Word: loaned
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Major players in the trial included France G.Schwartz, a former attorney in Walsh's firm whohad a romantic relationship with the citycouncilor; Ann Jarosiewicz, an assistant toSchwartz; Dennis Cargill, real estate broker andformer close business associate of Walsh; andArthur E. Peach, a loan representative at Dime...
When the returns were finally released last week, they did indeed show a total of about $22,000 for 1978 and 1979 in Whitewater-related interest deductions on two loans. Those included $10,131 that the Clintons say they paid in 1978 to Great Southern Land Co., a company mostly owned by McDougal that he now says handled payments to the Whitewater lending institutions at that time. In the following year, the returns show the Clintons paying $11,749 directly to "banks and loan companies," as well as $238 to McDougal. A new accounting of the Clintons' Whitewater investment released...
...President admitted to something like a recovered memory when he announced that he and his wife had not lost $68,900 on Whitewater, the figure they have claimed since 1992. While reading the manuscript of his late mother's forthcoming autobiography, Clinton said, he remembered taking out a loan to help her buy property and a cabin in Arkansas. When questions about Whitewater first arose during the 1992 campaign, Denver attorney James Lyons, who was hired by the Clinton campaign to examine and report on the deal, had included that loan as one related to Whitewater. It became part...
Stephens and other lawyers in the Washington office of San Francisco's Pillsbury Madison & Sutro have been retained by the Resolution Trust Corporation to investigate civil claims flowing from the failure of Little Rock's Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan, the institution run by James McDougal, the Clintons' partner in Whitewater Development Corp. Stephens won't elaborate on his work, which began last month, but it's likely to bring more heat on Clinton. Sources close to the investigation describe Pillsbury's effort as "the civil equivalent of ((Whitewater special counsel Robert)) Fiske...
Take their response to Whitewater itself. Hillary Clinton calls routine inquiries into her cozy dealings with a sleazy Arkansas savings and loan a "well organized" and "well financed" campaign by those with "a different political agenda" and "financial" motives. Stands to reason. Who could oppose an apostle of political virtue but those who, for the most selfish of reasons, wish to stop her good works? The President angrily declares that "the American people can worry about something else" than his wife's "moral compass." The Clintons do not just deny wrongdoing in Whitewater. They take offense at the very suggestion...