Word: hubers
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...billing records Huber found clarify the extent of Hillary Clinton's legal work for Madison Guaranty, the savings and loan owned by the Clintons' Whitewater partner, James McDougal. They had been under subpoena by both Whitewater independent counsel Kenneth Starr and the Resolution Trust Corporation, but the Clintons had maintained they were lost. The notation in the papers of 60 hours billed by Hillary to the Madison account has sparked further investigation and connected her with the dubious Castle Grande real estate deal...
...worst news for the Clintons is the appearance of the records in plain sight. Huber told the committee she was in the book room days before her discovery and saw no papers on the table. Asked if she thought someone had deposited them deliberately in the interim, she answered, "Someone had." If the papers were knowingly withheld while under subpoena, that someone might have committed a felony...
...blood. Declared North Carolina Republican Lauch Faircloth: "We have no choice but to depose the First Lady and Mr. Clinton on the reasonable assumption of possible obstruction of justice." That may be premature, since in addition to the Clintons, the book room is accessible to guests, some servants and Huber herself. But the list is finite, the White House keeps a guest log, and Starr is said to have the fbi dusting the printouts for fingerprints...
...Clinton has considered trying to steal D'Amato's thunder by going voluntarily before his committee. That, some White House aides think, would be the climax of the hearings, and then the sensation would be over. But that scenario supposes, maybe too hopefully, an end to discoveries like Carolyn Huber...
...Senate, White House aide Carolyn Huber explained that she had indeed discovered Hillary Rodham Clinton's long-sought law-firm billing records--but only after the records unexpectedly turned up on a table in the book room of the White House residence. That prompted Republicans to pounce and say they would seek further information. Earlier, former presidential aide David Watkins told a House committee that it was he, and not the First Lady, who ordered the controversial 1993 firings of White House travel employees. He did concede, however, that he felt pressure coming from Mrs. Clinton...