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WHITEWATER
TIMELINE
1978
Arkansas
Attorney General Bill Clinton and Hillary
Clinton join with James B. and Susan McDougal to
borrow $203,000 to buy 220 acres of land in
Arkansas' Ozark Mountains. They soon form the
Whitewater Development Corp., intending to build
vacation homes.
Clinton is
elected governor.
1980
Clinton loses
his reelection bid and enters private legal
practice.
James McDougal,
who served briefly as Gov. Clinton's economic
development director, quits government to buy a
small bank in Kingston, Ark. He loans $30,000 to
Hillary Clinton to build a model house on a
Whitewater lot.
1982
McDougal buys a
small savings and loan and names it Madison
Guaranty.
After two years
as a private citizen, Clinton is once again
elected governor.
1984
Federal
regulators begin to question the financial
stability and lending practices of Madison
Guaranty, criticizing Madison's speculative land
deals, insider-lending and hefty commissions
paid to the McDougals and others.
Clinton is
reelected.
1985
James McDougal
holds a fund-raising event at Madison Guaranty
to help pay off a $50,000 Clinton campaign debt.
Investigators later determine some of the money
was improperly withdrawn from depositor funds.
McDougal hires
the Rose Law Firm, where Hillary Clinton is a
partner, to do legal work for the ailing savings
and loan.
Hillary Clinton
and another Rose lawyer seek state regulatory
approval for recapitalization plan for Madison.
1986
McDougal borrows
$300,000 from a company owned by David Hale, a
former Little Rock judge. Hale's company
receives federal funds from the Small Business
Administration to lend to disadvantaged business
owners, but an investigation 10 years later
alleges that he lent up to $3 million to
political figures instead.
Citing improper
practices, federal regulators remove McDougal as
Madison Guaranty's president, but he retains
ownership.
1988
Witnesses from
the Rose Law Firm say Hillary Clinton requested
the destruction of Madison land contract files.
Hillary Clinton
writes James McDougal to ask for power of
attorney to sell off remaining Whitewater lots
and clear up bank obligations.
1989
Madison Guaranty
collapses after a series of bad loans and a
change in government accounting procedures. The
federal government shuts it down and spends $60
million bailing it out.
James McDougal
is indicted on federal fraud charges related to
his management of a Madison real estate
subsidiary.
1990
McDougal is
acquitted.
1992
The Clinton
presidential campaign gathers information on
Whitewater and Madison Guaranty. A report
commissioned by the campaign claims the Clintons
lost $68,000 on Whitewater, an estimate later
adjusted down to somewhat over $40,000.
The Federal
Resolution Trust Corp., investigating causes of
Madison's failure, sends a referral to the
Justice Department that names the Clintons as
"potential beneficiaries" of illegal activities
at Madison.
January 1993
Clinton's first
term as president begins.
May 1993
White House
fires seven employees in the travel office,
possibly to make room for Clinton friends. An
FBI investigation of the office ensues,
allegedly opened under pressure from the White
House to justify the firings.
June 1993
Deputy White
House Counsel Vincent Foster files three years
of delinquent Whitewater corporate tax returns.
July 1993
Foster is found
dead in a Washington area park. Police rule the
death a suicide. Federal investigators are not
allowed access to Foster's office immediately
after the discovery, but White House aides enter
Foster's office shortly after his death, giving
rise to speculation that files were removed from
his office.
September 1993
First of three
meetings in which Treasury Department officials
tip off Clinton aides about the progress of the
RTC investigation.
October 1993
RTC's criminal
referral is rejected by Paula Casey, U.S.
attorney in Little Rock and former law student
of Bill Clinton.
December 1993
The White House
agrees to turn over Whitewater documents to the
Justice Department, which had been preparing to
subpoena them. These documents include files
found in Foster's office.
January 1994
Attorney General
Janet Reno names New York lawyer and former U.S.
attorney Robert B. Fiske Jr. as special counsel
to investigate the Clintons' involvement in
Whitewater. Fiske announces he will also explore
a potential link between Foster's suicide and
his intimate knowledge of the developing
Whitewater scandal.
February 1994
Republican
attorney Jay Stephens is appointed to head the
Resolution Trust Corp.'s investigation of the
failure of Madison Guaranty.
March 1994
Webster L.
Hubbell abruptly resigns as associate attorney
general after allegations are raised about his
conduct at the Rose Law Firm. Two of Clinton's
top political advisers call business friends and
line up more than $500,000 for Hubbell,
including $100,000 from the Lippo Group. Hubbell
is later convicted of fraud and serves 18 months
in jail.
Summer 1994
The House and
Senate Banking committees begin hearings on
Whitewater. Twenty-nine Clinton administration
officials are subpoenaed or testify at
congressional hearings. All are cleared of any
wrongdoing.
