| 1950s
When Bill Clinton is 7, his family moves from
Hope, Arkansas, to the long-time mob resort of Hot Springs, AR. Here Al
Capone is said to have had permanent rights to suite 443 of the Arlington
Hotel. Clinton's stepfather is a gun-brandishing alcoholic who loses his
Buick franchise through mismanagement and his own pilfering. He physically
abuses his family, including the young Bill. His mother is a heavy gambler
with mob ties. According to FBI and local police officials, his Uncle
Raymond -- to whom young Bill turns for wisdom and support -- is a colorful
car dealer, slot machine owner and gambling operator, who thrives (except
when his house is firebombed) on the fault line of criminality.
PAUL BOSSON, Hot Springs Prosecutor - In Hot
Springs, growing up here, you were living a lie. You lived a lie because you
knew that all of these activities were illegal. I mean, as soon as you got
old enough to be able to read a newspaper, you knew that gambling in
Arkansas was illegal, prostitution was illegal. And so you lived this lie,
so you have to find some way to justify that to yourself and, you know, you
justify it by saying, "Well," you know, "it's okay here."
VIRGINIA KELLY, Clinton's mother (1923-1994) -
Hot Springs was so different. We had wide-open gambling, for one thing, and
it was so wide open that it never occurred to me that it was illegal - it
really didn't - until it came to a vote about whether we were going to
legalize gambling or not. I never was so shocked.
| HOT
SPRINGS BEFORE THE CLINTONS
In
the 1930s, Hot Springs represented the western border of organized crime
in the U.S with the local syndicate headed by Owney Madden, a New York
killer who had taken over the mob's resort in Arkansas. Owney Madden was
an English born gang member who had been arrested more than 40 times in
New York by the time he was 21. Madden got the assignment from his boss,
Myer Lansky. The plan for Arkansas was modeled on an earlier one in
which Governor Huey Long opened a Swiss bank account into which the mob
would put $3 to $4 million annually for the right to run casinos in the
state. Lansky then moved to Hot Springs where he hired Madden, former
operator of Harlem's Cotton Club. According to one account, " The Hot
Springs set up was so luxurious and safe that it became known as a place
for gangsters on the lam to hole up until the heat blew over."
Hot Springs was where Lucky Luciano was
arrested and brought back for trial prosecuted by Thomas E.Dewey.
According to
one account, "Dewey proclaimed Luciano Public Enemy No 1, and a
grand jury returned a criminal indictment against him that carried a
maximum penalty of 1,950 years. . . He was arrested in Hot Springs,
Arkansas, and extradited back to New York. There, in the New York State
Supreme Court he was tried, and on June 7, the verdict of guilty was
returned. Eleven days later, he was sentenced to a total of from
30-to-50 years in state prison. It was the longest sentence ever handed
out for compulsory prostitution."
THE DICE MAN
- There is evidence that many
syndicate groups became involved in Hot Springs. Owney Madden was the
overseer of everything and watched out for the New York mob's interests.
Morris Kleinman, who was one of the founding gangsters of the Cleveland
syndicate spent much time in Hot Springs. It is rumored that the
Cleveland boys had pieces of the profits from Hot Springs gambling.
Johnny Roselli, an "upper level" member of the Chicago mob was a silent
partner in many Hot Springs casinos in the 1940's and 1950's, as was
Frank Costello. All of these groups used local operators as "fronts", a
system perfected by the Cleveland syndicate in Ohio, Florida, and
Kentucky. Since Hot Springs was a very popular tourist spot, the command
went out from the different syndicates that there should be no murders
carried out in Hot Springs. This would be the rule in Las Vegas too. If
bodies littered the streets like in Chicago, it would only hurt
business. Also "petty" crimes like burglary and armed robbery were not
to be tolerated. If the suckers weren't comfortable, they wouldn't come
to Hot Springs.
. . . Owney Madden laid the groundwork for
gangsters "on the lam" to hide out in Hot Springs. The city had a
resort-like atmosphere and elegant nightlife, with people coming and
going all the time. This was the perfect situation to "hide" mobsters
who couldn't be seen in their hometowns. Al Capone would stay at the
Arlington Hotel when things got too hot in Chicago.. . . In 1964, the
New York Times called Hot Springs the largest illegal casino operation
in the United States. |
1960s
A federal investigation concludes that Hot
Springs has the largest illegal gambling operations in the United States.
Clinton goes to Georgetown University where he
finds a mentor in Professor Carroll Quigley. Quigley writes: "That the two
political parties should represent opposed ideals and policies. . . is a
foolish idea. Instead, the two parties should be almost identical . . .The
policies that are vital and necessary for America are no longer subjects of
significant disagreement, but are disputable only in detail, procedure,
priority, or method. "
Bill Clinton, according to several agency
sources interviewed by biographer Roger Morris, works as a CIA informer
while briefly and erratically a Rhodes Scholar in England. Although without
visible means of support, he travels around Europe and the Soviet Union,
staying at the ritziest hotel in Moscow. During this period the US
government is using well educated assets such as Clinton as part of
Operation Chaos, a major attempt to break student resistance to the war and
the draft. According to former White House FBI agent Gary Aldrich Clinton is
told by Oxford officials that he is no longer welcome there.
Bill Clinton and his friend Jim McDougal get a
job in the office of Senator J. William Fulbright. The Washington Post will
later write, "McDougal was interested in making money while Clinton was
obsessed with political stature."
After becoming involved in politics, Wellesley
graduate Hillary Rodham orders her senior thesis sealed from public view.
1969
Clinton meets a 19-year-old woman in a English
bar and has sex with her. She will say she was raped; Clinton will claim it
was consensual. A retired State Department official will tell the news
service, Capitol Hill Blue, in the late 1990s, "There is no doubt in my mind
that this woman suffered severe emotional trauma. But we were under
tremendous pressure to avoid the embarrassment of having a Rhodes Scholar
charged with rape. I filed a report to my superiors and that was the last I
heard of it." The victim's family decline to pursue the case.
