The content of the following materials are verbatim as forwarded by the
Office of the Independent Counsel. The conversion to HTML has altered the
pagination and format. The original Table of Contents is not provided.
Table of Contents
The
Principals The
First Family Presidential
Aides/Advisors/Assistants Other White House
Personnel Department of Defense
Employees Monica Lewinsky's
Friends/Family/Acquaintances Monica Lewinsky's New
York Employment Contacts Secret Service Lawyers and
Judges Media Foreign
Dignitaries Other
Factual
Background The
Investigation The Significance of the
Evidence of Wrongdoing The Scope of the
Referral
The Contents of the
Referral
I. Nature of President
Clinton's Relationship with Monica Lewinsky
II. 1995: Initial Sexual
Encounters
III. January-March 1996:
Continued Sexual Encounters
IV. April 1996: Ms.
Lewinsky's Transfer to the Pentagon
V. April-December 1996:
No Private Meetings
VI. Early 1997:
Resumption of Sexual Encounters
VII. May 1997:
Termination of Sexual Relationship
VIII. June-October 1997:
Continuing Meetings and Calls
IX. October-November
1997: United Nations' Job Offer
X. November 1997:
Growing Frustration
XI. December 5-18, 1997:
The Witness List and Job Search
XII. December 19, 1997
- January 4, 1998: The Subpoena
XIII. January 5-January
16, 1998: The Affidavit
XIV. January 17,
1998-Present: The Deposition and Afterward
There is Substantial and
Credible Information that President Clinton Committed Acts that May Constitute
Grounds for an Impeachment
Introduction
I. There is
substantial and credible information that President Clinton lied under
oath as a defendant in Jones v. Clinton regarding his sexual relationship
with Monica Lewinsky.
A. Evidence that
President Clinton Lied Under Oath During the Civil Case
1.
President Clinton's Statements Under Oath About Monica
Lewinsky 2. Monica
Lewinsky's Testimony
(i)
Wednesday, November 15, 1995 (ii)
Friday, November 17, 1995 (iii)
Sunday, December 31, 1995 (iv)
Sunday, January 7, 1996 (v) Sunday,
January 21, 1996 (vi)
Sunday, February 4, 1996 (vii)
Sunday, March 31, 1996 (viii)
Sunday, April 7, 1996 (ix)
Friday, February 28, 1997 (x)
Saturday, March 29, 1997 (xi) Two
Subsequent Meetings
3. Phone Sex
4.
Physical Evidence 5. Testimony of
Ms. Lewinsky's Friends, Family Members, and Counselors
6.
Summary
II. There is
substantial and credible information that President Clinton lied under
oath to the grand jury about his sexual relationship with Monica Lewinsky.
III. There is
substantial and credible information that President Clinton lied under
oath during his civil deposition when he stated that he could not recall
being alone with Monica Lewinsky and when he minimized the number of gifts
they had exchanged.
IV. There is
substantial and credible information that the President lied under oath
during his civil deposition concerning conversations he had with Monica
Lewinsky about her involvement in the Jones case.
V. There is
substantial and credible information that President Clinton endeavored to
obstruct justice by engaging in a pattern of activity to conceal evidence
regarding his relationship with Monica Lewinsky from the judicial process
in the Jones case. The pattern included:
VI. There is
substantial and credible information that
VII. There is
substantial and credible information that President Clinton endeavored to
obstruct justice by helping Ms. Lewinsky obtain a job in New York at a
time when she would have been a witness against him were she to tell the
truth during the Jones case.
VIII. There is
substantial and credible information that the President lied under oath in
describing his conversations with Vernon Jordan about Ms. Lewinsky.
IX. There is
substantial and credible information that President Clinton endeavored to
obstruct justice by attempting to influence the testimony of Betty Currie.
A.
Evidence
1.
Saturday, January 17, 1998, Deposition 2. Sunday,
January 18, 1998, Meeting with Ms. Currie 3.
Conversation Between the President and Ms. Currie on Tuesday, January
20, 1998, or Wednesday, January 21, 1998.
B. The
President's Grand Jury Testimony C.
Summary
X. There is
substantial and credible information that President Clinton endeavored to
obstruct justice during the federal grand jury investigation. While
refusing to testify for seven months, he simultaneously lied to potential
grand jury witnesses knowing that they would relay the falsehoods to the
grand jury.
XI. There is
substantial and credible information that President Clinton's actions
since January 17, 1998, regarding his relationship with Monica Lewinsky
have been inconsistent with the President's constitutional duty to
faithfully execute the laws.
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