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NBC News Sits On A Bombshell
Reed Irvine -- Accuracy in Media

February 5, 1999

It is obvious that nothing short of a bombshell could shatter the unity
of the 45 Democratic Senators and persuade a dozen of them to vote to
convict President Clinton and remove him from office. NBC News has been
sitting on such a bombshell. It is an eight-hour on-camera interview by
Lisa Myers with Juanita Broaddrick in which Mrs. Broaddrick charges
that
she was brutally raped by Bill Clinton in 1978, when he was attorney
general of Arkansas. Lisa Myers first reported this on the NBC Nightly
news last March.
She said then, "In court documents today, Paula Jones�s lawyers claim
Clinton �forcibly raped and sexually assaulted� Broaddrick, then
�bribed
and intimidated her� to remain silent. Sources say that Broaddrick, 54,
recently denied under oath that such an assault occurred. But Jones�s
lawyers claim she had told their investigator she had suffered a
�horrible thing� at the hand of Clinton and did not want to relive it.
NBC News has talked to four people from Arkansas who say Broaddrick
told
them of such an assault years ago."

Broaddrick has since been deposed by Ken Starr�s investigators, and her
deposition is said to be an important part of the still-secret evidence
that persuaded wavering House Republicans to vote for impeachment. If
Juanita Broaddrick could tell the Senate what Bill Clinton did to her,
even diehard Clinton loyalists might find it hard to vote to keep him
in
office. The airing of her story by NBC might have forced the Senate to
convert its pro forma exercise into a genuine trial where her testimony
might have had some impact on those Senators who say that the fuss is
about nothing more than consensual sex between two adults.

It was reported on the Internet that NBC had planned to air the
Broaddrick story on January 29. That was not true. Tim Russert, the
Washington bureau chief of NBC News, has said, "If we honestly had a
buttoned-up bombshell, we would go with it in a flash." The story would
be aired, he said, when they had adequate corroboration for it. NBC
obviously had far less corroboration for the story they aired last
March
than they do now. The March story contained a serious error�the claim
that Clinton had "bribed and intimidated" Broaddrick to remain silent.
Broaddrick herself has said that is false. NBC has obviously raised the
bar for this story. They still have three investigators in Arkansas
working on it, but a reliable Arkansas source says that all the major
elements have been documented, and the investigators are busying
themselves with minor details.

What has kept it from being given an air date? Robert Wright, the
chairman of NBC, told me that they were still missing a piece of very
crucial information, and he didn�t feel comfortable airing the story
until they got it. He told me, off the record, what the missing
information was, and he okayed my checking it out with Mrs. Broaddrick.

She informed me that NBC had that information and the documents that
proved it. I was able to confirm this and inform Bob Wright that he had
been given false information. He responded that he must be out of the
loop farther than he thought. He said he would look into it. In an
earlier conversation he had acknowledged that there were people with
clout at NBC News who, like CNN�s Rick Kaplan, were friends of
Clinton�s. When, in our second conversation, I told him that I was
going
to write that it looks like the Kaplan clones at NBC are responsible
for
the delay, he did not agree, but he did not protest my saying it.

The prime suspect would be the president of NBC News, Andrew Lack.
Washington bureau chief Tim Russert reports to him, and Lack reports to
Wright. It is not likely that Russert would sabotage a story that one
of
his best reporters had been working on for a year by telling Lack that
they were still missing indispensable information that they actually
had. Russert assured me that there were no phone calls to NBC from the
White House about this story, but he could not possibly know if Clinton
or one of his aides had spoken to Lack. When asked about Andrew Lack, a
retired CBS correspondent came up with "Kaplanesque."

In 1992, Rick Kaplan, who was then with ABC News, was suspected of
having been behind ABC�s sacrifice of a big scoop�Clinton�s infamous
1969 letter to Col. Eugene Holmes. The letter explained why he had not
kept his promise to enroll in the ROTC at the University of Arkansas, a
promise he made to escape induction. ABC�s delay in reporting the story
helped save the Clinton candidacy. It appears that a Kaplanesque
official at NBC News has now helped save Clinton�s presidency by
sabotaging the timely airing of NBC�s exclusive interview with Juanita
Broaddrick.

Visit the website Accuracy in Media

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