COMMENTARY
A right-wing conspiracy? You be the judge
Clinton shifts focus to Kosovo and Mexico
NEWS ANALYSIS
An altered political landscape
Unexpected winners likely to be women
IN MEXICO
Clinton's trip: more image than diplomacy
GOP gathering: Forget Clinton, focus on 2000
Clinton's trial: A special report
YEAR THAT WAS
Tracking the effects of Clinton's infidelity
VICE PRESIDENT
Impeachment acquittal breaks both ways for Gore prospects
THE GOP
For Republicans, time to listen to America's voices
VICTIMS COUNT
The uncelebrated played bit parts, paid big prices
THE MEDIA
Questions still shadow scandal's impact
THE CONGRESS
Senate may emerge more unified than ever
THE PRECEDENTS
With presidential impeachments, little set in stone
FROM CHAPEL HILL
Come the year 2130, historians will be puzzled
FROM OXFORD
Impeachment: It's a medieval relic better left unused
IN FOCUS
Clinton's split- screen moments
ROBERT A. JORDAN
Starr and Tripp now deserve a grilling on their activities
Prior coverage
CLINTON ACQUITTED
2 charges fail; vote seen as House rebuff
THE SENATE
With verdict finally tallied, a quiet relief fills chamber
PUBLIC REACTION
To the very end, a case of national indifference
CONTINUING PROBE
White House still worried by Starr
TRIPP/JONES
Tripp's remarks revised
THE VOTING
Moderates cross aisle in New England GOP
POLL FAVORITE
Mrs. Clinton may consider Senate race in N.Y.
THE WHITE HOUSE
Sober Clinton asks for reconciliation in Rose Garden talk
IN CITY: RELIEF, INDIGNATION
In city, relief and some indignation
GLOBE EDITORIAL
Bruised by impeachment
DEC.19, 1998
Clinton is impeached
BACKGROUND
-CHRONOLOGY
-WHAT IT MEANS
-THE ARTICLES
-TERMS GLOSSARY
Full text
-STARR'S PREPARED TEXT
-STARR REPORT
-REBUTTAL
-REBUTTAL #2
-CLINTON TESTIMONY
-CLINTON'S 81 ANSWERS
-LEWINSKY TESTIMONY
-TRIPP TAPES
Video
BROADCAST.COM
-CLINTON'S GRAND JURY TESTIMONY
NECNEWS.COM
-STARR'S JUDICIARY COMMITTEE TESTIMONY
-COMMITTEE IMPEACHMENT DEBATE
Side-by-side
Comparing the two arguments
|
|
Key dates in the Starr-Clinton investigation
Key events in the Clinton investigation:
Jan. 12, 1994: Under pressure, President Clinton asks that a special prosecutor be named to investigate his Whitewater land dealings.
Jan. 20: Attorney General Janet Reno selects Robert B. Fiske Jr. as special prosecutor.
May 6: Paula Jones files a lawsuit alleging Clinton sexually harassed her in a Little Rock, Ark., hotel room three years earlier while she was a state clerk and he was governor.
Aug. 5: After Congress reauthorizes the defunct Independent Counsel Act -- and Clinton signs it -- a panel of three federal appeals court judges appoints former Bush administration Solicitor General Kenneth Starr to take over Fiske's investigation.
-----------
Nov. 5, 1996: Clinton re-elected.
-----------
May 27, 1997: The Supreme Court rules Mrs. Jones can pursue her lawsuit while Clinton is in office.
Dec. 5: Monica Lewinsky named on a list of potential witnesses in Mrs. Jones' lawsuit.
Dec. 19: Ms. Lewinsky served with subpoena to appear at a deposition for the Jones suit and to turn over gifts from Clinton.
-----------
Jan. 7, 1998: Ms. Lewinsky signs affidavit for Jones case saying she had no sexual relationship with Clinton.
Jan. 12: A confidante of Ms. Lewinsky, Linda Tripp, gives Starr's office tapes she made of conversations between herself and Ms. Lewinsky.