Bill Clinton fails to report to his duty
station at the University of Arkansas ROTC. Reclassified 1-A on October 30,
1969, as enlistment with Army Reserves is revoked by Colonel E. Holmes.
1972
A 22-year-old woman tells
campus police at Yale University that she was sexually assaulted by Clinton,
a law student at the college. No charges are filed, but retired campus
policemen contacted by Capitol Hill Blue news service in the 1990s confirm
the incident. The woman also confirms the incident, but declines to discuss
it further.
1974
27 year old Clinton, only months out of Yale
Law School, is back in Arkansas eager to run for Congress. Roger Morris
writes later, "A relative unknown, he faces an imposing field of rivals in
the Democratic primary, and beyond, in the general election, a powerful
Republican incumbent. Yet as soon as he enters the race, Mr. Clinton enjoys
a decisive seven-to-one advantage in campaign funds over the nearest
Democratic competitor, and will spend twice as much as his well-supported
GOP opponent. It begins with a quiet meeting at his mother's house in Hot
Springs. Around the kitchen table, as Virginia Clinton will describe the
scene, avid young Billy meets with two of his most crucial early backers --
uncle Raymond G. Clinton, a prosperous local Buick dealer, and family friend
and wealthy businessman Gabe Crawford. As they talk, Mr. Crawford offers the
candidate unlimited use of his private plane, and uncle Raymond not only
provides several houses around the district to serve as campaign
headquarters, but will secure a $10,000 loan to Bill from the First National
Bank of Hot Springs - an amount then equal to the yearly income of many
Arkansas families. Together, the money and aircraft and other gifts,
including thousands more in secret donations, will launch Mr. Clinton in the
most richly financed race in the annals of Arkansas -- and ultimately onto
the most richly financed political career in American history. Though he
loses narrowly , his showing is so impressive, especially in his capacity to
attract such money and favours, that he rises rapidly to become state
attorney-general, then governor, and eventually, with much the same backing
and advantage, president of the United States . . . No mere businessman with
a spare plane, Gabe Crawford presided over a backroom bookie operation that
was one of Hot Springs' most lucrative criminal enterprises. [And the]
inimitable uncle Raymond - who had also played a pivotal behind-the-scenes
role in keeping young Bill out of the Vietnam draft - was far more than an
auto dealer. In the nationally prominent fount of vice and corruption that
was Hot Springs from the 1920s to the 1980s (its barely concealed casinos
generated more income than Las Vegas well into the 1960s), the uncle's Buick
agency and other businesses and real estate were widely thought to be
facades for illegal gambling, drug money laundering and other ventures, in
which Raymond was a partner. He was a minion of the organized crime overlord
who controlled the American Middle South for decades, New Orleans boss
Carlos Marcello or "Mafia Kingfish" as his biographer John Davis called him.
Acccording to Capitol Hill Blue news service, a
female student at the University of Arkansas will later claim that then-law
school instructor Bill Clinton tried to prevent her from leaving his office
during a conference. She says he groped her and forced his hand inside her
blouse. She complains to her faculty advisor who confronts Clinton, but
Clinton claims the student ''came on'' to him. The student leaves the school
shortly after the incident. Reached at her home in Texas in the 1990s, the
former student confirms the incident, but declines to go on the record with
her account. Several former students at the University also confirm the
incident.
1976
Bill Clinton is elected attorney general of
Arkansas.
Two Indonesian billionaires come to Arkansas.
Mochtar Riady and Liem Sioe Liong are close to Suharto. Riady is looking for
an American bank to buy. Finds Jackson Stephens with whom he forms Stephens
Finance. Stephens will broker the arrival of BCCI to this country and steer
BCCI's founder, Hassan Abedi, to Bert Lance.
Riady's teen-age son is taken on as an intern
by Stephens Inc. He later says he was "sponsored" by Bill Clinton.
1977
Hillary Clinton joins the Rose Law Firm.
Apparently because of pressure from Indonesia,
Riady withdraws his bid to buy Lance's 30% share of the National Bank of
Georgia. Instead, a BCCI front man buys the shares and Abedi moves to
secretly take over Financial General - later First American Bankshares --
later the subject of the only BCCI-connected scandal to be prosecuted in the
US.
1978
Clinton is elected governor.
The Clintons and McDougals buy land in the
Ozarks for $203,000 with mostly borrowed funds. The Clintons get 50%
interest with no cash down. The 203 acre plot, known as Whitewater, is fifty
miles from the nearest grocery store. The Washington Post will report later
that some purchasers of lots, many of them retirees, "put up houses or
cabins, others slept in vans or tents, hoping to be able to live off the
land." More than half of the purchasers will lose their plots thanks to the
sleazy form of financing used.
Two months after commencing the Whitewater
scam, Hillary Clinton invests $1,000 in cattle futures. Within a few days
she has a $5,000 profit. Before bailing out she earns nearly $100,000 on her
investment. Many years later, several economists will calculate that the
chances of earning such returns legally were one in 250 million.
Governor Clinton appoints Jim McDougal an
economic development advisor.
Bill Clinton's mother hangs out at the race
track with mobsters and other local figures, including Dan Lasater who
breeds race horses in Kentucky and Florida and has a box at the track next
to hers. Mrs. Clinton introduces Lasater to Roger Clinton.
More than a few Little Rock insiders believe
Hillary Clinton is having an affair with Vince Foster.
Roger Clinton develops a four-gram a day
cocaine habit, getting his stuff from New York and Medellin suppliers, based
(as one middleman will later testify) on "who his brother was." Sharlene
Wilson is one of his dealers. Dan Lasater will give Roger work and loan him
$8,000 to pay off a drug debt.
According to her later allegations, Juanita
Broaddrick, a volunteer in Clinton's gubernatorial campaign, is raped by
Clinton and her lip almost bitten off. Hospital nurses report Broaddrick's
incident as a rape but the report along with photos have since disappeared.
