Jackie Fellows <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


Hi Terry

Did you watch the interview with Susan McDougal?  I don't know where you got your
information, but she said that the only way she could walk out was to tell the
story the way Starr wanted her to--not to agree to testify, but to testify the way
he wanted.

She said if she did that and testified the way Starr wanted the story that she
would be open to perjury, not open to perjury for telling the truth.

Hi Sue:  I don't think Susan can do anything as she was a witness for Whitewater, I
think.  Did she have anything to do with the Paula Jones fiasco?

jackief

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
> Hi Sue,
>
> >Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> >If this whole thing goes down the tubes would Susan McDougal have any
> >grounds for a law suit.  She was held in jail for refusing to say what
> >Starr wanted her to say,
>
> Totally untrue.  This is nonsense.  Susan McDougal could have opened the
> cell doors at any time she wanted.  All she needed to do was agree to
> testify - and do so.
>
> She claimed that testifying truthfully would open her to charges of perjury.
> But perjury, like any other charges, have to be proven.  She was willing to
> spend 18 months under horrible conditions to avoid a perjury conviction (for
> telling the truth yet) that would like entail no jail time?  Make sense to you?
>
> Susan McDougal was caught between Starr and Clinton.  Either Clinton had
> offered her inducements or she was frightened of implicating him.  You tell
> me what other possible reason there was for her actions.
>
> although she did say over and over that she
> >didn't know of any wrong doing.
> >
> >I know I am stretching with this but I was just wondering.  :)
> >
> >Sue
> Best,     Terry
>
> "Lawyer - one trained to circumvent the law"  - The Devil's Dictionary
>
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--
In the sociology room the children learn
that even dreams are colored by your perspective

I toss and turn all night.    Theresa Burns, "The Sociology Room"



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