Jan. 16: Court panel gives Starr authority to investigate Lewinsky matters. Prosecutors confront Ms. Lewinsky and unsuccessfully seek her cooperation.
Jan. 17: Clinton testifies in Mrs. Jones' lawsuit and denies a sexual relationship with Ms. Lewinsky.
Jan. 26: Clinton declares publicly, ``I did not have sexual relations with that woman. ... I never told anybody to lie.''
March 15: Former Clinton aide Kathleen Willey appears on CBS' ``60 Minutes,'' saying Clinton made a sexual advance to her in the White House in 1993.
April 1: In Arkansas, U.S. District Judge Susan Webber Wright dismisses Mrs. Jones' lawsuit.
Aug. 6: Under immunity from prosecution, Ms. Lewinsky testifies to the Starr grand jury.
Aug. 17: Clinton undergoes more than four hours of questioning before the grand jury. He then says in a televised speech, ``I did have a relationship with Ms. Lewinsky that was not appropriate. ... It constituted a critical lapse in judgment and a personal failure on my part for which I am solely and completely responsible.''
Sept. 9: Starr tells House leaders he has found ``substantial and credible information ... that may constitute grounds for impeachment.'' He delivers 36 boxes holding two copies of his report and supporting evidence.
Oct. 8: House votes to hold impeachment inquiry.
Nov. 3: Democrats pick up five House seats in the election. Exit polls show almost two-thirds of voters don't want Clinton impeached.
Nov. 13: Clinton agrees to pay Mrs. Jones $850,000 to drop her sexual harassment lawsuit, with no apology or admission of guilt.
Nov. 20: Starr's ethics adviser, Sam Dash, resigns, objecting to Starr's testifying before Congress in support of impeachment report.
Nov. 27: Answering questions from Chairman Henry Hyde, R-Ill., Clinton writes the Judiciary Committee that his testimony in the Lewinsky affair was ``not false and misleading.''
Dec. 11: House Judiciary Committee approves impeachment articles I, II and III, which accuse the president of perjury in the Jones deposition, perjury in his grand jury testimony and obstruction of justice in the Jones case.
Dec. 12: Committee approves a fourth and final article, including charges of perjury regarding Clinton's responses to its questions. The committee rejects a substitute resolution backed by Democrats that would instead censure Clinton for ``reprehensible conduct.''
Dec. 17: House delays debate on articles of impeachment while the United States launches military strikes against Iraq.
Dec. 19: Clinton impeached by the House on articles I and III, perjury and obstruction of justice. Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La., in line to become speaker of the House, announces he will leave Congress after disclosure of sexual affairs.
Dec. 20: Polls show Clinton's approval rating continues to rise.
----------
Jan. 7, 1999: Impeachment trial begins in Senate. Chief Justice William Rehnquist sworn in to preside. He swears in the 100 senators as jurors.
Jan. 24: Ms. Lewinsky interviewed privately by House prosecutors under judge's order.
Jan. 28: After two weeks of arguments by House prosecutors and Clinton's lawyers, the Senate rejects a motion to dismiss the charges. It authorizes subpoenas for questioning of Ms. Lewinsky, presidential friend Vernon Jordan and White House aide Sidney Blumenthal.
Feb. 1-3: Ms. Lewinsky, Jordan and Blumenthal deposed by House managers and lawyers for the president.
Feb. 4: Senate votes to allow showing that videotaped testimony during the trial. Senators reject calling live witnesses.
Feb. 6: Clips from the videotaped testimony of Ms. Lewinsky, Jordan and Blumenthal, as well as videotaped testimony from Clinton are played publicly at Senate trial.
Feb. 8: House managers and White House lawyers present closing arguments.
Feb. 9: Senate declines to change rules to allow open deliberations on impeachment articles and begins private deliberations.
Feb. 10-11: Senate continues private deliberations.
Feb. 12: After additional deliberations, the Senate acquits Clinton. The votes on perjury were 45 guilty, 55 not guilty. The votes on obstruction of justice were 50 guilty, 50 not guilty. Sixty-seven votes were necessary to convict.
-----------------------------
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS, 02/12/99
|