Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Neither Monica Lewinsky nor her attorney will
attend Saturday's
annual White House correspondent's dinner, William Ginsburg says, adding
that it would be
"tasteless" to do so. 

Paula Jones will attend the dinner as a guest of the conservative
magazine Insight, according to the
Rutherford Institute, which has arranged Jones' legal representation in
her sexual harassment suit
against President Clinton. 

Ginsburg, appearing on CNN's "Larry King Live," said Tuesday that he was
not taking a "pot shot"
at Jones and respected her decision to attend the annual event. 

But he added, "Neither Monica Lewinsky nor I are going to attend that
dinner. That's between the
White House correspondents and the president of the United States and
his staff. And it's tasteless
for us to attend." 

"Paula Jones has made her own decision with her lawyers and I respect
her decision, but we will not
be there because we don't think its appropriate for us to be there." 

Ginsburg repeated his criticism of independent counsel Kenneth Starr's
investigation of allegations
that Clinton had an affair with Lewinsky and urged her to lie about it. 

Both Clinton and Lewinsky have denied the allegations. 

He said he doubted Lewinsky would be indicted in the case anytime soon,
but declined to discuss
any details of the case. 

Lewinsky, he said, would assert her Fifth Amendment right to avoid
incriminating herself if she was
called before the grand jury. 

Ginsburg blasted Starr's office for calling Lewinsky's mother to
testify, and attempting to subpoena
the records of Washington area bookstores in an attempt to find out
which books the former White
House intern may have given the president as gifts. 

Starr's actions amounted to an assault on Americans' right to privacy,
and threatened to prevent
children from being able to confide in their parents. 

"The day the children cannot communicate with the parents is the day the
fabric of this democracy is
so badly torn that we may not be able to repair it," Ginsburg told CNN. 

He also launched another attack on the integrity of Lewinsky's friend
Linda Tripp who taped over
20 hours of conversations in which Lewinsky talked of an intimate
relationship with Clinton. 

"For 30 pieces of silver, this woman betrayed her best friend. She had a
pending book deal at the
time she began pursuing Monica Lewinsky," Ginsburg said, noting that
Tripp began tape recording
conversations with Lewinsky long before Lewinsky had been subpoenaed in
the Jones case. 

A federal judge has since thrown out Jones' case against Clinton, but
Jones has vowed to appeal. 

"Where was her friendship, her honor, her sense of responsibility and
friendship when she pushed
that button," he said. "A friend doesn't betray a friend." 
-- 
Two rules in life:

1.  Don't tell people everything you know.
2.

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