Word: vincents
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Senate Whitewater hearings lumbered into their second week. The most dramatic testimony: a Secret Service officer who testified that he had seen the First Lady's chief of staff, Maggie Williams, remove files from deputy counsel Vincent Foster's office on the night of his suicide-and Williams' emphatic testimony that she had done no such thing. The handling of Foster's files are at the heart of allegations that the White House impeded the investigation into his death in order to protect the Clintons from Whitewater disclosures...
Headed by New York's Alfonse D'Amato, a special Senate committee launched yet another investigation into the Clintons' Whitewater financial dealings, a probe Republicans hope will prove politically bruising to the Administration. The initial focus of the hearings -- the handling of documents in deputy counsel Vincent Foster's office by White House aides after Foster's suicide -- broke little new ground. On Saturday the Clintons gave depositions on Whitewater for the second time to independent counsel Kenneth Starr...
...White House attorney, Clifford Sloan, discovered and called attention to scraps of paper in Vincent Foster's briefcase while searching Foster's office two days after he died, but was rebuffed by then-White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum, Foster attorney Michael Spafford told a congressional panel today. "This is troubling," responded GOP Senator Alfonse D'Amato, who is chairingthe Whitewater Hearings. Republicans have repeatedly questioned why it took the White House six days after Foster's death to discover the torn suicide note and another 30 hours to release it to the public. But that night, Spafford recalled, getting Foster...
...indications that Hillary Clinton was more directly involved in the handling of Vincent Foster's files than previously acknowledged were expected to raise temperatures atSenate Whitewater hearingsas Mrs. Clinton's chief of staff, Maggie Williams, testified today. TIME Washington correspondent Suneel Ratan says that while the new information about exchanges between Williams and Mrs. Clinton two days after Foster committed suicide "doesn't show the first lady ordered the separation and removal of documents, it puts her closer to the action and conceivably suggests a closer involvement." Earlier today, Senators questioned Secret Service agent Henry O'Neill, who had vivid...
...called before panel. TIME Daily reported exclusively on Monday that Sens. Lauch Faircloth of North Carolina and Rod Grams of Minnesota intended to ask that Mrs. Clinton be called to testify on whether sheplayed any role in the removal of papers from the office of former White House aide Vincent Foster shortly after his 1993 suicide."Unless there is clear and convincing facts and reasons that necessitate the first lady's appearance, I certainly have no intention of calling her before this committee," D'Amato said when the hearings convened today. "There would have to be very, very strong evidence...