Posted on 06/20/2014 2:28:32 AM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
The facts are these. In 1975, before she married Bill Clinton, Hillary Rodham defended a child rapist in Arkansas court. She was not a public defender. No one ordered her to take the case. An ambitious young lawyer, she was asked by a friend if she would represent the accused, and she agreed. And her defense was successful. Attacking the credibility of the 12-year-old victim on the one hand, and questioning the chain of evidence on another, Clinton got a plea-bargain for her client. He served ten months in prison, and died in 1992. The victim, now 52, has had her life irrevocably alteredfor the worse.
Sometime in the mid-1980s, for an Esquire profile of rising political stars, Hillary Clinton and her husband agreed to a series of interviews with the Arkansas journalist Roy Reed. Reed and Hillary Clinton discussed at some length her defense of the child rapist, and in the course of that discussion she bragged and laughed about the case, implied she had known her client was guilty, and said her faith in polygraphs was forever destroyed when she saw that her client had taken one and passed. Reeds article was never published. His tapes of the interviews were later donated to the University of Arkansas. Where they remained, gathering dust.
Contrary to what you may have heard over the past week, Clintons successful defense of the rapist Thomas Alfred Taylor is not old news. On the contrary: For a CV that has been scrutinized so closely, references to the rape case in the public record have been rather thin. One of those references came from Clinton herself. In 2004, when she was a senator from New York, and published her first memoir, Living History, Clinton included a brief mention of the case, mainly as a way to take credit for Arkansas first rape crisis hotline. And in 2008, Glenn Thrushthen at Newsdaywrote a lengthy article on the subject.
Dont remember it? Theres a reason. My then-editor appended a meaningless intro to the story, delayed and buried it because, in his words, It might have an impact, Thrush said in a June 15 tweet. Well, the editor got his way. It didnt have an impact.
The occasion for Thrushs tweet was The Hillary Tapes by the Washington Free Beacons Alana Goodman, who obtained the Reed interview and made it public for the first time. Goodman is careful to quote a source saying that, once an attorney takes on a client, he is required to provide that client with the strongest possible defense. Yet the same source also noted that Hillary Clintons subsequent narrative of the casespecifically, her implication to Reed that her client had been guilty all alongraised serious questions regarding attorney-client privilege. And Goodman also notes the casual and complacent manner in which Clinton treats such a morally fraught episode, as well as the parallels between the tactics Clinton employed to defend Taylor and the tactics she, her husband, and their allies have used to defend themselves against accusations of wrongdoing over the course of their three decades in public life. Pretty newsworthy, it seems to me.
And yet, looking over the treatment of Goodmans scoop over the past week, I cant help thinking that the reaction to The Hillary Tapes is just as newsworthy as the tapes themselves. That reaction has been decidedly mixed. Not long ago, in 2012, the Washington Post ran an extensive investigation into the troubling incidents of Mitt Romneys prep-school days, whereupon the media devoted hour after hour to the all-important discussion of whether Willard M. Romney had been something of a child bully. Here, though, we have a newly unearthed recording of Hillary Clinton laughing out loud over her defense of a child rapistand plenty of outlets have ignored the story altogether. The difference? As the Newsday editor said: It might have an impact.
No matter your view of Hillary Clinton, no matter your position on legal ethics, the recording of the Reed interview is news. It tells us something we did not already know. It tells us that, when her guard was down, Clinton found the whole disturbing incident a trifling and joking matter. And the fact that so many supposedly sophisticated and au courant journalists and writers have dismissed the story as nothing more than an attorney doing her job is, I think, equally disturbing. Dana Bash to the contrary notwithstanding, Hillary Clinton was not forced to take on Taylor as a client. It was her choiceand not, for her, a hard one. Certainly that complicates our understanding of the former first lady as an unrelenting defender and advocate of women and girls.
Lets even concede that Clinton was just doing her job. What makes that job exempt from inquiry and skepticism and criticism? Yes, Mumia, Bill Ayers, and child rapists have the right to legal representation. But that does not give the lawyers who represent them the rightthe entitlementto public office. If it is fair to attack a candidate because he used to travel with the family dog on the roof of his car, because he may have forcibly subjected a fellow student to a haircut, then it is entirely fair, it is more than fair, to attack a candidate for defending the rapist of a 12-year-old girl, and for laughing about it a decade later.