According to Roger Morris in Partners in
Power, a young woman lawyer in Little Rock will later claim that she was
accosted by Clinton this year and that when she recoiled he forced himself
on her, biting and bruising her. "Deeply affected by the assault, the woman
decided to keep it all quiet for the sake of her own hard-won career and
that of her husband. When the husband later saw Clinton at the 1980
Democratic Convention, he delivered a warning. 'If you ever approach her,'
he told the governor, 'I'll kill you.' Not even seeing fit to deny the
incident, Bill Clinton sheepishly apologized and duly promised never to
bother her again."
Paula Grober, Clinton's speech interpreter for
the deaf is killed in a high-speed, no witness, one-car crash. Has traveled
extensively with Clinton since 1978
1979
A legal secretary will later say that Clinton
tried to force her into oral sex. She will tell Capitol Hill Blue news
service in the 1990s that when she told her boyfriend, who was a lawyer and
supporter of Clinton, about the incident, he told her to keep her mouth
shut. "He said that people who crossed the governor usually regretted it and
that if I knew what was good for me I'd forget that it ever happened," she
says. "I haven't forgotten it. You don't forget crude men like that." She
declines further interviewing.
Sharlene Wilson will testify in a 1990 federal
drug probe that she began selling cocaine to Roger Clinton as early as this
year. She will also tell reporters that she sold two grams of cocaine to
Clinton's brother at the Little Rock nightclub Le Bistro, then witnessed
Bill Clinton consume the drug. "I watched Bill Clinton lean up against a
brick wall," Wilson reveals to the London Telegraph's Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard in 1995. "He was so messed up that night, he slid down the
wall into a garbage can and just sat there like a complete idiot." Wilson
also describes gatherings at Little Rock's Coachman's Inn between 1979 and
1981, where she saw Clinton using cocaine "quite avidly" with friends. Drug
prosecutor Jean Duffey will say that she has no doubt that Wilson was
telling the truth.
The Clintons and McDougals form Whitewater
Development Company.
1980s
According
to later sworn testimony by Arkansas trooper Larry Patterson, Governor
Clinton has oral sex with a woman in a car parked outside Chelsea Clinton's
elementary school.
Governor Clinton appoints Web Hubbell to head a
new state ethics commission. First task: to weaken ethics legislation
currently under consideration by exempting the governor from some of its
most rigorous provisions.
Arkansas becomes a major center of gun-running,
drugs and money laundering. The IRS warns other law enforcement agencies of
the state's "enticing climate." According to Clinton biographer Roger
Morris, operatives go into banks with duffel bags full of cash, which bank
officers then distribute to tellers in sums under $10,000 so they don't have
to report the transaction.
Sharlene Wilson, according to investigative
reporter Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, flies cocaine from Mena to a pickup point
in Texas. Other drugs, she and others say, are stuffed into chickens for
shipping around the country. Wilson also serves as "the lady with the snow"
at "toga parties" attended, she reports, by Bill Clinton.
According to Wilson,"I lived in Little Rock,
Arkansas, O.K.? And I worked at a club called Le Bistro's, and I met Roger
Clinton there, Governor Bill Clinton, a couple of his state troopers that
went with him wherever he went. Roger Clinton had come up to me and he had
asked me could I give him some coke, you know, and asked for my one-hitter,
which a one-hitter is a very small silver device,O.K., that you stick up
into your nose and you just squeeze it and a snort of cocaine will go up in
there.And I watched Roger hand what I had given him to Governor Clinton, and
he just kind of turned around and walked off."
Investor's Business Daily would later write,
"Sally Perdue, a former Miss Arkansas and Little Rock talk show host who
said she had an affair with then-Gov. Clinton in 1983, told the London
Sunday Telegraph that he once came over to her house with a bag full of
cocaine. ''He had all the equipment laid out, like a real pro.'' In the
1990s, Genifer Flowers tells Sean Hannity's WABC talk radio show: "He smoked
marijuana in my presence and and offered me the opportunity to snort cocaine
if I wanted to. I wasn't into that. Bill clearly let me know that he did
cocaine. And I know people that knew he did cocaine. He did tell me that
when he would use a substantial amount of cocaine that his head would itch
so badly that he would become self conscious at parties where he was doing
this. Because all he wanted to do while people were talking to him is stand
around and scratch his head. ...."
Two Arkansas state troopers will swear under
oath that they have seen Clinton ''under the influence'' of drugs when he
was governor. Sharlene Wilson is a bartender who ended up serving time on
drug crimes and cooperating with drug investigators. She told a federal
grand jury she saw Clinton and his younger brother ''snort'' cocaine
together in 1979. Jack McCoy, a Democratic state representative and Clinton
supporter, told the Sunday Telegraph that he could ''remember going into the
governor's conference room once and it reeked of marijuana.'' Historian
Roger Morris, in his book ''Partners in Power,'' quotes several law
enforcement officials who say they had seen and knew of Clinton's drug use.
One-time apartment manager Jane Parks claims that in 1984 she could listen
through the wall as Bill and Roger Clinton, in a room adjoining hers,
discussed the quality of the drugs they were taking.
Hillary Clinton makes a $44,000 profit on a
$2,000 investment in a cellular phone franchise deal that involves taking
advantage of the FCC's preference for locals, minorities and women. The
franchise is almost immediately flipped to the cellular giant, McCaw.
A drug pilot brings a Cessna 210 full of
cocaine into eastern Arkansas where he is met by his pick-up: a state
trooper in a marked police car. "Arkansas," the pilot will recall years
later, "was a very good place to load and unload."