August 5, 1994
A U.S. Court of
Appeals panel refuses to re-appoint Fiske as
special counsel, citing a possible conflict of
interest because he was appointed by Clinton's
attorney general, Janet Reno. Kenneth W. Starr,
a former federal appeals court judge and U.S.
solicitor who worked in the Reagan and Bush
administrations, succeeds Fiske as the
independent counsel to investigate
Whitewater-Madison matters. He reissues
subpoenas for documents, such as the Rose
billing records of Hillary Clinton.
Jan. 3, 1995
The Democratic
majority on the Senate Banking Committee
releases a report finding no laws were broken in
the Whitewater matter.
April 22, 1995
Starr interviews
the Clintons privately.
July 18, 1995
The Senate
Special Whitewater Committee, chaired by
Republican Alfonse D'Amato, begins hearings on
Whitewater and on Foster's suicide. D'Amato is
also a chairman of Republican Bob Dole's
presidential campaign. The hearings last 11
months.
Aug. 10, 1995
The House
Banking Committee, chaired by Republican Jim
Leach of Iowa, finishes its examination and
finds no illegalities.
Aug. 17, 1995
A grand jury
charges James and Susan McDougal and Arkansas
Gov. Jim Guy Tucker with bank fraud relating to
questionable loans.
Oct. 26, 1995
The Senate
Whitewater committee issues 49 subpoenas to
federal agencies and others involved in the
affair.
Dec. 12, 1995
White House
associate counsel William H. Kennedy III, who
worked at the Rose Law Firm, refuses to release
subpoenaed notes of a 1993 meeting between
administration officials and the president's
lawyers about Whitewater.
Dec. 20, 1995
The Senate votes
along party lines to enforce the subpoena. The
next day, the White House drops its claim to
attorney-client privilege and releases the
notes. They prove vague and do not reveal any
illegality, but contain the phrase "Vacuum Rose
law files WWDC Docs – subpoena."
Jan. 4, 1996
Hillary
Clinton's billing records from the Rose Law Firm
are found on a table in the White House
residence book room after two years. Clinton
aide Carolyn Huber says she found the bills in
August 1995 but didn't realize their
significance until coming across them again. The
documents include copies of bills for Hillary
Clinton's legal work, showing she performed 60
hours of legal work for Madison in 1985 and
1986.
Jan. 8, 1996
In a commentary
titled "Blizzard of Lies," New York Times
columnist William Safire describes Hillary
Clinton as "a congenital liar." White House
press secretary Michael McCurry said if Clinton
were not president he "would have delivered a
more forceful response to that [column] on the
bridge of Mr. Safire's nose."
Jan. 15, 1996
Republicans
suggest billing documents may have been withheld
from their investigation to disguise how much
work Hillary Clinton had done for Madison
Guaranty. The White House issues a denial.
Jan. 22, 1996
Kenneth Starr
subpoenas Hillary Clinton in a criminal probe to
determine if records were intentionally
withheld. This is the first time a wife of a
sitting president has been subpoenaed.
Jan. 26, 1996
Hillary Clinton
testifies before a grand jury about the
discovery and content of the billing records.
March 4, 1996
Whitewater trial
of Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy Tucker (D) and the
McDougals begins in Little Rock.
April 22, 1996
David Hale, the
former owner of a government-funded lending
company who has pleaded guilty to two felonies,
testifies at Whitewater trial that in early 1985
then governor Bill Clinton pressured him to make
a fraudulent $300,000 loan to Susan McDougal and
asked that his name be kept out of the
transaction.
April 28, 1996
Clinton
testifies on videotape as a defense witness for
just over four hours. He denies Hale's charge.
The tape is played to the Whitewater trial jury
on May 9.
May 26, 1996
Gov. Tucker and
the McDougals are convicted of nearly all the
fraud and conspiracy charges Starr lodged
against them 10 months earlier.
May 28, 1996
The White House
acknowledges that during four months in late
1993 it wrongly collected FBI background reports
on hundreds, including prominent Republicans.
Director of personnel security, Craig
Livingstone, later takes responsibility.
June 17, 1996
"Second"
Whitewater trial begins. Arkansas bankers Herby
Branscum Jr. and Robert Hill are accused of
illegally using bank funds to reimburse
themselves for political contributions,
including contributions to Clinton's
gubernatorial and presidential campaigns.
June 18, 1996
The Senate
Whitewater committee finishes its investigation.
Republicans and Democrats remain divided in
their respective reports on whether the Clintons
committed any ethical breaches.
July 7, 1996 
President
Clinton testifies on tape for the second
Whitewater trial.
July 15, 1996
Jim Guy Tucker
resigns as governor of Arkansas.
July 16 & 17, 1996
Deputy White
House Counsel Bruce Lindsey, named an unindicted
co-conspirator in the Branscum-Hill trial,
testifies about his role as the treasurer of
Clinton's gubernatorial reelection effort in
1990. He says he never sought to conceal from
regulators two large cash withdrawals he
ordered.
July 18, 1996
President
Clinton's videotaped testimony from July 7 is
aired at the trial. In it, Clinton denies naming
the two defendants to unsalaried state posts in
exchange for contributions to his 1990
gubernatorial campaign.
