-Caveat Lector- THE CLINTON SCANDALS Proving Bribery Isn't Easy This is a crime you could almost admit to and still get away with. BY PAUL A. ENGELMAYER Friday, March 2, 2001 12:01 a.m. EST Time and again, prosecutors in quest of Bill Clinton have seen their quarry elude them. This time, can federal prosecutors investigating Pardongate make a bribery case against him stick? Probably not, if experience is any guide. There is no more tenacious prosecutor than Manhattan U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White, and her staff is second to none. But, as any public-corruption prosecutor will attest, few charges are harder to prove than a historical (already completed) bribe scheme. Bribery cases require prosecutors to prove that the public official accepted a thing of value in exchange for his official acts. That is a formidable burden. As long as there is a reasonable doubt that the official acted for any other reason, he cannot be convicted. When prosecutors are alerted to a bribe scheme in midstream, they can, and often do, prove the necessary quid pro quo by capturing the exchange on tape. The Justice Department has used this technique to good effect in numerous "sting" operations in corruption cases, most notably the Abscam prosecutions of congressmen in the early 1980s. But when an alleged bribe scheme is over by the time the investigation gets under way, proving a quid pro quo is much harder. The government typically must secure the cooperation of one party to the bribe scheme--usually the bribe-payer--to testify as to the agreement to trade money or other things of value for official acts. For example, the 1980s testimony of Wedtech officials about payoffs they had made to public officials in exchange for official acts resulted in the convictions (under the closely related extortion statute) of two congressmen and other local officials. In the case of Mr. Clinton's pardon of fugitive tax-evader Marc Rich, prosecutors already have proof of a "quo" (the pardon) and a "quid" (huge contributions to the Clinton presidential library by ex-wife Denise Rich). Their challenge is proving the elusive "pro"--that the pardon was given in exchange for those contributions, or other things of value. Absent confessional testimony by a party to such an alleged scheme (Ms. Rich or her friend Beth Dozoretz, for example), the "pro" realistically can't be established, because Mr. Clinton can advance a plausible explanation for each individual pardon. In his recent New York Times op-ed piece, Mr. Clinton stated that he had pardoned Mr. Rich because the prosecution had been unfair, and because America's Israeli allies had lobbied for the pardon. While many have questioned Mr. Clinton's insistence that the pardon was unconnected to Ms. Rich's donations, his story is not so incredible as to leave no explanation other than a quid pro quo. Indeed, even if Mr. Clinton admitted he had bestowed the Rich pardon out of appreciation for Ms. Rich's past generosity--a plausible scenario--that would still not establish bribery. Prosecutors would still have to prove that, before the donations were made, Ms. Rich and Mr. Clinton had reached an understanding that in exchange for her donations, he would later act to her benefit. Prosecutors face the same challenge in proving bribery in connection with Mr. Clinton's other controversial 11th-hour pardons: to the four Hasidic "New Square" men convicted of bilking the government of some $30 million (a pardon allegedly granted in exchange for delivering votes to Hillary Clinton), or to the two convicts represented by Hugh Rodham (allegedly in exchange for a $400,000 contingency fee). How, then, can we expect prosecutors to proceed in probing these events? First, expect a full-bore investigation of Ms. Rich, Mr. Rich, Ms. Dozoretz, and others who pressed for other controversial pardons. Prosecutors will subpoena their bank and phone records, tax returns, and perhaps obtain testimony from their accountants. A close examination of their political contributions and finances could conceivably turn up campaign-finance, income-tax, or other irregularities separate from the pardon issue. If an investigation turned up criminal exposure on Ms. Rich's part, for example, prosecutors might try to use that leverage to secure her cooperation with the pardon probe, in exchange for leniency. The civil lawsuit filed yesterday by New York State, to collect $137 million in unpaid income tax from Marc Rich, won't be enough to put pressure on this billionaire. Second, if the facts support them, expect prosecutors to explore lesser charges, such the federal gratuity statute, as an alternative to proving bribery and as a means of putting pressure on Ms. Rich and other pardon-seekers to cooperate. While the gratuity statute carries a two-year maximum sentence--in contrast to bribery's 15-year maximum--its proof requirements are far less daunting. To prove a gratuity, prosecutors must merely show that a thing of value was given to the public official either as a reward for a specific official act, or as an incentive to carry out such an act. As federal courts have explained, to prove a gratuity there need not be a mutual understanding between the gift-giver and the public official. The gift-giver merely must have sought to increase the likelihood that the official act would be performed. Suppose, for example, that Mr. Rich (through his ex-wife) channeled large sums to the Clinton library (or gave the Clintons other things of value, such as furniture) around the time of the pardon or pardon request. Further suppose that he had made no comparable gifts in the past. That would be strong evidence of a criminal gratuity. Similarly, expect prosecutors to aggressively question colleagues and friends of pardon-seekers as to what explanations they were giving for their beneficence towards the Clintons in the period leading up to the pardon. Finally, expect prosecutors to keep a sharp lookout for obstruction of justice or grand-jury perjury, and to vigilantly investigate and prosecute any such misconduct. As the prosecutors well know, it is often not the underlying alleged misconduct, but the cover-up in response to it, that lands public officials and their coteries in trouble. Mr. Clinton has acknowledged evasiveness before in response to questioning under oath. If asked by federal prosecutors about Pardongate, he can expect far more skillful questioning than he has encountered before. If caught in a lie in that forum, his troubles will just have begun. Mr. Engelmayer, an attorney in New York, is a former chief of the major crimes unit at the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office. ================================================================= Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT FROM THE DESK OF: *Michael Spitzer* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends ================================================================= <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A> DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. 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