Lawyers I can handle. Librarians? Theyre trouble. I did not expect, when I arrived at the office Wednesday, to find a letter from a dean of the University of Arkansas sitting on my desk, informing me that the Free Beacons research privileges had been suspended because we failed to fill out a permission slip, that we were in violation of the University of Arkansas intellectual property rights, and demanding that we remove the audio of the Hillary tapes from our website. (Both the letter from Dean Allen and the response of the Free Beacons lawyers can be read below.)
Now, we obtained these materials without having to fill out any forms and without being provided a copy of any university policy. The university has yet to prove that it owns the copyright to the Reed audio. Nor has it explained how, exactly, that audio does not fall under fair use. And remember, too, that the institution protesting our story is a librarywhich ostensibly exists for the sole purpose of spreading knowledge and literacy and information and print and audio and visual media. That is what libraries are for, isnt it?
Puzzling. Less puzzling, though, when I discovered that the author of the letter, Dean Carolyn Henderson Allen, was a donor to Hillary Clintons 2008 campaign, and that the University of Arkansas Chancellor, David Gearhart, is a former student of the Clintons, and that his brother, Van Gearhart, worked at the same legal aid clinic as Clinton at the time of the Taylor case.
One would expect the media to rally behind potential violations of a publications First Amendment rightsbut, with the exception of this Politico story, the University of Arkansas attempt to suppress the Hillary tapes has yet to be the subject of extensive coverage.
I wonder why.
Defending even a child rapist as vigorously as possible might be a plus if she were running to lead the American Bar Association, wrote Melinda Henneberger, in one of the few stories about the Hillary tapes to appear in the mainstream media. But wouldnt her apparent willingness to attack a sixth-grader compromise a presidential run?
Indeed, I think it would. Which is why the reaction to Alana Goodmans scoop has been so muted and unusual. And why Hillarys people must be wondering: Whats next?
I .. and I'll guess a lot more of us than not .. suspect this attitude in most politicians.
It is unbelievable to read a newspaper, listen to the news, read FR and some others ... and actually accept what event accounted is 'normal'.
Since bill clinton, I've had headaches from shaking my head in disbelief ... That's 15 years of skeletal dysfunction, folks .. and at my age .. I live off of aspirin.
“Since bill clinton, I’ve had headaches from shaking my head in disbelief ... That’s 15 years of skeletal dysfunction, folks .. and at my age .. I live off of aspirin. “
WOW I have the same thing. I am shaking my head daily in disbelief. I never knew there was a term for it (skeletal dysfunction), thanks for clearing it up. :)
time for more aspiran
RICO.
I’m sure that if asked about it, her response would be: “At this point in time, what difference does it make?”
I had a co-worker who worked as a local radio station reporter, back around 1969. He interviewed a naked man in a tree during an anti-war demonstration on Dickson Street in Fayetteville Arkansas. He said the naked man’s name was BILL CLINTON.
I tried to get him to release the tape back in 1991 but he stalled around till it was too late.
Ooooops — Wrong link.
She was 28.
From birth to age 18 she lived in suburban Illinois. From 18-27 she lived and worked in suburban Boston and New Haven.
When she took this case, she had only been living in Arkansas for a few months - she moved there only after she had failed the DC bar exam and decided to help Bill Clinton with his failed 1974 Congressional campaign.
What a phony.
Was he hanging onto the tree with a crooked appendage?
I love the way the author puts them all together so casually. Well done.
Since bill clinton, Ive had headaches from shaking my head in disbelief ... Thats 15 years of skeletal dysfunction, folks .. and at my age .. I live off of aspirin.
______________________________
WOW I have the same thing. I am shaking my head daily in disbelief. I never knew there was a term for it (skeletal dysfunction), thanks for clearing it up. :)
time for more aspiran
I think with this addition I might qualify for some disability and maybe a dumbophone.
Thanks for sharing this, particularly the letters from the university and the Free Beacon.
The letter from the Free Beacon’s attorney is great. He points out that the public library takes state funds and thus, has to provide materials to the public including Free Beacon staff.
I think the university’s letter was a stab in the dark, hoping the Free Beacon would be trembling in their boots and take the information down immediately. Good for them for standing up for themselves!
In law school, the teachers conspire to destroy any natural morality in the law student. Then they pass the bar and start working to ruing everything good, anywhere they find it.
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