[Congressional Record Volume 146, Number 47 (Thursday, April 13, 2000)] [Senate] [Pages S2653-S2655] From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov] INDEPENDENT COUNSEL Mr. REID. Mr. President, this past Tuesday, the Washington Post carried a story reporting that Independent Counsel Robert Ray, a lawyer who was trained in prosecutorial ethics by Rudolph Giuliani and who took over the special prosecutor duties from Ken Starr, is planning on continuing and even expanding his investigation of President Clinton. Mr. Ray has hired six new prosecutors and another investigator and plans to increase spending over the next 6 months by $3.5 million. Under this plan, he is seriously considering indicting the President after he leaves office for a number of things. He includes perjury, obstruction of justice, making false statements, and even conspiracy. When I read this story, to say the least, I was surprised. One year ago, I stood in this Chamber at this same seat during the impeachment trial of the President of the United States and compared what was happening then to literature. I can no longer make that comparison because what is happening here is too outlandish and unbelievable to qualify anymore as literature. Every great story has an ending. Every play has a denouement. This investigation has already lasted 6 years. It has cost Nevada taxpayers and the taxpayers of this country more than $52 million, not counting the money this new prosecutor wants to spend in the next 6 months. More than the length of this proceeding, more than the cost of this proceeding, this story has crossed the line from Kafka to ``The Twilight Zone.'' It has drifted from prosecutorial intemperance to the brink of lunacy. A number of years ago, the very articulate, brilliant Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia criticized the independent counsel statute. He pointed out that with the typical criminal case, the prosecutor starts with a crime and then looks for the perpetrator. But with an independent counsel, the prosecutor starts with a suspect and searches to find a crime--any crime--to charge him or her with. Once placed in office, the prosecutor has built-in pressure to bring a charge rather than exonerate his target in order to justify his very existence; and in this instance, the tens of millions of dollars already spent. There is no more perfect example to what Justice Scalia was talking about than this so-called case. Let's trace the confused and wandering thread of this narrative. This all began with the 20-year-old land deal called Whitewater--an Arkansas land deal 1,500 miles from here. The special prosecutor spent millions of dollars. Nothing turned up. But he kept going. He put a woman by the name of Susan McDougal in jail for 2 years, even though she had committed no crime. There is no debate about that. And she had never been convicted in a court of law. There is no debate about that. Why? He wanted her to change her testimony and implicate the President and the people at the White House. She would not do that. She went to jail. Eventually, after an innocent person, who had never been accused of a crime, had languished in jail for years, he gave up on Whitewater. He, the prosecutor, gave up on Whitewater, but he did not give up on looking for something on the White House. First, he investigated the unfortunate death of Vince Foster and reached [[Page S2654]] the same conclusion other investigators had already reached. It was a suicide. I am personally resentful of what the prosecutor did in this instance. What he put the Foster family through is untoward, unfair, and immoral. My father committed suicide. It is very difficult for a family to go through a suicide. Vince Foster was a good man. No one ever disputed that. He was despondent. He killed himself. That should have ended it. But no, what Starr wanted to do was to bring in all these conspiratorial theories that the President had had him killed. Can you imagine that? One of the President's best friends, and he not only drags the President through this, but he also drags the Foster family through this. This not only was immoral, in my opinion, but it cost millions of dollars. What did he get to show for it? Nothing. Then this prosecutor--persecutor, some would call him--took a look at the 1993 firings at the White House Travel Office, and reached the same conclusion that other investigators had reached. There was nothing there. Millions of dollars more, and nothing to show for it. Then he took a look at a deposition in a civil suit brought by Paula Jones. That suit was dismissed by a Federal judge. But no matter, the prosecutor hired to look at a land deal had struck gold with a lie about a sex act in a case that was dismissed. He latched on to it, and refused to let go. It did not matter that he did not have jurisdiction over this issue. He created jurisdiction by filing a statement with the Attorney General of the United States asserting the case had fallen into his lap by accident, when in fact there was credible evidence, sound evidence, that his staff had been in close contact with Paula Jones' lawyers from the very beginning and had worked with them and fed them information. This is supposedly an unbiased prosecutor. He was obviously so excited about what he had found that he began leaking information to the press in violation of Federal law and Justice Department regulations. The court appointed an investigator to investigate the investigator. But no matter, he had found something that he could use to justify the millions of dollars he was spending, and he was not about to give it up. His investigators questioned Monica Lewinsky alone in a hotel room. Can you imagine the audacity of this young woman asking for a lawyer? She asked for a lawyer. They denied her request. They would not let legal niceties get in their way. A first-year law student knows a person being investigated for a crime is entitled to a lawyer. But not Ken Starr's minions. The main evidence he had in this case were the tapes, the surreptitious tapes made by one Linda Tripp, who has been charged criminally by a Maryland grand jury for wiretapping. It did not matter that the tapes were made illegally. He was going to use them anyway. He kept on going. Still not enough. When Monica Lewinsky would not cooperate with his probe, he dragged her parents before the grand jury. He subpoenaed bookstores to find out what kind of books they were buying and reading. The public was appalled. I was appalled. But he was still going to go ahead. Still not enough. After investigating for a year, the independent counsel released a report to Congress that was embarrassing in its sexual explicitness and even more embarrassing in its biased reporting of the facts. Monica Lewinsky said she had never been asked to lie and was never promised a job. But Prosecutor Starr never mentioned this once in the hundreds of pages of his report. It was so biased and so one sided that this, among other things, turned the public against the independent counsel and his unethical practices and unethical tactics. But no matter, he kept on going. Still not enough. The House of Representatives voted to impeach on a straight party- line