Para quienes esten convencidos que los problemas del presidente de USA
solo son unos episodios morbosos con una mujer que podia haber sido su
hija, he aqui lo que le viene al congreso.  Lo del viernes pasado fue
apenas el comienzo....

Saludos,

Dario



Kenneth W. Starr's case for impeaching President Clinton is only the
first public accounting in a massive ongoing investigation --contrary to
White House claims that the Whitewater probe is dead.

"All phases of the investigation are now nearing completion," the
445-page report says.  The independent counsel "will soon make final
decisions about what steps to take, if any, with respect to the
other                                  information it has gathered." 
While it was Mr. Starr's "strong desire" to complete the entire
Whitewater inquiry before giving any information to Congress, the report
said, it "became apparent" there was "substantial and credible
information" of impeachable offenses and he was required under the law
to refer the information to Congress as soon as possible.

"It also became apparent that a delay of this referral until the
evidence from all phases of the investigation had been evaluated would
be unwise," the report said.  Mr. Starr will soon make decisions on
final reports to a three judge panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and possible indictments, the report added.

Mr. Clinton's personal attorney, David E. Kendall, attacked the Monica
Lewinsky report this week as a  "hit-and-run smear campaign," saying it
was nothing but an attempt to damage the president with "irrelevant and 
unnecessary graphic and salacious allegations." He asked,  "Where's
Whitewater?"  

But the report's introduction notes that Mr. Starr's four-year
Whitewater probe, all but forgotten in the crush  of sordid public
revelations of Mr. Clinton's sexual dalliances with the former White
House intern, continues to target a number of areas:

-Legal representation of a failed Arkansas thrift, Madison Guaranty
 Savings and Loan Association, and a real estate project, Castle Grande,
 by first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton and former Rose Law Firm partner
 Webster L.  Hubbell, the ex-associate attorney general who resigned in
 disgrace.

-The firing of seven White House travel office employees to make room
 for Clinton cronies, and the role Mrs. Clinton may have played in the
 decision.  

-The delivery to the White House of more than 1,000 secret FBI files on
 Reagan and Bush administration aides, and efforts to shield White House
 officials, including Mrs. Clinton, from a public accounting on how the
 files were obtained and used.

-The misuse of personnel records of Pentagon employee Linda R. Tripp,
 whose secret recordings of conversations with Miss Lewinsky began the
 grand jury investigation.

-Possible perjury and obstruction of justice concerning an incident
 involving former White House volunteer Kathleen E. Willey. Mrs. Willey
 said in August 1997 that Mr. Clinton made sexual advances in the Oval
 Office in November 1993.

The Starr report to Congress said Miss Lewinsky told the president
Newsweek was working on an article about Mrs. Willey.  Mr. Clinton
dismissed the accusations as "ludicrous, because he would never approach
a  small-breasted woman like Mrs. Willey." Later he asked Miss Lewinsky
if she had heard about the Newsweek inquiry from Mrs. Tripp, to which
she replied "yes."  The former intern said Mr. Clinton asked if Mrs.
Tripp could trusted and then told her to persuade Mrs. Tripp to call
White House Deputy Counsel Bruce R. Lindsey about the matter. Newsweek
published the Willey story on Aug. 11, 1997. In his Jan. 17 deposition
in the Paula Jones case, Mr. Clinton denied the Willey accusation.

The Starr probe also is looking into accusations that efforts were made
to silence Mrs. Willey. Among those drawing attention is Democratic
fund-raiser Nathan Landow.  Investigators want to know if he urged Mrs.
Willey to deny she was groped by the president. Mrs. Willey has since
testified before the Lewinsky grand jury as a cooperating witness.  Mr.
Landow testified before the grand jury, later telling reporters he took
the Fifth Amendment. His daughter, former White House volunteer Harolyn
Cardozo, who worked with Mrs. Willey, also testified.

In "Travelgate" and "Filegate," papers filed earlier this month in
federal court in Washington show the investigations "are continuing and
in extremely sensitive stages." Deputy independent counsel Robert
Bittman told the court the probes had reached to the "highest level of
the federal government" and involved "issues of singular constitutional
and historic importance."

The Whitewater probe also is examining whether Mr. Hubbell hid his
involvement and that of Mrs. Clinton with Castle Grande, a real estate
project south of Little Rock, Ark.  In September 1996, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp. said Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Hubbell drafted legal
papers that Madison used to deceive bank examiners and divert $300,000
to Mr. Hubbell's father-in-law, Seth Ward. The report said the papers
"facilitated the payment of substantial commissions to Mr. Ward, who
acted as a straw buyer" in Castle Grande. 

A straw buyer is one who owns property in name only, having never put up
any money or assumed any risk.  The FDIC said the Ward payments were in
violation of federal regulations. The report did not accuse Mrs. Clinton
or  Mr. Hubbell of criminal wrongdoing, although it raised serious
questions about their involvement in a deal that  ultimately cost
taxpayers $3.8 million when Castle Grande failed.

Prosecutors, the report to Congress said, immediately recognized
parallels between the job help provided to Miss Lewinsky by Washington
lawyer Vernon E. Jordan Jr., a longtime Clinton friend, and "his earlier
relationship" with Mr. Hubbell, sentenced in 1994 to prison for stealing
$420,000 from his Rose Law Firm partners. By late 1997, Mr. Starr had
evidence Mr. Jordan helped Mr. Hubbell obtain consulting contracts after
he agreed to cooperate in the Whitewater probe.

In 1994, Mr. Hubbell was paid $450,010 by 17 different persons or
entities as a consultant and $91,750 in 1995,  despite beginning a
28-month prison term in August of that year. He has yet to explain what
work he did for the   cash.  Some of the payments came from MacAndrews &
Forbes Holding Co. in New York after he was introduced to the firm's
executives by Mr. Jordan, a director of Revlon Inc. The cosmetics firm,
controlled by MacAndrews & Forbes, also offered a job to Miss Lewinsky
based on Mr. Jordan's recommendations.

With regard to Mrs. Tripp's personnel records, Mr. Starr has been
investigating if they were illegally released in an effort to tarnish
her reputation in the Lewinsky probe. Assistant Defense Secretary
Kenneth Bacon approved the release to a reporter for the New Yorker
magazine. The records show Mrs. Tripp was detained by police as a
teen-ager 29 years ago and had not noted the arrest in her 1987 security
clearance form.  The arrest later was shown to have been a teen-age
prank, in which she pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of loitering. 
Former White House Deputy Chief of Staff Harold Ickes was questioned
about the documents by the grand jury. Mr. Bacon also testified in the
case.

Responder a