VINCE
FOSTER
According to his wife, security operative Jerry
Parks delivers large sums of money from Mena airport to Vince Foster at a
K-Mart parking lot. Mrs. Parks discovers this when she opens her car trunk
one day and finds so much cash that she has to sit on the trunk to close it
again. She asks her husband whether he is dealing drugs, and he allegedly
explains that Foster paid him $1,000 for each trip he took to Mena. Parks
said he didn't "know what they were doing, and he didn't care to know. He
told me to forget what I'd seen.". . . .Later Evans-Pritchard will write,
"Foster was using him as a kind of operative to collect sensitive
information on things and do sensitive jobs. Some of this appears to have
been done on behalf of Hillary Clinton. . . Foster told him that Hillary
wanted it done. Now, my understanding . . . is that she wanted to know how
vulnerable he would be in a presidential race on the question of -- how
shall I put it? -- his appetites."
Hillary Clinton quietly lobbies on behalf of
the Contras and against groups and individuals opposing them.
Dan Lasater's parties become known around
Little Rock for the availability of cocaine and women.
According to Roger Clinton's landlady, Jane
Parks, Bill Clinton is a frequent visitor to the apartment which shared a
wall with her office. She notes drug use and young girls at gatherings Bill
Clinton attends.
Judy Gibbs, a model and call girl who appeared
in Penthouse magazine, runs a powerful house of prostitution in Fordyce with
her sister Sharon. They also blackmail some of their more powerful clients.
Both her family and one of Clinton's bodyguards will later link Judy Gibbs
to the governor. She decides to cooperate with police in an investigation of
Arkansas cocaine trafficking, but is burned to death inside her home from a
fire of undetermined origin. In 1999, Newsmax will report, "[Former Clinton
bodyguard Barry] Spivey had become something of a mystery man, who insisted
on meeting [Paula Jones investigator] Rick Lambert on a deserted road
nestled deep in the Arkansas backwoods. The Jones investigator admitted he
was none too comfortable with the situation. Spivey shared a story about a
conversation he had with Clinton while on a flight over southeast Arkansas.
The trooper noticed a blackened patch amidst the greenery below that,
surprisingly, Clinton recognized. That patch was all that was left of an
estate that had burned to the ground in the mid-80s. According to the
trooper, Clinton began reminiscing about rumors of his involvement with the
woman of the house, a onetime "Penthouse pet." Her husband, Spivey said, was
involved in a pornography ring. Clinton explained to Spivey, 'You know that
mansion just burned down right on top of them.' Years later, Spivey remains
struck by one thing: the eerie expression that crossed Clinton's face as he
spoke those words. ...."
The sudden and/or
violent deaths of persons connected in some way to the Clinton machine
now number over 30. Since most of these deaths have been at best
shoddily investigated by public officials, it is impossible to determine
which are the result of foul play and which are coincidental. Barbara
Wise is a case in point. This woman, whose partially nude body was found
in the Commerce Department, has been described by some as being a highly
disturbed person whose death may be totally unrelated to the Clinton
scandals. Similarly, according to some news reports, a business figure,
perhaps with intelligence ties, cancelled at the last minute his seat on
the ill-fated Ron Brown plane. This same businessman died later in the
crash of TWA 800. Coincidence or unsolved mystery?
In cases of foul play, readers are warned not to leap to conclusions as
to motivation or potential perpetrators. For example, if Vincent Foster
was killed rather than committing suicide, it may not have been because
of the shady dealings at the White House but because public
investigations of these shady dealings threatened to expose peripheral
criminality such as past money laundering, drug trafficking, or illegal
intelligence activities. |
1980
The husband of a Little Rock attorney warns
Clinton at the Democratic Convention that if he approaches his wife again,
he'll kill him. Clinton apologizes and agrees to leave the woman alone.
Bill Clinton loses re-election as governor. He
will win two years later. Larry Nichols will tell the George Putman Show in
1998 that he had met with Clinton and Jackson Stephen's brother Witt and
that Witt had told Clinton that the Stephens were ready to back him for
another run at the governorship but that he had to "dry out on the white
stuff."
There are reports that following his loss,
Clinton ended up in the hospital for a drug overdose. Journalist R. Emmett
Tyrrell later asked emergency room workers at the University of Arkansas
Medical Center if they could confirm the incident. He didn't get a flat
''no'' from the hospital staff. One nurse said, ''I can't talk about that.''
Another said she feared for her life if she spoke of the matter. Newsmax
will report: "Dr. Sam Houston, a respected Little Rock physician and once a
doctor for Hillary's cantankerous father, Hugh Rodham, says it is well known
in Little Rock medical circles that Clinton was brought to a Little Rock
hospital for emergency treatment for an apparent cocaine overdose. According
to Houston, who told us he spoke to someone intimately familiar with the
details of what happened that night, Clinton arrived at the hospital with
the aid of a state trooper. Hillary Clinton had been notified by phone and
had instructed the hospital staff that Clinton's personal physician would be
arriving soon. When Mrs. Clinton arrived, she told both of the resident
physicians on duty that night that they would never practice medicine in the
United States if word leaked out about Clinton's drug problem. Reportedly,
she pinned one of the doctors up against the wall, both hands pressed
against his shoulders, as she gave her dire warning."
According to Jim McDougal's later account, he
and Henry Hamilton, ``developed a system to pass money to Clinton,'' then
governor of Arkansas. ``I considered it just another way of helping to take
care of Bill. A contractor agreed to pad my monthly construction bill by
$2,000. The contractor put the figure on his invoice as a cost for gravel or
culvert work. After I paid the full amount ... the contractor reimbursed me
the $2,000. I turned the money over to Henry to give to Clinton. Once, after
I handed Henry his latest consignment of 20 hundred-dollar bills to relay to
the governor's office, he turned the bills over and over in one hand, like a
magician. Henry grinned. `You know,' he said, `Caesar had his Brutus,
Charles the First had Cromwell. Clinton could profit from these examples if
he crosses us.'"
1981
Hillary Clinton writes Jim McDougal: "If
Reagonomics works at all, Whitewater could become the Western Hemisphere's
Mecca."
Major drug trafficker Barry Seal, under
pressure from the Louisiana cops, relocates his operations to Mena,
Arkansas. Seal is importing as much as 1,000 pounds of cociane a month from
Colombia according to Arkansas law enforcement officials. He will claim to
have made more than $50 million out of his operations. As an informant Seal
testified that in 1980-81, before moving his operation to Arkansas, he made
approximately 60 trips to Central America and brought back 18,000 kilograms.
