Word: subpoenaing
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Minutes isn't the only place where Wigand is going--or would have gone--public. Last week he was served a subpoena in Mississippi. State attorney general Mike Moore wants him to testify in the preliminary phase of a Medicaid reimbursement suit against the tobacco industry. The case attempts to make the tobacco industry compensate state taxpayers for funds spent on the tobacco-related illness and death of indigent citizens...
...today he will probe explosive allegations concerning how and where Foster died. On Wednesday, FBI agents once again searched the Ft. Marcy park area where Foster's body was found by park rangers, looking again for the bullet that killed him. D'Amato told CBS Radio that he will subpoena a White House employee who told friends in Arkansas that Foster shot himself in his car, on the White House grounds. Foster's body was found several miles away in the park. The White House employee, reports TIME's Suneel Rataan, is Helen Dickey, who was then Chelsea Clinton...
House Speaker Newt Gingrich testified behind closed Ethics Committee doors for three hours about the propriety of his controversial book deal. Afterward, the senior Democrat on the committee accused the panel of botching the probe by refusing to conduct a full-fledged formal investigation with subpoena powers and outside counsel...
...would like to urge you, as the ranking member to call her." So far,TIME's James Carneynotes, all committee requests for testimony and evidence have come jointly from D'Amato and the ranking Democrat, Sen. Paul Sarbanes of Maryland. (Only D'Amato has sole authority to issue a subpoena.) "The White House posture is that it's insignificant unless and until D'Amato and Sarbanes request that she testify," Carney says. "There's no unanimity among the Senate Republicans, because they know that it's dangerous to go after...
...carried out. So far, TIME's James Carney notes, all committee requests for testimony and evidence have come jointly from the Republican chairman, Sen. Al D'Amato of New York, and the ranking Democrat, Sen. Paul Sarbanes of Maryland. (Only D'Amato has sole authority to issue a subpoena.) "The White House posture is that it's insignificant unless and until D'Amato and Sarbanes request that she testify," Carney says. "There's no unanimity among the Senate Republicans, because they know that it's dangerous to go after her. She's still the First Lady, and it could backfire...