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(05/21/98)

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[Editor's note: The following is part of a speech delivered last week by Dan Moldea at the Martin Luther King Memorial Library in Washington, D.C., about his dealings with Hickman Ewing, deputy chief of the Office of the Independent Counsel. The speech was given to Salon by Moldea.]

I will neither discuss my own sourcing within the office of the independent counsel during the research of my book, nor will I discuss my conversations with other reporters about their sourcing within the Office of the Independent Counsel. However, I am willing to discuss my conversation with the top official who explained to me the OIC's process of cooperating with reporters and book reviewers.

But before doing that I want to make it clear that:

1) Although I initially wanted this OIC official to read portions of my manuscript to ensure its fairness and accuracy, he never became a source of mine.

2) He never provided me with any inside information about any OIC investigation, even though I wanted it, and he said, at first, that he was willing to cooporate with me, even after I told him about a potential conflict of interest I had with Starr, stemming from a legal situation before Starr became independent counsel.

3) In the end, this official double-crossed me, leaving me in the lurch as I was facing the deadline for my book ... The OIC official who explained the rules about the OIC and the media to me, six weeks before the Monica Lewinsky situation became public, was Hickman Ewing, Kenneth Starr's chief deputy, who directed the federal grand jury investigation of Whitewater and related activities in Little Rock.

According to my personal notes of this conversation, Ewing told me that:

1) prior to anything being published, the OIC freely talks to reporters and book reviewers and gives them the OIC's positions on controversial issues along with occasionally providing information that is not on the public record. This information is provided to approved writers on an off-the-record basis.

2) Ewing told me that if the OIC understands where a reporter is coming from -- in other words if he is in agreement with the OIC's positions -- then the OIC will speak more freely with the reporter seeking inside information.

3) Ewing told me that, even though he wanted to cooperate with me, he could not do so without the permission of Kenneth Starr. In other words, Ewing made it clear to me that no reporter or book reviewer receives anything from the OIC without Starr's expressed approval.

To summarize, according to Hickman Ewing, Kenneth Starr's chief deputy, the OIC freely provides nonpublic information on an off-the-record basis to reporters and book reviewers who are personally approved by Kenneth Starr and whose work is in sync with the OIC's positions on key issues.

This runs contrary to the OIC's public statements about its relationship with the media and is further proof that the OIC's investigation of the Clinton White House, regardless of merit, is political, partisan and punitive, built upon a series of well-timed leaks that have turned gossip into gasoline and some of these approved journalists into lapdogs who are dependent upon their sources' access and goodwill. Because this matter has become a legal issue, I have chosen to speak out about it.

Return to "Why Vincent Foster can't rest in peace"

SALON | May 28, 1998



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[Newsreal: Newsreal: The trials and tribulations of Bill Clinton] [Off your chest: There is no need for the human race to exploit animals.]