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2.38 MB

Extraction Summary

6
People
2
Organizations
0
Locations
2
Events
3
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Draft manuscript / memoir / legal commentary
File Size: 2.38 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a memoir or manuscript (possibly by Alan Dershowitz or a similar legal commentator) detailing the author's criticism of attorney Robert Bennett's handling of the Bill Clinton/Paula Jones case in January 1998. The text recounts a TV appearance where the author criticized Bennett, followed by a confrontation phone call where Bennett defended his strategy and admitted he had not investigated Lewinsky but simply accepted the President's word. The author argues that Bennett failed in his duty to explain the option of defaulting on the civil case to avoid a perjury trap.

People (6)

Name Role Context
The President Subject of legal case
Bill Clinton; discussed regarding the Jones case and Lewinsky affidavit.
Linda Tripp Witness/Source
Recorded conversations with Monica Lewinsky.
Monica Lewinsky Affiant/Subject
Alleged sexual relationship with the President; provided an affidavit.
Robert Bennett Lawyer
Attorney for the President; criticized by the narrator for his legal strategy.
Narrator (I) Legal Commentator/Author
Appeared on MSNBC to criticize Bennett; received a call from Bennett.
Jones Plaintiff
Paula Jones; referring to the lawsuit against the President.

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
MSNBC
Television network where the narrator appeared.
Internight
MSNBC program name.

Timeline (2 events)

January 23, 1998
Narrator appeared on MSNBC program 'Internight'.
MSNBC
Narrator
January 27, 1998
Phone conversation between Robert Bennett and the narrator regarding legal strategy.
Telephone
Robert Bennett Narrator

Relationships (3)

Robert Bennett Attorney-Client The President
Bennett represented the President in the Jones case.
The President Alleged Sexual Relationship Monica Lewinsky
Reports of tape recorded conversations suggesting a sexual relationship.
Linda Tripp Conversationalists Monica Lewinsky
Tape recorded conversations between them.

Key Quotes (4)

"The president responded: “That is absolutely true.”"
Source
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Quote #1
"He has to tell the truth, and if the truth is inculpatory he has to tell it."
Source
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Quote #2
"Bennett replied that defaulting would have been “ridiculous” and “a stupid idea” and that he would never recommend it."
Source
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Quote #3
"I asked Bennett what kind of an investigation he had conducted of the Lewinsky matter before he allowed the President to be deposed, and he acknowledged that he simply accepted the President’s word, since it was supported by Lewinsky’s affidavit."
Source
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,119 characters)

4.2.12
WC: 191694
Is that a true and accurate statement”
The president responded: “That is absolutely true.”
Shortly thereafter, reports began to appear of tape recorded conversations between Linda Tripp
and Monica Lewinsky suggesting that there had been a sexual relationship of some kind between
the President and Monica Lewinsky.
On January 23, 1998 I appeared on the MSNBC program “Internight” and criticized Bennett for
allowing the President to walk into a perjury trap and a swearing contest. I recommended that
the President “get out in front of this story. He has to tell the truth, and if the truth is inculpatory
he has to tell it.” I recommended that the president “get a new lawyer, tell him the truth, sit down
with your new lawyer … and [have him give you] the straight poop.” The lawyer has to be
someone “who doesn’t care what the president thinks of him. His obligation is to tell the
president what he doesn’t want to hear.”
On January 27, 1998, Robert Bennett called me to complain about what I said on television.
Bennett kept me on the phone for nearly half an hour telling me that I did not understand his
“strategy” in the case and accusing me of “Monday morning quarterbacking” his decisions.
I asked Bennett a direct question: “Did you ever advise the President that in addition to the option
of settling the Jones case, he could simply default on the liability phase of the case?”
Bennett replied that defaulting would have been “ridiculous” and “a stupid idea” and that he
would never recommend it.
I asked Bennett what kind of an investigation he had conducted of the Lewinsky matter before he
allowed the President to be deposed, and he acknowledged that he simply accepted the
President’s word, since it was supported by Lewinsky’s affidavit. I asked him whether he had
ever questioned Lewinsky and gave a vague response. He did say that he was surprised about the
questions asked concerning Lewinsky at the deposition.
I told Bennett that I strongly believed he had made a mistake by walking his client into a perjury
trap and allowing him to get into a swearing contest about his sex life. He assured me that he
knew what he was doing and that it would all work to the advantage of his client. I told him I
hoped he was right, but that I still thought he had made a mistake.
A lawyer owes his client the duty to explain all available legal options, even if he believes that the
client will probably reject a given option. Bennett failed in this duty. He now argues, in his own
defense, that if Clinton had defaulted the Jones case, many more litigants would “come out of the
woodwork” and sued Clinton in the hope that he would default. This is a fallacious argument for
several reasons. First, the statute of limitations would have passed on virtually all allegations
arising – as the Jones case did – before Clinton became President. Even more importantly, the
moment it became public – which it quickly did – that the President previously had offered a
$700,000 settlement to Jones, there was more than enough incentive for gold-diggers to come
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