In 1996 the Progressive Review will report: "The London Telegraph has
obtained some of the first depositions in ex-CIA contract flyer Terry Reed's
suit against Clinton's ex-security chief - and now a high- paid FEMA
director - Buddy Young. According to the Telegraph's Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard, "Larry Patterson, an Arkansas state trooper, testified
under oath that there were 'large quantities of drugs being flown into the
Mena airport, large quantities of money, large quantities of guns.' The
subject was discussed repeatedly in Clinton's presence by state troopers
working on his security detail, he alleged. Patterson said the governor 'had
very little comment to make; he was just listening to what was being said.'"
Mena state police investigator Russell Welch
will later describe the airport, pointing to one hanger he says is owned by
a man who "doesn't exist in history back past a safe house in Baltimore in
1972." Another is owned by someone who "smuggled heroin through Laos back in
the seventies." Still another is "owned by a guy who just went bankrupt. So
what's he do? Flies to Europe for more money." Welch points to a half dozen
Fokker aircraft parked on an apron, noting that "the DEA's been tracking
those planes back and forth to Columbia for a while now."
1982
A DEA report uncovered by
Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard will cite an informant claiming that a key
Arkansas figure and backer of Clinton "smuggles cocaine from Colombia, South
America, inside race horses to Hot Springs."
IRS agent William Duncan and an Arkansas State
Police investigator take their evidence concerning drug trafficking in Mena
to US Attorney Asa Hutchinson. They ask for 20 witnesses to be subpoenaed
before the grand jury. Hutchinson chooses only three. According to reporter
Mara Leveritt, "The three appeared before the grand jury, but afterwards,
two of them also expressed surprise at how their questioning was handled.
One, a secretary at Rich Mountain Aviation, had given Duncan sworn
statements about money laundering at the company, transcripts of which
Duncan had provided to Hutchinson. But when the woman left the jury room,
she complained that Hutchinson had asked her nothing about the crime or the
sworn statements she'd given to Duncan. As Duncan later testified, 'She
basically said that she was allowed to give her name, address, position, and
not much else.' The other angry witness was a banker who had, in Duncan's
words, 'provided a significant amount of evidence relating to the
money-laundering operation.' According to Duncan, he, too, emerged from the
jury room complaining 'that he was not allowed to provide the evidence that
he wanted to provide to the grand jury.'"
Bill Clinton wins back the governorship.
Financial General changes its name to First
American and Clark Clifford is appointed chairman. BCCI fronts begin
acquiring controlling interest in banks and other American financial
institutions. In Arkansas, Jim McDougal purchases Madison Guaranty Savings &
Loan. I
1983
Mochtar Riady forms Lippo Finance & Investment
in Little Rock. A non-citizen, Riady hires Carter's former SBA director,
Vernon Weaver, to chair the firm. The launch is accomplished with the aid of
a $2 million loan guaranteed by the SBA. Weaver uses Governor Clinton as a
character reference to help get the loan guarantee. First loan goes to
Little Rock Chinese restaurant owner Charlie Trie.
Riady also joins with Jackson Stephens to form
United Pacific Trading.
State regulators warn McDougal's Madison
Guarantee S&L to stop making imprudent loans. Gov. Clinton is also warned of
the problem but takes no action.
According to a later account in the Tampa
Tribune, planes flying drugs into Mena in coolers marked "medical supplies."
are met by several people close to then-Governor Bill Clinton.
Although he is under investigation for drug
activities, Dan Lasater's firm is given a piece of 14 state bond issues.
Judge David Hale's Capital Management Services
starts making loans to state figures.
Jackson Stephens forms United Pacific Trading
with Mochtar Riady to do business in the U.S. and Asia.
1984
Stevens and Riady buy a banking firm and change
its name to Worthern Bank with Riady's 28-year-old son James as president.
Other Worthen co-owners will eventually include BCCI investor Abdullah Taha
Bakhish.
The Federal Home Loan Bank Board issues a
negative report on Madison Guaranty, questioning both its lending practices
and its financial stability. The Arkansas Securities Department begins to
take steps to close it down.
The Washington Times will later quote an
unnamed Clinton business associate who claims the governor used to "jog over
to McDougal's office about once a month to pick up the [retainer] check for
his wife." Jim McDougal will claim later that Clinton on one of his jogs had
asked that Madison steer business to Hillary Clinton.
Foreshadowing future Wall Street interest in
Clinton, Goldman Sachs, Payne Webber, Salomon Brothers and Merrill Lynch all
show up as financial backers of the governor. Also on the list: future
king-maker Pam Harriman. But Bill Clinton's funders include not only some of
the biggest corporate names ever to show an interest in the tiny state of
Arkansas but some of the most questionable. A former US Attorney will later
tell Roger Morris, "That was the election when the mob really came into
Arkansas politics. . . It wasn't just Bill Clinton and it went beyond our
old Dixie Mafia. . . This was eastern and west coast crime money that
noticed the possibilities just like the legitimate corporations did."
Dan Lasater buys a ski resort in New Mexico for
$20 million and uses Clinton's name (with permission) to promote it. Later,
a US Customs investigative report will note that the resort is being used
for drug operations and money laundering. Lasater also flies to Belize with
his aide Patsy Thomasson to buy a 24,000 acre ranch. Among those present at
the negotiations is the US Ambassador. The deal falls through because of the
opposition of the Belize government.
A private contractor for Arkansas' prison
system stops selling prisoners' blood to a Canadian broker and elsewhere
overseas after admitting the blood might be contaminated with the AIDS virus
or hepatitis. Sales of prisoners' blood in US are already forbidden.
Tens of thousands of dollars in mysterious
checks begin moving through Whitewater's account at Madison Guaranty.
