The Death of American Virtue: Clinton vs. Starr

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Author: Ken Gormley

ISBN-10: 0307409457

ISBN-13: 9780307409454

Category: U.S. - Political Biography

Ten years after one of the most polarizing political scandals in American history, author Ken Gormley offers an insightful, balanced, and revealing analysis of the events leading up to the impeachment trial of President William Jefferson Clinton. From Ken Starr’s initial Whitewater investigation through the Paula Jones sexual harassment suit to the Monica Lewinsky affair, The Death of American Virtue is a gripping chronicle of an ever-escalating political feeding frenzy.\ In exclusive...

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Ten years after one of the most polarizing political scandals in American history, author Ken Gormley offers an insightful, balanced, and revealing analysis of the events leading up to the impeachment trial of President William Jefferson Clinton. From Ken Starr’s initial Whitewater investigation through the Paula Jones sexual harassment suit to the Monica Lewinsky affair, The Death of American Virtue is a gripping chronicle of an ever-escalating political feeding frenzy.In exclusive interviews, Bill Clinton, Ken Starr, Monica Lewinsky, Paula Jones, Susan McDougal, and many more key players offer candid reflections on that period. Drawing on never-before-released records and documents—including the Justice Department’s internal investigation into Starr, new details concerning the death of Vince Foster, and evidence from lawyers on both sides—Gormley sheds new light on a dark and divisive chapter, the aftereffects of which are still being felt in today’s political climate. The New York Times Book Review - Richard L. Berke …recreates it all, from the Clintons' investment in the Whitewater development in rural Arkansas to the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit and Clinton's affair with Lewinsky, culminating in the impeachment trial. This hefty volume, going beyond the sordid details, provides helpful context for the larger story, the fractionalization of American politics that defined the Clinton years…the sobriety of The Death of American Virtue also offers a relief from the familiar overheated chronicles. Unlike some other commentators, Gormley allows for the possibility that even the most rabid-seeming players might have acted out of honorable considerations.

Prelude: Collision in the Capitol\ Chapter 1 The Impeachment Vote 3\ Chapter 2 Bill Clinton and Ken Starr 15\ Part 1 Arkansas Mischief\ Chapter 3 Breathtaking "Whitewater" 33\ Chapter 4 McDougal Paints the Town 44\ Chapter 5 Seeds of Scandal 57\ Chapter 6 Death Song in the West Wing 66\ Chapter 7 Conspiracy Theories 81\ Chapter 8 The Special Prosecutor 91\ Chapter 9 David Hale Visits Justice Jim 99\ Part 2 Pursuing the President\ Chapter 10 Paula Corbin Jones 115\ Chapter 11 Danny Traylor: "Can We Settle for Five Thousand Dollars?" 128\ Chapter 12 Three Judges in Black 143\ Chapter 13 Ken Starr: Special Prosecutor 155\ Chapter 14 Paula Jones on Film 170\ Chapter 15 Arkansas Felons 184\ Chapter 16 The "Cooperating Witness" 202\ Chapter 17 Paula Jones Goes to Washington 219\ Part 3 The Monica Thread\ Chapter 18 Monica S.Lewinsky 231\ Chapter 19 Inside a Texas Prison 242\ Chapter 20 The Settlement That Never Happened 252\ Chapter 21 Trapped Outside the White House 262\ Chapter 22 The Hundred-Page Referral 270\ Chapter 23 An Unexpected Caller 278\ Chapter 24 A Cubicle in the Pentagon 295\ Chapter 25 Pinning the Tail on Clinton 314\ Chapter 26 Panic in the Justice Department 324\ Chapter 27 Vanity to Prayer 339\ Chapter 28 "The Brace" 348\ Chapter 29 The Avuncular Mr. Ginsburg 362\ Chapter 30 Clinton Takes an Oath 376\ Chapter 31 Scandal in Washington 392\ Part 4 The Grand Confessional\ Chapter 32 A Presidency in Peril 411\ Chapter 33 "Of Trust and Confidence" 420\ Chapter 34 One Nation Divided 431\ Chapter 35 The Vilification of Ken Starr 440\ Chapter 36 A Mother's Collapse 452\ Chapter 37 Last Night in Solitary Confinement 459\ Chapter 38 The Indictment of Hillary Clinton 470\ Chapter 39 Out-Gunning the Secret Service 484\ Chapter 40 Ginsburg's Final Photo Shoot 494\ Chapter 41 Monica's Truth 505\ Chapter 42 The Drudge Revolution 527\ Chapter 43 A Walk in the Woods 532\ Chapter 44 Maximum Peril 552\ Part 5 High Crimes and Misdemeanors\ Chapter 45 Bombshell Report 565\ Chapter 46 Starr Witness 582\ Chapter 47 "Men of the Year" 600\ Chapter 48 Thirteen Angry Managers 614\ Chapter 49 A Scottish Vote 629\ Chapter 50 Clinton's Contempt 646\ Epilogue: White House Exodus\ Chapter 51 "Who Will Blink?" 655\ Chapter 52 Aftermath 671\ Notes 691\ Bibliographical Sources 762\ Acknowledgments 770\ Index 775

