The
Progressive Review
Our
Clinton Scandal Index
RECORDS SET
- The only
president ever impeached on grounds of personal
malfeasance
- Most number of convictions and guilty pleas by friends
and associates*
- Most number of cabinet officials to come under
criminal investigation
- Most number of witnesses to flee country or refuse to
testify
- Most number of witnesses to die suddenly
- First president sued for sexual harassment.
- First president accused of rape.
- First first lady to come under criminal investigation
- Largest criminal plea agreement in an illegal campaign
contribution case
- First president to establish a legal defense fund.
- First president to be held in contempt of court
- Greatest amount of illegal campaign contributions
- Greatest amount of illegal campaign contributions from
abroad
* According
to our best information, 40 government officials were
indicted or convicted in the wake of Watergate.
A reader
computes that there was a total of 31 Reagan era
convictions, including 14 because of Iran-Contra and 16
in the Department of Housing & Urban Development
scandal.
47
individuals and businesses associated with the Clinton
machine were convicted of or pleaded guilty to crimes
with 33 of these occurring during the Clinton
administration itself. There were in addition 61
indictments or misdemeanor charges. 14 persons were
imprisoned. A key difference between the Clinton story
and earlier ones was the number of criminals with whom
he was associated before entering the White House.
Using a
far looser standard that included resignations, David R.
Simon and D. Stanley Eitzen in Elite Deviance, say that
138 appointees of the Reagan administration either
resigned under an ethical cloud or were criminally
indicted. Curiously Haynes Johnson uses the same figure
but with a different standard in "Sleep-Walking Through
History: America in the Reagan Years: "By the end of his
term, 138 administration officials had been convicted,
had been indicted, or had been the subject of official
investigations for official misconduct and/or criminal
violations. In terms of number of officials involved,
the record of his administration was the worst ever."
STARR-RAY
INVESTIGATION
- Number of
Starr-Ray investigation convictions or guilty pleas to
date (including one governor, one associate attorney
general and two Clinton business partners): 14
- Number of Clinton Cabinet members who came under
criminal investigation: 5
- Number of Reagan cabinet members who came under
criminal investigation: 4
- Number of top officials jailed in the Teapot Dome
Scandal: 3
CRIME STATS
- Number of
individuals and businesses associated with the Clinton
machine who have been convicted of or pleaded guilty to
crimes: 47
- Number of these convictions during Clinton's
presidency: 33
- Number of indictments/misdemeanor charges: 61
- Number of congressional witnesses who have pleaded the
Fifth Amendment, fled the country to avoid testifying,
or (in the case of foreign witnesses) refused to be
interviewed: 122
SMALTZ
INVESTIGATION
- Guilty
pleas and convictions obtained by Donald Smaltz in cases
involving charges of bribery and fraud against former
Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy and associated
individuals and businesses: 15
- Acquitted or overturned cases (including Espy): 6
- Fines and penalties assessed: $11.5 million
- Amount Tyson Food paid in fines and court costs: $6
million
CLINTON
MACHINE CRIMES
FOR WHICH CONVICTIONS
HAVE BEEN OBTAINED
Drug
trafficking (3), racketeering, extortion, bribery (4),
tax evasion, kickbacks, embezzlement (2), fraud (12),
conspiracy (5), fraudulent loans, illegal gifts (1),
illegal campaign contributions (5), money laundering
(6), perjury, obstruction of justice.
OTHER
MATTERS INVESTIGATED BY SPECIAL PROSECUTORS
AND CONGRESS, OR REPORTED IN THE MEDIA
Bank and
mail fraud, violations of campaign finance laws, illegal
foreign campaign funding, improper exports of sensitive
technology, physical violence and threats of violence,
solicitation of perjury, intimidation of witnesses,
bribery of witnesses, attempted intimidation of
prosecutors, perjury before congressional committees,
lying in statements to federal investigators and
regulatory officials, flight of witnesses, obstruction
of justice, bribery of cabinet members, real estate
fraud, tax fraud, drug trafficking, failure to
investigate drug trafficking, bribery of state
officials, use of state police for personal purposes,
exchange of promotions or benefits for sexual favors,
using state police to provide false court testimony,
laundering of drug money through a state agency, false
reports by medical examiners and others investigating
suspicious deaths, the firing of the RTC and FBI
director when these agencies were investigating Clinton
and his associates, failure to conduct autopsies in
suspicious deaths, providing jobs in return for silence
by witnesses, drug abuse, improper acquisition and use
of 900 FBI files, improper futures trading, murder,
sexual abuse of employees, false testimony before a
federal judge, shredding of documents, withholding and
concealment of subpoenaed documents, fabricated charges
against (and improper firing of) White House employees,
inviting drug traffickers, foreign agents and
participants in organized crime to the White House.
ARKANSAS
ALZHEIMER'S
Number of
times that Clinton figures who testified in court or
before Congress said that they didn't remember, didn't
know, or something similar.