Investigators will later suspect that McDougal was operating a check-kiting
scheme to drain money from the S&L
Hot Springs police record Roger Clinton during
a cocaine transaction. Roger says, "Got to get some for my brother. He's got
a nose like a vacuum cleaner." Roger is arrested while working at menial
jobs for Arkansas "bond daddy" Dan Lasater.
Barry Seal estimates that he has earned between
$60 and $100 million smuggling cocaine into the US, but with the feds
closing in on him, Barry Seal flies from Mena to Washington in his private
Lear Jet to meet with two members of Vice President George Bush's drug task
force. Following the meeting, Seal rolls over for the DEA, becoming an
informant. He collects information on leaders of the Medellin cartel while
still dealing in drugs himself. The deal will be kept secret from
investigators working in Louisiana and Arkansas. According to reporter Mara
Leveritt, "By Seal's own account, his gross income in the year and a half
after he became an informant - while he was based at Mena and while Asa
Hutchinson was the federal prosecutor in Fort Smith, 82 miles away - was
three-quarters of a million dollars. Seal reported that $575,000 of that
income had been derived from a single cocaine shipment, which the DEA had
allowed him to keep. Pressed further, he testified that, since going to work
for the DEA, he had imported 1,500 pounds of cocaine into the U.S. Supposed
informant Seal will fly repeatedly to Colombia, Guatemala, and Panama, where
he meets with Jorge Ochoa, Fabio Ochoa, Pablo Escobar, and Carlos Lehder -
leaders of the cartel that at the time controlled an estimated 80 percent of
the cocaine entering the United States."
Ronald Reagan wants to send the National Guard
to Honduras to help in the war against the Contras. Massachusetts Governor
Michael Dukakis goes to the Supreme Court in a futile effort to stop it but
Clinton is happy to oblige, even sending his own security chief, Buddy
Young, along to keep an eye on things. Winding up its tour, the Arkansas
Guard declares large quantities of its weapons "excess" and leaves them
behind for the Contras.
Clinton bodyguard, state trooper LD Brown,
applies for a CIA opening. Clinton gives him help on his application essay
including making it more Reaganesque on the topic of the Nicaragua.
According to Brown, he meets a CIA recruiter in Dallas whom he later
identities as former member of Vice President Bush's staff. On the
recruiter's instruction, he meets with notorious drug dealer Barry Seal in a
Little Rock restaurant. Joins Seal in flight to Honduras with a purported
shipment of M16s and a return load of duffel bags. Brown gets $2,500 in
small bills for the flight. Brown, concerned about the mission, consults
with Clinton who says, "Oh, you can handle it, don't sweat it." On second
flight, Brown finds cocaine in a duffel bag and again he seeks Clinton's
counsel. Clinton says to the conservative Brown, "Your buddy, Bush, knows
about it" and of the cocaine, "that's Lasater's deal."
Clinton wins re-election with 64% of the vote.
1985
Roger Clinton pleads guilty to cocaine
distribution but cops a plea on more serious charges with a promise to
cooperate. He will serve a short prison term.
A relative of Bill Clinton is raped. Wayne
Dumond is arrested and imprisoned in the case. While awaiting sentencing,
Dumond himself is sexually assaulted and castrated by two masked men. A
local sheriff, later sentenced to 160 years for extortion and drug dealing,
displays Dumond's testicles in a jar on his desk under a sign that read,
"That's what happens to people who fool around in my county." A parole
board, upon receiving new evidence of Dumond's innocence, will vote to
release him after 4 1/2 years in prison. Governor Clinton -- according to
the managing editor of the Arkansas Democrat Gazette -- stages a "romping,
stomping fit" and blocks the release.
Mrs. Clinton is put on a $2,000 a month
retainer by Madison Guaranty.. . McDougal will later write in his book that
the payments were in lieu of his earlier system of passing money to Bill
Clinton. Ms. Clinton will later claim not to have received any retainer nor
to have been deeply involved with Madison. Subsequent records show, however,
that she represented Madison before the state securities department. After
the revelation, she says, "For goodness sakes, you can't be a lawyer if you
don't represent banks."
Clinton establishes the Arkansas Development
Finance Authority that will be used, in the words of one well-connected
Arkansan as "his own political piggy bank." Though millions of dollars are
funneled to Clinton allies, records of repayments will be hazy or
non-existent. AFDA brags to prospective out-of-state corporations of
Arkansas' anti-union climate. Dan Lasater is a major underwriter and gets a
$30 million bond deal for state police radios even as the governor's
stepbrother Roger is making a bargain with the US attorney to testify
against Lasater in a drug case.
Arkansas state pension funds -- deposited in
Worthen by Governor Bill Clinton -- suddenly lose 15% of their value because
of the failure of high risk, short-term investments and the brokerage firm
that bought them. The $52 million loss is covered by a Worthen check written
by Jack Stephens in the middle of the night, an insurance policy, and the
subsequent purchase over the next few months of 40% of the bank by Mochtar
Riady. Clinton and Worthen escape a major scandal.
Lippo executive and Chinese native John Huang
becomes active in Lippo's operations in Arkansas.
China Resources pays for a Lippo-organized trip
to Asia by Gov. Clinton, according to a later FBI inteview with John Huang.
Mochtar and James Riady engineer the takeover
of the First National Bank of Mena in a town of 5,000 with few major assets
beyond a Contra supply base, drug running and money-laundering operations.
Terry Reed is asked to take part in Operation
Donation, under which planes and boats needed by the Contras "disappear,"
allowing owners to claim insurance. Reed has been a Contra operative and CIA
asset working with Felix Rodriguez, the Contra link to the CIA and then-Vice
President Bush's office. Reed later claims he refused, but that his plane
was removed while he was away.
Park on Meter, a parking meter manufacturer in
Russellville, Arkansas, receives the first industrial development loan from
the Arkansas Development Finance Authority in 1985. Some suspect that POM is
doing a lot more than making parking meters -- specifically that it has
secret federal contracts to make components of chemical and biological
weapons and devices to carry them on C-130s for the Contras. The company
later denies the Contra connection although it will admit having secret
military contracts. Web Hubbell is the company's lawyer. Right next to POM,
on land previously owned by it, is an Army reserve chemical warfare company.
