Word: client
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...over a 15-month period. The papers also make clear that she made some 68 phone calls concerning Madison and engaged in two official contacts with Arkansas state officials on the bank's behalf. Mrs. Clinton's personal lawyer, David Kendall, asserts that the papers merely confirm that his client did not perform significant work for Madison...
...bright young associate" named Richard Massey. Mrs. Clinton has also implied in a sworn statement to the RTC in May 1995 that Massey brought Madison's business to the firm. Committee sources tell TIME that Massey will testify this week, that he did not bring Madison in as a client and that he assumed Mrs. Clinton was involved...
...times on Thursday that he couldn't corroborate Mrs. Clinton's version of events. The First Lady has said in sworn testimony to the Resolution Trust Corporation that her work on Madison started in 1985 after Massey asked her to consider bringing on the S & L as a client. "I don't believe it happened that way," Massey told Senators Thursday. He did admit to pitching Madison President John Latham on Rose's services, but said Latham told him only James McDougal, the S & L's owner, could retain Rose. To many questions posed by the Whitewater committee, Massey either...
...great French storyteller Honore de Balzac could have written this tale of a Faustian bargain gone terribly wrong. In 1965 lawyer Andre-Francois Raffray agreed to "purchase" the house of an elderly client with $500-a-month installments, then a steep price--on condition that he would inherit the property outright the moment she died. Last week, 30 years older and $180,000 poorer, Raffray, 77, expired on Christmas Day. His client, Jeanne Calment, celebrated the holiday with a sumptuous hotel banquet in her hometown of Arles. "We all make bad deals in life," she joked to Raffray when...
...Whitewater meeting attended by White House lawyers and Bill Clinton's personal lawyers. Rejecting a last-minute White House compromise, the committee voted along partisan lines to ask the full Senate to enforce a subpoena for the notes. Unless one side or the other blinks (Clinton is asserting attorney-client privilege), the issue could soon be headed for the courts...