding Madison
- Guaranty may be considered far more pertinent because it shows
- how Clinton runs a government. And in Little Rock in the roaring
- 1980s, the environment was apparently clubby and murky enough
- to keep investigators busy for some time to come.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-