vote. This body, the Senate of the United States, voted on a bipartisan basis not to convict the President on any charge. Democrats and Republicans, listening to the evidence, voted not to convict. The Congress of the United States then decided not to renew this awful law that authorized the independent counsel. I always opposed it. The law died last summer. And rightfully so. For 200 years, the Justice Department has done a good job. Over time, with the independent counsel we have had some real travesties. During the Reagan administration, what was done to that President by the independent counsel was wrong. We could go through other examples. But even though the law died last summer, and it should have stopped there, it did not. Still, Starr had not had enough. After failing to convict the President, in one last, desperate grab at the glory that he thought had escaped him, Starr focused the power of his office on a story told by a person by the name of Kathleen Willey--a story of an alleged touch that was completely irrelevant to his mandate. Remember--Whitewater, Arkansas, 1,500 miles away. When a friend of Ms. Willey, named Julie Hyatt Steele, dared to contradict the story, in effect, saying that Kathleen Willey was lying--how could she dare do such a thing?--Starr indicted her for perjury. And not only that--she could probably handle the perjury charge, which was so baseless--he threatened to have her children taken away from her. Who are these children? This good woman adopted orphans from Romania; and he threatened to send them back to Romania. What a guy--an innocent woman and her orphan-adopted children. These are the trophies that special prosecutor Ken Starr had to show for all of his efforts and all the pain he had caused. But, no, still not enough. Our weary Nation was thankful when Starr began scaling down his investigation and, in October, finally resigned. I thought that was the end of the story. Most Americans thought that was the end of the story. But surprisingly, apparently, shockingly, it is not the end. Still not enough. The lynch mob, though, now has a new leader, one who is willing to prejudge the facts and unbalance the law in the spirit of his mentor, Rudy Giuliani, and, of course, his predecessor, Ken Starr. The new mob leader is Robert Ray. Apparently, he is not going to let the acquittal by this body, or the resignation of his predecessor, or the expiration of the statute under which he supposedly is acting, stand in his way. Still not enough. This is a long, sad, and sordid story that should have ended long ago. The Office of the Independent Counsel has repeatedly stepped over the line of decency in its quest to find something--anything--on the President. Now, the new special prosecutor says he is considering indicting the President after he leaves office next year. I say, enough is enough. The President has been tried in this body. He has been acquitted. He suffered. His family suffered. His legacy is forever tarnished. He is deeply in debt to his lawyers. The Arkansas bar is considering withdrawing his license to practice law. He has not gone unpunished. Apparently, that is not enough for Mr. Ray; still, not enough. In primitive legal systems, such as those of Communist countries and other totalitarian dictatorships, every minor technical violation of the law is met with the full force and fury of the government. Police are to be feared. But the greatness of our legal system is that it recognizes that because human beings are frail and fall short of perfection, mercy must season justice. At its heart, criminal law and the prosecutors charged with enforcing it exist to serve and protect the public. Our legal system contemplates discretion. Not every violation of the law should be pursued to the fullest extent because not every crime is the same. The decision not to prosecute or not to bring certain charges is as much of a prosecutor's job as a decision to bring charges. When the impeachment hearings began, I cosponsored a censure resolution that in lieu of impeachment proceedings would have specifically provided the President remain subject to criminal actions in a court of law, such as any other citizen. That resolution was opposed in this body by Senators who instead voted to go down the impeachment road. I was a trial lawyer before I came here. I understand there are offers of [[Page S2655]] settlement made and withdrawn. That was an offer of settlement that attempted to expedite things and not have the spectacle that took place in the Senate. But once it was decided that the proper legal course of action was to pursue the constitutional impeachment proceeding, the decision should have been final and binding. It was still not enough. Even Ken Starr, the original prosecutor, is quoted in published reports as holding the belief that once the Senate acts on an impeachment vote, further criminal actions are totally inappropriate. There is a concept in our system of justice known as double jeopardy. It applies here. That doctrine holds that there is a limit to what a Government prosecutor can do to a United States citizen. It recognizes that there comes a point where continued investigation crosses the line into inappropriate Government harassment. An investigation into the truth should not be allowed to become a vendetta against an individual. It does recognize that enough is enough. Many of his critics suggest that the President does not have greater rights under the law than any other citizen of this country. I agree. That is true. But equally true is the fact that the President should not have fewer rights than any other citizen. What the President did should not be lightly or easily forgiven, but it should not be blown out of proportion either by an unrelenting, unfair, trophy-seeking prosecutor with an unlimited budget in search of a conviction that won't serve the cause of justice. This case has gone on far too long. Tens of millions of dollars, tragedy, embarrassment, double jeopardy-- enough is enough. It can best be summed up, Mr. President, by syndicated columnist Richard Cohen in today's Washington Post, printed in newspapers all over America, entitled, ``Independent Counsel Overkill'', which ends by saying: Give it up, Bob. Your best way of serving the country is to close down your office, lock the door and put Clinton behind you. The country already has. Mr. President, I yield whatever time I have remaining to the Senator from South Dakota. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has 2\1/2\ minutes remaining. The Senator from South Dakota. Mr. JOHNSON. Mr. President, I appreciate the yielding of time by the gentleman from Nevada. I ask unanimous consent to proceed as in morning business for 5 minutes, and following my remarks, Senator Collins of Maine be recognized to speak for 5 minutes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (The remarks of Mr. Johnson and Ms. Collins pertaining to the introduction of S. 2419 are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced Bills and Joint Resolutions.'') The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senator from Connecticut, Mr. Dodd, or his designee, is recognized to speak for up to 30 minutes. ____________________