Word: subpoenaing
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Billy Ray Dale, former White House travel office chief, pleaded not guilty to embezzling money paid by the news media for travel with the president, and asked the judge for the right to subpoena records from Hillary Rodham Clinton and other White House officials to prove his innocence. Among the records sought are those of the late Vincent Foster, the deputy White House counsel who committed suicide. Dale is accused of wrongfully pocketing at least $33,297. "Mr. Dale never spent a penny of government money or media money," his attorney, Steven C. Tabackman, said outside court. Dale claims that...
...President Clinton thoughtWhitewater was a nightmare so far. . . just wait. Both future House and Senate committee chairs overseeing financial institutions are banking on going after the president once again -- this time with full subpoena-power and without pesky Dems curtailing their grilling of administration witnesses. Sen. Alfonse D'Amato (R-N.Y.), destined to chair the Banking Committee, says he'llresume hearingswithin 60 days of taking power in January. And he said he would not hesitate to use his subpoena power "if we find people not being cooperative." Rep. Jim Leach (R-Ia.), who will chair the House Banking Committee...
...using its legal muscle to find out why juicy snippets of information about their client end up nightly on America's TV screens. They're forcing a reporter for KNBC-TV, her boss, the Los Angeles police chief and the spokesman for the department to testify in court under subpoena. KNBC-TV, you recall, was the station that reported DNA tests linked blood on O.J.'s socks to that of Nicole Simpson. KNBC-TV reporter Tracie Savage later said her sources provided inaccurate information. Judge Lance Ito will take up the issue of leaks tomorrow...
...marked "Whitewater" to Williams, who then had it stored on the third floor of the White House residence. Five days later, the papers were transferred to the Clintons' personal attorney. They eventually reached special counsel Robert Fiske, but not voluntarily, as the White House first said. Fiske had to subpoena them. What's more, the White House now admits that Williams acted at Mrs. Clinton's direction after she phoned the First Lady in Little Rock. Mrs. Clinton may not have known all the details, but she was directly responsible for some of the details that mattered most -- and that...
...alleged trysts as Governor. Wright is also a prime source for reporters looking for dirt on Clinton's pesky accusers. But her expertise in Clinton arcana is costing her too. Friends say her lobbyist's salary won't cover the hefty legal fees already incurred complying with an expected subpoena from Whitewater prosecutor Robert Fiske...