HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017307.jpg

2.39 MB

Extraction Summary

8
People
1
Organizations
4
Locations
2
Events
3
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book manuscript / draft excerpt
File Size: 2.39 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir draft (dated 4.2.12) written by an attorney (contextually Alan Dershowitz) describing his retention in 2011 to defend former Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma against murder charges. The text draws a parallel between Kuchma's case and the historical conflict between King Henry II and Thomas Becket, specifically regarding 'surreptitious' recordings found under a couch in Kuchma's office. The page also details the author's emotional trip to Kiev and his visit to the Babi Yar memorial, noting his family's connection to the Holocaust.

People (8)

Name Role Context
Alan Dershowitz Author / Attorney
Implied author ('I') who was retained to defend Leonid Kuchma; mentions having a 'former student' Doug Schoen.
Leonid Kuchma Former President of Ukraine
The client accused of ordering the murder of a journalist.
Doug Schoen Political Strategist
Former student of the author; counseling the President's family; retained the author.
Author's Brother Attorney
Retained alongside the author.
Unnamed Journalist Victim
Murdered journalist critical of the government (historically Georgiy Gongadze, though not named in text).
Yevgeny Yevtushenko Poet
Soviet dissent poet mentioned in relation to Babi Yar.
King Henry II Historical Figure
Used as a metaphor for Kuchma's situation.
Thomas Becket Historical Figure
Used as a metaphor for the murdered journalist.

Organizations (1)

Name Type Context
House Oversight Committee
Indicated by the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'.

Timeline (2 events)

2011
Author was asked to become involved in the defense of Leonid Kuchma.
Ukraine
Author Leonid Kuchma
Unknown (during 2011 trip)
Author flew to Kiev to meet client and visited the Babi Yar memorial.
Kiev, Ukraine
Author

Locations (4)

Location Context
Country where the events took place.
City where the author met the client and visited Babi Yar.
Site of mass slaughters of Jewish residents; author visited the memorial.
Refers to Kuchma's office where recordings were made.

Relationships (3)

Author (Dershowitz) Attorney/Client Leonid Kuchma
My client was the former President of the Ukraine, Leonid Kuchma.
Author (Dershowitz) Teacher/Student & Professional Doug Schoen
retained by a former student of mine, Doug Schoen
Author (Dershowitz) Family & Co-counsel Author's Brother
My brother and I were retained

Key Quotes (4)

"Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017307.jpg
Quote #1
"My client was the former President of the Ukraine, Leonid Kuchma."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017307.jpg
Quote #2
"My brother and I were retained by a former student of mine, Doug Schoen..."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017307.jpg
Quote #3
"I was shocked to see that there was hardly any memorial to the murdered Jews."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017307.jpg
Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,118 characters)

4.2.12
WC: 191694
Defending the Former President of the Ukraine Against Murder Charges
In T.S. Eliot’s famous play Murder In The Cathedral—which is loosely based on historical
events—King Henry II is anxious to be rid of Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Unwilling to bloody his own hands, the King hints of his wishes to several loyal knights by issuing
a rhetorical challenge: “Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?” The knights, believing they
are following the King’s command, then murder the Archbishop in the Cathedral.
Lawyers and historians have long debated whether the King was legally, morally or historically
guilty of Becket’s murder. In 2011, I was asked to become involved in what prosecutors believed
was a modern-day, real-life variation on murder in the Cathedral.
My client was the former President of the Ukraine, Leonid Kuchma. Ukrainian prosecutors were
investigating him for ordering the murder of a journalist who was critical of the government. The
journalist was murdered during President Kuchma’s term in office, and the resulting scandal
contributed to the ending of Kuchma’s political career.
Over the next several years, there were investigations but they all exculpated the former president.
But now, a decade later, the prosecutors claimed they had a smoking gun: a surreptitiously
recorded conversation involving President Kuchma in his “oval office” making statements about
the murdered journalist akin to those made by King Henry II about the Archbishop.
The conversations were allegedly recorded on a small Toshiba digital recorder that had been
secreted beneath a couch in the president’s office. The voice on the recording was unmistakably
that of President Kuchma and the words—if he had indeed uttered them—were damning and
incriminating.
My brother and I were retained by a former student of mine, Doug Schoen, a brilliant political
strategist who was counseling the President’s family. Our job was to advise the Ukrainian
lawyers with regard to the recording and other legal and factual issues.
I flew to Kiev to meet my client. It was an emotionally wrenching trip for me, since my
family—including many who were murdered during the Holocaust—came from areas not too far
from Kiev. I wanted to visit Babi Yar, the site of one of the worst mass slaughters of Jewish
residents of the area. I had been told that some members of my mother’s family were almost
certainly among the tens of thousands of victims of the Babi Yar massacres. I asked to visit the
memorial as soon as I got to Kiev. I was shocked to see that there was hardly any memorial to
the murdered Jews. A current resident of Kiev who visited the area, which is just outside the
center of town, wouldn’t even know that the Jewish residents of Kiev were gathered in the area
and systematically shot and thrown into pits. The tiny memorial has a faded plaque that is
extremely vague about what had happened. I knew that under the Soviet regime, there had been
denial and silence. I knew that from the famous poem by the Soviet dissent poet Yevgeny
Yevtushenko,
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HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017307

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