A series of checks to Clinton and his campaign
are endorsed and deposited in Madison S&L. One of the checks -- a cashiers
check in the amount of $3,000 -- has the name of a 24-year-old college
student on it. When informed of this in 1993, the then-student, Ken Peacock,
will deny having made any such donation.
Whitewater fails to file corporate tax returns
for this year.
Asa Hutchinson leaves the US Attorney's office
to make an unsuccessful bid for US Senate. According to police sources,
Hutchinson had been aware of what was happening at Mena and the
investigation into it, but did nothing. Hutchinson is replaced by Mike
Fitzhugh who is reluctant to let investigators Russell Welch of the state
police and William Duncan of the IRS present evidence of money-laundry to a
grand jury.
Jim McDougal sets up a land deal called Castle
Grande.
The New Jersey securities firm Bevill, Bresler
& Schulman files for bankruptcy amid fraud charges and an estimated $240
million in losses; one of the biggest apparent losers is Stephens-dominated
Worthen Bank, which holds with Bevill $52 million of Arkansas state funds in
uncollateralized repurchase agreements.
1986
Journalist Evans-Pritchard will describe the
Arkansas of this period as a "major point for the transshipment of drugs"
and "perilously close to becoming a 'narco-republic' -- a sort of
mini-Columbia within the borders of the United States." There is "an
epidemic of cocaine, contaminating the political establishment from top to
bottom," with parties "at which cocaine would be served like hors d'oeuvres
and sex was rampant." Clinton attends some of these events.
According to former CIA officials David
MacMichael and Ray McGovern, Barry Seal, a former TWA pilot who had trained
Nicaraguan Contra pilots in the early eighties, and who is facing a long
sentence after a federal drug conviction in Florida, makes his way to the
White House's National Security Council to make the following proposition to
officials there. He would fly his own plane to Colombia and take delivery of
cocaine. He would then make an emergency landing in Nicaragua and make it
appear that Sandinista officials were aiding him in drug trafficking. Seal
made it clear that he would expect help with his legal problems. The Reagan
White House jumps at the offer. Seal's plane is flown to Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base, where it was fitted with secret cameras to enable Seal to
photograph Nicaraguan officials in the act of assisting him with the boxes
of cocaine.
On January 17, the U. S. Attorney for the
Western District drops a money laundering and narcotics-conspiracy charges
against associates of drug smuggler Barry Seal over the protests of
investigators Russell Welch of the state police and Bill Duncan of the
Internal Revenue.
The operation goes as planned. The photos are
delivered to the White House, and a triumphant Ronald Reagan goes on
national TV to show that the Sandinistas are not only Communists but also
criminals intent on addicting America s youth.
A Federal Home Loan Bank Board audit describes
Madison as financially reckless, rife with conflicts and on the brink of
collapse. It says that the S&L's records are so poor that examiners often
could not discover the "real nature" of transactions. In August federal
regulators will remove McDougal from the board of Madison.
Capital Management Services Inc., owned by
David Hale, makes an SBA-approved loan of $300,000 to Susan McDougal, sole
owner of an advertising firm called Master Marketing. The loan will never be
repaid. Hale will later claim that Clinton and Jim McDougall pressured him
into making the loan.
Dan Lasater, Arkansas bond don who is close to
Clinton, pleads guilty to cocaine distribution charges. The case also
involves Clinton step brother Roger, who testifies against Lasater in a plea
agreement. Both Lasater and Roger Clinton will serve brief prison terms.
While Lasater is in prison his affairs will be run by Patsy Thomasson, who
later becomes a White House aide.
BARRY
SEAL FOLLOWING HIS MURDER
Seal is scheduled to testify at the trial of
Jorge Ochoa Vasques. But on February 19, shortly before the trial is to
begin, Seal is murdered in Baton Rouge gangland style by three Colombian
hitmen armed with machine guns who attack while he seated behind the wheel
of his white Cadillac in Baton Rouge, La. The Colombians, connected with the
Medellin drug cartel, are tried and convicted. Upon hearing of Seal's
murder, one DEA agent says, "There was a contract out on him, and everyone
knew it. He was to have been a crucial witness in the biggest case in DEA
history."
Eight months after the murder, Seal's cargo
plane is shot down over Nicaragua. It is carrying ammunition and other
supplies for the Contras from Mena. One crew member, Eugene Hasenfus,
survives.
The attorney general of Louisiana tells US
Attorney General Ed Meese that drug trafficker Barry Seal has smuggled drugs
into the US worth $3-$5 billion.
Whitewater fails to file corporate tax returns
for this year.
James Riady resigns as president of Worthen
Bank.
Clinton is reelected governor.
Roger Clinton is paroled.
1987
According to the McDougals, the Whitewater
files are transferred to the Clintons. In the 1992 campaign, the Clintons
will say they can not find the records.
Clinton gives Arkansas Traveler awards to
Contra operatives Adolpho and Mario Calero and John Singlaub.
Two boys, Kevin Ives and Don Henry, are killed
in Saline County and left on a railroad track to be run over by a train The
medical examiner will initially rule the deaths accidental, saying that the
boys were unconscious and in a deep sleep due to marijuana. The finding will
be punctured by dogged investigators whose efforts are repeatedly blocked by
law enforcement officials. Ultimately, the bodies will be exhumed and
another autopsy will be performed, which finds that Henry had been stabbed
in the back and Ives beaten with a rifle butt. Although no one will ever be
charged, the trail will lead into the penumbra of the Dixie Mafia and the
Arkansas political machine. Some believe the boys died because they
accidentally intercepted a drug drop, but other information obtained by the
Progressive Review suggests the drop may have dispensed not drugs but cash,
gold and platinum -- part of a series of sorties through which those working
with US intelligence were being reimbursed. According to one version, the
boys were blamed in order to cover up the theft of the drop by persons
within the Dixie Mafia and Arkansas political machine. Ives mother will
later charge that high state and federal officials participated in a coverup:
"I firmly believe my son and Don Henry were killed because they witnessed a
drug drop by an airplane connected to the Mena drug smuggling routes."
