In the mid-1990s, federal special prosecutor Kenneth Starr’s investigative team in Little Rock was headed by a veteran of the courtroom, Hickman Ewing Jr. Grilled by Ewing before a grand jury on July 22, l995, Mrs. Clinton used the words "I can’t recall" in answer to 50 questions. Later, Ewing told Starr that he rated Mrs. Clinton’s testimony as deserving an F Minus, and he wanted to indict the nation’s first lady. He was contemplating a number of counts, headed by two major lines of enquiry. First came her handling of the commodity trades and her failure to report her profits to the IRS. Second came her conduct amid the collapse of Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan, owned by Jim McDougal. Relevant to this affair were Hillary Clinton’s billings as a legal counsel to Madison Guaranty. These were germane to the question of whether Hillary was being truthful in denying she’d done any legal work for the bank. After many adventures, the records finally came into the hands of Starr’s team and showed that Hillary Clinton had billed Madison Guaranty at the rate of $150 an hour, with a total of 60 hours of supposed work on the Castle Grande deal. The prosecutors had the billings but were never able to look at Hillary’s time sheets. Her secretary removed them from the Rose Law Firm in 1992, and it’s generally assumed the first lady destroyed them.
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
April 10, 2015
The real history of Hillary Clinton
Part Two of a three part 2007 series by Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
I can't believe that people are seriously considering this person as being fit for President.
Of course, then again you have George Bush and Sarah Palin (potentially a breath away).
There is something very wrong with our educational system if our citizens don't demand better than the walking embarrassments mentioned above.
Post a Comment