Word: requester
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...senior vice president William Roelle pulled Altman aside and informed him of the ongoing probe against Madison Guaranty. Two days later, Altman faxed a copy of a 1992 New York Times story on Madison and Whitewater to White House counsel Nussbaum. On Sept. 24, 1993, with Altman's original request for updates in mind, Roelle told Altman about the progress of the RTC's probe into Madison. Roelle explained that the RTC was about to send to the Justice Department nine separate criminal referrals, including at least one naming the Clintons as possible beneficiaries -- wittingly or unwittingly -- of illegal activity...
NATO planes bombed a target near Sarajevo as punishment to the Bosnian Serbs for seizing weapons from a U.N. depot. At least one antitank gun was confirmed hit, the Pentagon said. Sixteen NATO planes executed the attack, at the request of the U.N. The Bosnian Serbs apparently learned their lesson after the NATO strike and agreed to return the weapons they took. The latest attack represents a tightening of the noose around the Bosnian Serbs, who have few friends left. According to TIME's Central Europe bureau chief James L. Graff, Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic today enforced...
...pursue the death penalty against Simpson, Los Angeles attorney Gloria Allred wrote to the district attorney on behalf of the Women's Equal Rights Legal Defense and Education Fund: "Since you have chosen to meet & publicly with a group expressing support for Mr. Simpson's rights, I respectfully request that you now meet with those of us who are concerned about the rights of battered women and who are urging you to consider asking for the death penalty...
Name Withheld on Request...
Prosecutors and defenders battled over the defense's request to independently test blood found at the murder scene and at Simpson's estate. But Superior Court Judge Lance Ito said he would hold off on dividing the samples until he heard from experts on whether this would leave the prosecution with enough samples for its testing. Lawyers on both sides of the case were sharply critical of each other as the day wore on, and rightly so, says TIME law writer Andrea Sachs. "It's not surprising that there's a battle going on the DNA testing," says Sachs...