Bill Kennedy
116
Harold Ickes 148
Ricki Seidman 160
Bruce Lindsey 161
Bill Burton 191
Mark Gearan 221
Mack McLarty 233
Neil Egglseston 250
Hillary Clinton 250
John Podesta 264
Jennifer O'Connor 343
Dwight Holton 348
Patsy Thomasson 420
Jeff Eller 697
THE CLINTON
LEGACY:
LONELY HONOR
Here are
some of the all too rare public officials, reporters,
and others who spoke truth to the dismally corrupt power
of Bill and Hill Clinton's political machine -- some at
risk to their careers, others at risk to their lives. A
few points to note:
- Those
corporatist media reporters who attempted to report the
story often found themselves muzzled; some even lost
their jobs. The only major dailies that consistently
handled the story well were the Wall Street Journal and
the Washington Times.
- Nobody on
this list has gotten rich and many you may not have even
heard of. Taking on the Clintons typically has not been
a happy or rewarding experience. At least ten reporters
have been fired, transferred off their beats, resigned,
or otherwise gotten into trouble because of their work
on the scandals. Whistleblowing is even less appreciated
within the government. One study of whistleblowers found
that 232 out of 233 them reported suffering retaliation;
another study found reprisals in about 95% of cases.
- Contrary
to the popular impression, the politics of those listed
ranges from the left to the right, and from the
ideological to the independent.
- We have
not included victims of the Clinton machine, some of
whom have acted with considerable danger and at
considerable risk to themselves. They will be included
on a later list.
PUBLIC
OFFICIALS
MIGUEL
RODRIGUEZ was a prosecutor on the staff of Kenneth
Starr. His attempts to uncover the truth in the Vincent
Foster death case were repeatedly foiled and he was the
subject of planted stories undermining his credibility
and implying that he was unstable. Rodriguez eventually
resigned.
JEAN DUFFEY:
Head of a joint federal-county drug task force in
Arkansas. Her first instructions from her boss: "Jean,
you are not to use the drug task force to investigate
any public official." Duffey's work, however, led deep
into the heart of the Dixie Mafia, including members of
the Clinton machine and the investigation of the
so-called "train deaths." Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
reports that when she produced a star witness who could
testify to Clinton's involvement with cocaine, the local
prosecuting attorney, Dan Harmon issued a subpoena for
all the task force records, including "the incriminating
files on his own activities. If Duffey had complied it
would have exposed 30 witnesses and her confidential
informants to violent retributions. She refused." Harmon
issued a warrant for her arrest and friendly cops told
her that there was a $50,000 price on her head. She
eventually fled to Texas. The once-untouchable Harmon
was later convicted of racketeering, extortion and drug
dealing.
BILL DUNCAN:
An IRS investigator in Arkansas who drafted some 30
federal indictments of Arkansas figures on money
laundering and other charges. Clinton biographer Roger
Morris quotes a source who reviewed the evidence: "Those
indictments were a real slam dunk if there ever was
one." The cases were suppressed, many in the name of
"national security." Duncan was never called to testify.
Other IRS agents and state police disavowed Duncan and
turned on him. Said one source, "Somebody outside
ordered it shut down and the walls went up."
RUSSELL
WELCH: An Arkansas state police detective working with
Duncan. Welch developed a 35-volume, 3,000 page archive
on drug and money laundering operations at Mena. His
investigation was so compromised that a high state
police official even let one of the targets of the probe
look through the file. At one point, Welch was sprayed
in the face with poison, later identified by the Center
for Disease Control as anthrax. He would write in his
diary, "I feel like I live in Russia, waiting for the
secret police to pounce down. A government has gotten
out of control. Men find themselves in positions of
power and suddenly crimes become legal." Welch is no
longer with the state police.
DAN SMALTZ:
Smaltz did an outstanding job investigating and
prosecuting charges involving illegal payoffs to
Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy, yet was treated with
disparaging and highly inaccurate reporting by the likes
of the David Broder and the NY Times. Espy was acquitted
under a law that made it necessary to not only prove
that he accepted gratuities but that he did something
specific in return. On the other hand, Tyson Foods
copped a plea in the same case, paying $6 million in
fines and serving four years' probation. The charge:
that Tyson had illegally offered Espy $12,000 in
airplane rides, football tickets and other payoffs. In
the Espy investigation, Smaltz obtained 15 convictions
and collected over $11 million in fines and civil
penalties. Offenses for which convictions were obtained
included false statements, concealing money from
prohibited sources, illegal gratuities, illegal
contributions, falsifying records, interstate
transportation of stolen property, money laundering, and
illegal receipt of USDA subsidies. Incidentally, Janet
Reno blocked Smaltz from pursuing leads aimed at
allegations of major drug trafficking in Arkansas and
payoffs to the then governor of the state, WJ Clinton.
Espy had become Ag secretary only after being flown to
Arkansas to get the approval of chicken king Don Tyson.