Aug. 1, 1996
In a major
setback for Starr's investigation, Branscum and
Hill are cleared on four counts of bank fraud by
a federal jury, which deadlocks on seven other
charges.
Aug. 19, 1996
Former governor
Tucker receives a suspended four-year sentence
after his doctor testifies that he would likely
die of liver disease if imprisoned. Tucker is
placed under home detention and fined $319,000.
Aug. 20, 1996
Susan McDougal
is sentenced to two years in prison for her role
in obtaining an illegal loan for the Whitewater
venture.
Sept. 4, 1996
Susan McDougal,
who had considered cooperating with prosecutors,
says she doesn't trust them. She enters jail for
contempt of court rather than testify in front
of a grand jury.
Sept. 23, 1996
An FDIC
inspector general's report concludes Hillary
Clinton drafted a real estate document that
Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan used to
"deceive" federal regulators in 1986.
Sept. 30, 1996
The General
Accounting Office reports that independent
counsels investigating President Clinton and his
administration have spent more than $25 million.
Starr alone has spent more than $17 million.
Nov. 24, 1996
Clinton's former
campaign strategist for the 1992 election, James
Carville, announces plans to attack Starr as a
partisan hatchet man with a right-wing agenda.
Feb. 17, 1997
Starr
unexpectedly announces he will leave his post as
independent counsel in August to become the dean
of Pepperdine University Law School in
California. After much criticism, Starr reverses
his decision four days later and resolves to
keep his post until after the investigation is
completed.
April 10, 1997
On a radio talk
show, Hillary Clinton denies that hush money was
arranged for former law partner Webster L.
Hubbell. She says Whitewater reminds her "of
some people's obsession with UFOs and the Hale-Bopp
comet some days."
April 14, 1997
James B.
McDougal is sentenced to three years in prison
for his conviction on 18 fraud and conspiracy
charges. Starr requested a reduced sentence for
McDougal for assisting the prosecution.
April 22, 1997
The U.S.
District Court extends the Whitewater grand
jury's term six more months, until Nov. 7, after
Starr says he has "extensive evidence" of
possible obstruction of justice.
April 25, 1997
8th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals, overruling a lower court, says
the White House must turn over subpoenaed notes
to Starr. The notes, for which the White House
claimed attorney-client privilege, were taken by
White House lawyers when investigators
questioned the First Lady.
May 2, 1997
The White House
announces that it will appeal the decision on
the subpoenaed notes to the Supreme Court.
June 23, 1997
The Supreme
Court refuses to hear the appeal, and the White
House turns over the notes.
June 25, 1997
The Washington
Post reports that Whitewater prosecutors have
been questioning Arkansas state troopers about
President Clinton's personal life, including
possible extramarital affairs he may have had
while Arkansas governor.
July 15, 1997
Starr's office
concludes that Vincent Foster's death in 1993
was a suicide.
July 30, 1997
Susan McDougal,
being detained for contempt of court, is moved
into a federal detention facility after seven
months in two Los Angeles jails, much of which
she spent locked in a windowless cell 23 hours a
day. The move comes a week after the American
Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit alleging
that McDougal was being held, at Starr's
request, in "barbaric" conditions in an attempt
to coerce her to testify.
Sept. 30, 1997
The General
Accounting Office announces that Starr had spent
over $25 million on his investigation as of
March 1997.
January 16, 1998
Starr receives
permission to expand his investigation into
whether Clinton and his close friend Vernon E.
Jordan Jr. encouraged a 24-year-old former White
House intern to lie under oath about her alleged
affair with the president.
March 8, 1998
James McDougal
dies just months before he hoped to be released
from prison.
April 1, 1998
The General
Accounting Office announces that Starr had spent
nearly $30 million on his investigation as of
September 1997.
April 16, 1998
Starr says there
is no end in sight to his investigation, and
officially declines the Pepperdine job, which
was being held open for him.
April 23, 1998
Susan McDougal,
finally serving her two-year fraud sentence
after completing her 18-month contempt of court
sentence, refuses yet again to testify before
Starr's Little Rock grand jury.
April 25, 1998
Starr and
deputies question Hillary Rodham Clinton about
Whitewater for nearly five hours at the White
House. The testimony is videotaped for the
Little Rock grand jury.
April 30, 1998
A new set of tax
evasion and fraud charges is brought against
Webster Hubbell.
May 4, 1998
Susan McDougal
is indicted on charges of criminal contempt and
obstruction.
April 30, 1998
A federal judge
dismisses the tax and fraud charges against
Hubbell and criticizes Starr for going on "the
quintessential fishing expedition."
Nov. 13, 1998
Starr brings a
third indictment against Hubbell, this one
alleging lies to Congress and federal banking
regulators.
Nov. 19, 1998
During the first
day of impeachment hearings, Starr clears
Clinton in relation to the firing of White House
travel office workers in 1993 and the improper
collection of FBI files revealed in 1996. He
also says his office drafted an impeachment
referral stemming from Whitewater in 1997, but
decided not to send it because the evidence was
insufficient
From:
The Washingthon
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