\ David Greenberg…a restrained, fair-minded, soup-to-nuts history of the largely fruitless investigations of Bill Clinton that shadowed so much of his presidency…All but the most unregenerate partisans should deem this book fair, even if individual judgments can be challenged…Charitable toward his sources, Gormley lets every character in the drama put his best foot forward.\ —The Washington Post\ \ \ \ \ Janet MaslinThe early parts of the imbroglio, especially the Whitewater real estate investigation involving James and Susan McDougal, are no less confounding than they ever were. But by and large Mr. Gormley has packed his narrative with intense, overdue and definitive testimony about the still-surprising investigation of Mr. Clinton's activities spearheaded by Kenneth W. Starr…Mr. Gormley is as successful in capturing big-picture issues as he is in setting bizarre intimate scenes…And its paradoxes are rich, sad and inescapable.\ —The New York Times\ \ \ Richard L. Berke…recreates it all, from the Clintons' investment in the Whitewater development in rural Arkansas to the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit and Clinton's affair with Lewinsky, culminating in the impeachment trial. This hefty volume, going beyond the sordid details, provides helpful context for the larger story, the fractionalization of American politics that defined the Clinton years…the sobriety of The Death of American Virtue also offers a relief from the familiar overheated chronicles. Unlike some other commentators, Gormley allows for the possibility that even the most rabid-seeming players might have acted out of honorable considerations.\ —The New York Times Book Review\ \ \ \ \ Publishers WeeklyThis book’s readers will quickly think of water. Facts overwhelm you like Niagara. And when you’ve finished reading about President Clinton and special prosecutor Ken Starr, you may want to take a long shower. Gormley, a professor of law at Duquesne (Archibald Cox), reviews the entire sordid business of Clinton’s foolishness and his enemies’ efforts to bring down his presidency. It’s not an edifying tale. Very few of the book’s cast come off well, except for Secret Service officials and a judge or two. If there’s a sympathetic character, it’s Susan McDougal, who refused to rat on her friends. Starr makes error after error and confuses vindictiveness with duty. While not altering the basic story in any way, Gormley gains much from effective interviews 10 years after with participants and his use of newly available documents. While his book is too long, Gormley remains in control of the details, and this riveting first look at events that only future history will put into full relief shows how affairs of sex and enmity can become affairs of state. 24 pages of b&w photos. (Feb.)\ \ \ \ \ Library JournalThe Whitewater investigation, led by independent counsel Kenneth Starr, investigated the scandals that tarnished the Clinton administration—scandals that, says Gormley (law, Duquesne Univ.; Archibald Cox: Conscience of a Nation), diminished respect for the office of the President. The author interviewed many major players, including Bill Clinton himself, who would not discuss the Lewinsky affair. The result is an illuminating account that could overwhelm the general reader with oceans of detail. Starr is presented as a highly respected attorney and not a religious fanatic determined to destroy Clinton. His weakness was his lack of experience as a prosecutor; he later acknowledged that he should not have expanded the Whitewater investigation to include the Lewinsky affair. Starr resigned in 1999, and the Office of Independent Counsel's final report, issued by his successor, Robert Ray, concluded that there was insufficient evidence to prosecute Clinton. VERDICT This is the most complete and likely the most impartial account available of the Clinton scandals. It will appeal to readers of such recent serious works as Richard Sale's Clinton's Secret Wars: The Evolution of a Commander in Chief and Taylor Branch's The Clinton Tapes: Wrestling History with the President.—Karl Helicher, Upper Merion Twp. Lib., King of Prussia, PA\ \ \ \ \ Kirkus ReviewsA law professor revisits the scandals, investigations and trials that crippled and nearly killed a presidency. Three locomotives barreling down separate tracks-independent counsel Ken Starr's investigation of shady Arkansas real-estate and banking transactions, a private lawsuit filed by Paula Jones alleging sexual harassment against President Bill Clinton and the president's dalliance with a White House intern-smashed horribly together Clinton's impeachment hearings in 1998. Gormley (Law/Duquesne Univ; Archibald Cox: Conscience of a Nation, 1997) appears in remarkable possession of every detail pertinent to this complex story, beginning with Jim McDougal's ill-fated 1978 Whitewater land development and ending with a still-secret Department of Justice investigation of the Starr deputies' initial interview of Monica Lewinsky. An acknowledged expert on special prosecutors, Gormley handles the many legal aspects of this story especially well-the inner workings of Starr's office, the strategies of the many defense lawyers representing multiple defendants and the controversial Supreme Court decision that exposed a sitting president to civil suit. He explains the unholy political warfare and the special role played by the mainstream, partisan and emerging Internet press, and he offers sharp snapshots of the many players that marched across TV screens for too many years. For most Americans, an intervening decade is perhaps insufficiently long for reintroduction to the likes of the vapid Lewinsky, her turncoat confidante Linda Tripp, her "avuncular" attorney William Ginsburg, the smarmy Webb Hubbell and the egregious Susan Carpenter-McMillan; too soon to be reminded of the stained dress, theVince Foster suicide, "the vast right-wing conspiracy" or the details of the Starr Report. But for those wishing to understand exactly what happened during this confusing, dismal time, Gormley's informed reporting and evenhanded analysis is the place to start. The entire nightmare vividly recalled. Agent: Mel Berger/William Morris Agency\ \