Prosecutor Jean Duffey will later tell talk
show host in answer to whether law enforcement people were involved in the
train death murders: "I believe the law enforcement agents were connected to
some very high political people because they have never been brought to
justice and I don't think they ever will be. I think they are protected to
avoid exposing the connection...There have been several murders of potential
witnesses. Anyone who could have solved this murder many years ago has been
systematically eliminated."
Nine persons reportedly having information on
the Ives-Henry murders will end up dead themselves. Keith McKaskle will
express fear for his life because of the "railroad track thing" and tell his
parents good-bye before his murder. An inmated will report being offered
$4,000 to kill McKaskle. A suspect in the Ives-Henry murders will die in
what initially is thought to have been a robbery but turns out to have been
a set-up. Boonie Bearden vanishes without a trace. It is rumored he knows
exactly what had happened at the tracks. James Milam is found decapitated;
nonetheless, the state medical examiner, Fahmy Malak - who also called the
Ives-Henry deaths accidental -- will declare the death to be of natural
causes. Jeff Rhodes will be shot, burned, and have his hands and feet
partially sawed off.
Terry Reed's plane is returned but, according
to his account, he is asked not to report it because it might have to be
"borrowed" again. Reed later says that he had become aware that the Contra
operation also involved drug running and had gotten cold feet. He also
believed that large sums of drug money were being laundered by leading
Arkansas financiers. He went to Felix Rodriguez and told him he was
quitting. Reed was subsequently charged with mail fraud for having allegedly
claimed insurance on a plane that was in fact hidden in a hanger in Little
Rock. The head of Clinton's Swiss Guard, Capt. Buddy Young, will claim to
have been walking around the North Little Rock Airport when "by an act of
G-d" a gust of wind blew open the hangar door and revealed the Piper Turbo
Arrow.
Whitewater fails to file corporate tax returns
for this year.
Harken Energy, with George W Bush on the board,
gets rescued by aid from the BCCI-connected Union Bank of Switzerland in a
deal brokered by Jackson Stephens, later to show up as a key supporter of
Bill Clinton. The deal was also pushed along by another Clinton friend,
David Edwards. Edwards will bring BCCI-linked investors into Harken deals
including Abdullah Bakhsh, purchases $10 million in shares of Stephens
dominated Worthen Bank.
1988
Conservative Democrats begin a series of nearly
100 meetings held at the home of Pam Harriman to plot strategy for the
takeover of the Democratic Party. Donors cough up $1,000 to attend and
Harriman eventually raises $12 million for her kind of Democrat. The
right-wing Dems will eventually settle on Bill Clinton as their presidential
choice.
Charles Black, a prosecutor for
Polk County, which includes Mena, meets with Governor Clinton and asks for
assistance in a probe of illegal activities. "His response," Mr. Black will
tell CBS News later, "was that he would get a man on it and get back to me.
I never heard back."
Following pressure from
then-Arkansas Rep. Bill Alexander, the General Accounting Office opens a
probe in April 1988; within four months, the inquiry is shut down by the
National Security Council, according to a later report by Micah Morrison of
the Wall Street Journal. Several congressional subcommittee inquiries
sputter and stop.
The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
issues a report that describes the seriousness of the Barry Seal disaster.
That report says, "Law enforcement officials were furious that their
undercover operation was revealed and agents' lives jeopardized because one
individual in the U.S. government - Lt. Col. Oliver North- decided to play
politics with the issue . . . Associates of Seal, who operated aircraft
service businesses at the Mena, Arkansas airport, were also targets of grand
jury probes into narcotics trafficking. Despite the availability of evidence
sufficient for an indictment on money laundering charges and over the strong
protests of state and federal law enforcement officials, the cases were
dropped."
1989
Madison S&L is closed by federal regulators at
an eventual cost to taxpayers of $47 million. Jim McDougal is indicted for
bank fraud
Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau
begins a wide-ranging probe of BCCI. .
FDIC hires Webster Hubbell of the Rose firm to
press its case concerning Madison. Rose law firm, now representing FDIC,
sues an accounting firm for $60 million, blaming its audits for causing
millions of dollars in losses to the S&L. Although the job earns Rose
$400,000 in fees and expenses the accounting firm will eventually settle by
paying the government just $1 million.
A US Senate subcommittee calls the available
evidence about Mena sufficient for an indictment on money laundering
charges. But the feds scrap a five year probe of Mena and interfere in local
investigations, and the state police are taken off the case. Clinton refuses
a request from one of his own prosecutors to pursue the matter.
What will later be known as the Vast Right Wing
Conspiracy begins on the left as a group of progressive students at the
University of Arkansas form the Arkansas Committee to look into Mena, drugs,
money laundering, and Arkansas politics.
Dan Short, a bank president, is abducted from
his home in Benton Co., Arkansas and allegedly forced to open the State Bank
in Noel, MO were $71,000 is allegedly taken. Three days before his
abduction, he had told friends that he had been laundering drug money and
was in trouble.
THE STORY CONTINUED
Among the public sources for this article
were Partners in Power by Roger Morris; The Secret Life of Bill Clinton by
Ambrose Evans Pritchard; Unlimited Access Unlimited Access by Gary Aldrich
and Shadows of Hope by Sam Smith. Also various newspaper and magazine
articles, particularly in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette, Washington Times,
New York Times, Washington Post, London Telegraph, Times of London, Wall
Street Journal, LA Times, American Spectator, Washington Weekly, Insight, as
well as the Internet service Free Republic, the Clinton Administration
Scandals bulletin board, and the columns of Alexander Cockburn and
Christopher Ruddy.
COPYRIGHT 1998
THE PROGRESSIVE REVIEW
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