Word: lindseyism
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Certainly the tax question hits a raw nerve. Presidential adviser Bruce Lindsey, a former Arkansas lawyer designated to field inquiries about Whitewater, angrily implies that TIME wants to write "a story that the Clintons are tax cheats." (Wrong: any underpayment could have been the result of excessively casual bookkeeping or following bad advice.) Lindsey also brandishes a folder containing copies of canceled checks that he says document all the Clintons' tax deductions related to Whitewater, which he insists are legitimate. But he refuses to make any public, complaining that the press would only report such information wrongly. The White House...
...White House in large part has itself to blame for the tax questions coming up now. They arise largely because Lindsey tried yet again to explain how the Clintons could have lost $68,900 in Whitewater, as attorney James Lyons claimed in a 1992 report issued on their behalf, when they had not documented that they had invested anywhere near that much. Lindsey told the Associated Press that slightly more than $41,000 of the loss consisted of interest the Clintons paid on Whitewater-related loans and deducted on their federal income tax returns. Lindsey told TIME that the rest...
...would a lawyer ask the Justice Department to subpoena some of the papers of his own clients -- especially if those clients are the President of the U.S. and his wife? White House senior adviser Bruce Lindsey has a simple . answer: "Privacy." Indeed, subpoenaed papers become part of the record of a criminal investigation, unavailable for release under the Freedom of Information Act and thus shielded more effectively than otherwise from Congress and the press...
...executive from the opposing S&L, Denton learned several days later that Hillary had suddenly withdrawn from the case. Why? She had discovered that her prestigious Rose Law Firm was already representing the opposing thrift in another case. "The conflict issue should have been resolved earlier," complains Denton. Bruce Lindsey, a senior adviser to the President and an old Arkansas friend, defends the action. "Assuming this happened, I don't see why this is important or unusual," he said...
While Clinton's intervention may have forced management back to the bargaining table, it leaves unresolved the cost-cutting issues that gave rise to the dispute. None of that mattered, however, as jubilant flight attendants scrambled back to work. Among those holiday travelers heaving sighs of relief was Lindsey himself; on Wednesday night, the White House adviser boarded a previously booked flight home to Arkansas -- on American Airlines...