Word: affidavits
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...Clinton safely past the 1996 election, Bennett, who is one of Washington's premier power lawyers (fee: $475 an hour), now says he wants to speed it up. Sources close to the President told TIME that one of Bennett's first moves will probably be to subpoena the affidavit detailing what Jones says are the "distinguishing characteristics" she saw in Clinton's genital area when he made an unsubtle demand for sex in a Little Rock hotel room. Once the President's legal team knows the specifics of her claim, the sources said, they believe it can be easily disproved...
...reassert my innocence and reiterate that all the charges against me are false." Albert faced the press hours after reports surfaced that his alleged victim is facing trial on charges that she threatened to kill a former boyfriend when he planned to take a vacation without her. In an affidavit filed with the District of Columbia Superior Court, the woman's ex-boyfriend says he received three threatening cell phone calls from the woman on March 13, about one month before the alleged incident with Albert at the Ritz Carlton Hotel. In one call, the boyfriend claims she told...
Nonetheless, the 31-page FBI affidavit and subsequent indictment detail a series of sizable but unexplained payments to Nicholson's various bank accounts, $180,000 in all. That money, more than double his $73,000 salary, started to arrive just as Nicholson's financial circumstances were getting tighter. During the years he was posted abroad with diplomatic cover, a large house, car and private schools for his three children went with the job. When he was moved back to the U.S. in 1994, the expatriate good life disappeared. That same year he divorced his wife and won custody...
...Trade Center in New York City. The suspected mastermind of the bombing, Ramzi Yousef, had passed through Malaysia. While in Kuala Lumpur, Nicholson had got agency permission to meet with a Russian agent by telling his CIA superiors he thought he could recruit the man. According to the FBI affidavit, in June 1994, one day after Nicholson's last reported meeting with the Russian, $12,000 was wired to Nicholson's savings account in Eugene, Oregon. Later agency hands would remember how Aldrich Ames had offered himself to the Russians: by getting permission to meet a Soviet agent that...
...have a harder time building its case and assessing the damage done. Unlike Ames, Nicholson is pleading not guilty. For starters, attorney Shapiro wants to subpoena the tape of the lie-detector tests, which he says can be used to refute some of the CIA's claims. The affidavit against Nicholson already contains at least one apparently inflated charge. It accuses him of selling to the Russians the name of the CIA station chief in Moscow. But as a symbol of warming ties, the U.S. and Russia actually inform one another these days of the identities of their spy chiefs...