DAVID
SCHIPPERS, was House impeachment counsel and a Chicago
Democrat. He did a highly creditable job but since he
didn't fit the right-wing conspiracy theory, the
Clintonista media downplayed his work. Thus most
Americans don't know that he told NewsMax, "Let me tell
you, if we had a chance to put on a case, I would have
put live witnesses before the committee. But the House
leadership, and I'm not talking about Henry Hyde, they
just killed us as far as time was concerned. I begged
them to let me take it into this year. Then I screamed
for witnesses before the Senate. But there was nothing
anybody could do to get those Senators to show any
courage. They told us essentially, you're not going to
get 67 votes so why are you wasting our time." Schippers
also said that while a number of representatives looked
at additional evidence kept under seal in a nearby House
building, not a single senator did.
JOHN CLARKE:
When Patrick Knowlton stopped to relieve himself in Ft.
Marcy Park 70 minutes before the discovery of Vince
Foster's body, he saw things that got him into deep
trouble. His interview statements were falsified and
prior to testifying he claims he was overtly harassed by
more than a score of men in a classic witness
intimidation technique. In some cases there were
witnesses. John Clarke has been his dogged lawyer in the
witness intimidation case that has been largely ignored
by the media, even when the three-judge panel overseeing
the Starr investigation permitted Knowlton to append a
20 page addendum to the Starr Report.
OTHER
THE ARKANSAS
COMMITTEE: What would later be known as the Vast Right
Wing Conspiracy actually began on the left - as a group
of progressive students at the University of Arkansas
formed the Arkansas Committee to look into Mena, drugs,
money laundering, and Arkansas politics. This committee
was the source of some of the important early Clinton
stories.
CLINTON
ADMINISTRATION SCANDALS E-LIST: Moderated by Ray Heizer,
this list has been subject to all the idiosyncrasies of
Internet bulletin boards, but it has nonetheless proved
invaluable to researchers and journalists.
JOURNALISTS
JERRY SEPER
of the Washington Times was far and away the best beat
reporter of the story, handling it week after week in
the best tradition of investigative journalism. If other
reporters had followed Seper's lead, the history of the
Clintons machine might have been quite different.
AMBROSE
EVANS-PRITCHARD of the London Telegraph did a remarkable
job of digging into some of the seamiest tales from
Arkansas and the Clinton past. Other early arrivals on
the scene were Alexander Cockburn and Jeff Gerth.
CHRISTOPHER
RUDDY, among other fine reports on the Clinton scandals,
did the best job laying out the facts in the Vince
Foster death case.
ROGER MORRIS
AND SALLY DENTON wrote a major expose of events at Mena,
but at the last moment the Washington Post's brass
ordered the story killed. It was published by Penthouse
and later included in Morris' "Partners in Power," the
best biography of the Clintons.
OTHERS who
helped get parts of the story out included reporters
Philip Weiss, Carl Limbacher, Wes Phelan, David
Bresnahan, William Sammon, Liza Myers, Mara Leveritt,
Matt Drudge, Jim Ridgeway, Nat Hentoff, Michael Isikoff,
Christopher Hitchens, and Michael Kelly. Also
independent investigator Hugh Sprunt and former White
House FBI agent Gary Aldrich.
Sam Smith of
the Progressive Review wrote the first book (Shadows
of Hope, University of Indiana Press, 1994)
deconstructing the Clinton myth and the Review developed
a
major
database
on the topic.
The
Clintons, to adapt a line from Dr. Johnson, were not
only corrupt, they were the cause of corruption in
others. Seldom in America have so many come to excuse so
much mendacity and malfeasance as during the Clinton
years. These rare exceptions cited above, and others
unmentioned, deserve our deep thanks.
THE CLINTON
LEGACY
The Hidden Election
USA Today
calls it "the hidden election," in which nearly 7,000
state legislative seats are decided with only minimal
media and public attention. The paper took brief notice
because this is the year the state legislatures perform
their most important national function: drawing revised
congressional districts based on the most recent census.
But there's
another important national story here: further evidence
of the disaster that Bill Clinton has been for the
Democratic Party. According to the National Conference
of State Legislatures, Democrats held a 1,542 seat lead
in the state bodies in 1990. As of last November that
lead had shrunk to 288. That's a loss of over 1,200
state legislative seats, nearly all of them under
Clinton. Across the US, the Democrats control only 65
more state senate seats than the Republicans.
Further, in
1992, the Democrats controlled 17 more state
legislatures than the Republicans. After November, the
Republicans control one more than the Democrats. Not
only is this a loss of 9 legislatures under Clinton, but
it is the first time since 1954 that the GOP has
controlled more state legislatures than the Democrats
(they tied in 1968).
Here's what
happened to the Democrats under Clinton, based on our
latest figures:
- GOP seats
gained in House since Clinton became president: 48
- GOP seats gained in Senate since Clinton became
president: 8
- GOP governorships gained since Clinton became
president: 11
- GOP state legislative seats gained since Clinton
became president: 1,254
as of 1998
- State legislatures taken over by GOP since Clinton
became president: 9
- Democrat officeholders who have become Republicans
since Clinton became
president: 439 as of 1998
- Republican officeholders who have become Democrats
since Clinton became president: 3
NATIONAL
CONF OF STATE LEGISLATURES
http://www.ncsl.org/programs/legman/elect/hstptyct.htm
http://www.ncsl.org/programs/legman/elect/demshare2000.htm