FLASHBACK: HILLARY CLINTON FIRED FROM
WATERGATE INVESTIGATION FOR FOR ‘LYING, UNETHICAL
BEHAVIOR’
The
now-retired general counsel and chief of staff of
the House Judiciary Committee, who supervised
Hillary when she worked on the Watergate investigation,
says Hillary’s history of lies and unethical
behavior goes back farther – and goes much deeper
– than anyone realizes.
Jerry Zeifman,
a lifelong Democrat, supervised the work
of 27-year-old Hillary Rodham on the committee.
Hillary got a job working on the investigation at
the behest of her former law professor, Burke Marshall, who was also Sen. Ted Kennedy’s chief counsel in the Chappaquiddick affair. When the investigation was over, Zeifman fired Hillary from the
committee staff and refused to give her a letter
of recommendation – one of only three people who earned
that dubious distinction in Zeifman’s 17-year career.
Why?
“Because she was a liar,” Zeifman said
in an interview last week. “She was an unethical,
dishonest lawyer. She conspired to violate the
Constitution, the rules of the House, the rules of the committee and the rules of confidentiality.”
How could a
27-year-old House staff member do all that? She
couldn’t do it by herself, but Zeifman said she
was one of several individuals – including Marshall,
special counsel John Doar and senior associate
special counsel (and future Clinton White House
Counsel) Bernard Nussbaum – who engaged in a
seemingly implausible scheme to deny Richard
Nixon the right to counsel during the investigation.
Why would they want to do that?
Because, according to Zeifman, they feared putting
Watergate break-in mastermind E. Howard Hunt on the stand to be cross-examined by counsel to the president. Hunt,
Zeifman said, had the goods on nefarious
activities in the Kennedy Administration that
would have made Watergate look like a day at the beach –
including Kennedy’s purported complicity in the
attempted assassination of Fidel Castro.
The actions of Hillary and her cohorts
went directly against the judgment of top
Democrats, up to and including then-House Majority Leader Tip O’Neill, that Nixon clearly had the right to counsel.
Zeifman says that Hillary, along with Marshall,
Nussbaum and Doar, was determined to gain enough
votes on the Judiciary Committee to change House rules and
deny counsel to Nixon. And in order to pull this
off, Zeifman says Hillary wrote a fraudulent
legal brief, and confiscated public documents to hide
her deception.
The brief involved precedent for
representation by counsel during an impeachment
proceeding. When Hillary endeavored to write a
legal brief arguing there is no right to
representation by counsel during an impeachment
proceeding, Zeifman says, he told Hillary about the case of
Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, who faced an impeachment
attempt in 1970.
“As soon as the impeachment resolutions
were introduced by (then-House Minority Leader
Gerald) Ford, and they were referred to the House
Judiciary Committee, the first thing Douglas did was hire himself
a lawyer,” Zeifman said.
The Judiciary Committee allowed Douglas
to keep counsel, thus establishing the precedent.
Zeifman says he told Hillary that all the
documents establishing this fact were in the Judiciary Committee’s public files. So what did Hillary do?
“Hillary
then removed all the Douglas files to the offices
where she was located, which at that time was
secured and inaccessible to the public,” Zeifman said.
Hillary then proceeded to write a legal brief arguing
there was no precedent for the right to
representation by counsel during an impeachment proceeding – as
if the Douglas case had never occurred.
The brief was so fraudulent
and ridiculous, Zeifman believes Hillary would
have been disbarred if she had submitted it to a
judge.
No comments:
Post a Comment