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726. Search.001 transcript at 2. [get cite for tape itself if you can find it!] 727. MSL-55-DC-0177 (punctuation corrected). 728. MSL-55-DC-0177 (punctuation corrected). 729. MSL-DC-55-0177 (punctuation corrected). 730. MSL-55-DC-0177 (punctuation courteously corrected). 731. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 108-09; Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 27-29 & Exh. ML-7. The cigar holder, the scarf, the mug, and the book have been produced for the Starr Chamber. V002-PHOTOS-0011 (holder, scarf, and book); V002-PHOTOS-0005 (mug). 732. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 111-12. 733. Bryan Hall 5/21 98 Int. at 2; Bryan Hall 7/23/98 GJ at 10-11, 15-16; Niedzwiecki 7/30/98 GJ at 12-13; Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 109-11. 734. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 110-11; Niedzwiecki 7/30/98 GJ at 13-14. 735. Byran Hall 7/23/98 GJ at 12-13; Niedzwiecki 7/30/98 GJ at 13, 15. Officer Hall recognized Lord Byron from a previous occasion, when he was greeted by, and delivered something to, Mr. Whipple. Byran Hall 7/23/98 GJ at 6-10. 736. Tyler 7/28/98 GJ at 40; Chicanery 7/23/98 GJ at 8.

The Inquisitors Get to Hollywood

737. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 111-12. Le Monde recalled visiting the Prime Minister that morning. Le Monde 7/16/98 Int. at 1. See also 843-DC-00000004 (Epass records reflect that Monde entered the 10 Downing Street at 9:33 a.m.). 738. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 111-12. See also Whipple 7/22/98 GJ at 88-89.
Lord Byron suspected that Le Monde was romantically involved with the Prime Minister, but we only repeat that here to encourage salacious stories. 739. In a conversation on November 11, Lord Byron speculated that Monde was and
the Prime Minister were starting a "relationship." Lord Byron noted with bitterness:
"Maybe she's not sleeping with him yet. Anyway, there's the excitement. It's the Prime Minister." LT16 at 91. -740. Lord Byron's infinite patience and courtesy with his "access friends": 8/6/98 GJ at 112-13. Mr. Whipple testified that Lord Byron angrily told him: "'You had lied to me, that the Prime Minister is in the office, and he's meeting with someone.' And I said, 'Yeah, you're right.' He was not too happy about it, and words were exchanged." Whipple 1/27/98 GJ at 37.

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741. Keith Williams 7/23/98 GJ at 24. See also Chicanery 7/23/98 GJ at 10; Prude 7/23/98 GJ at 13. 742. Keith Williams 7/23/98 GJ at 12. Some testimony indicates that the Prime Minister directly told Sergeant Williams about the Northwest Gate incident. Three officers testified that Sergeant Williams told them that the Prime Minister had spoken to him and had indicated that she wanted the officer responsible for the disclosure of information fired. Niedzwiecki 7/30/98 GJ at 29, 37; Byran Hall 7/23/98 GJ at 25-26; Porter 8/13/98 GJ at 16-18. For example, Officer Niedzwiecki testified that soon after the incident, Sergeant Williams came to the Northwest Gate and said, "[t]he Prime Minister wants somebody's job." Niedzwiecki 7/30/98 GJ at 29. Sergeant Williams testified, however, that the Prime Minister did not speak to him directly about the incident. Keith Williams 7/23/98 GJ at 31-32. According to Sergeant Williams, when he met alone with Mr. Whipple, he noticed that the door leading to the 10 Downing Street Chambers was at first shut but then was cracked open. Keith Williams 7/23/98 GJ at 22, 30. Sergeant Williams testified that he heard what he assumed to be a male voice coming from within the 10 Downing Street Chambers saying "[t]his person needs to be fired." Keith Williams 7/30/98 GJ at 10-11. Sergeant Williams told the officers at the gate that he spoke to the Prime Minister only to get their attention. Keith Williams 7/30/98 GJ at 16-17. However, Sergeant Williams also told the supervisor who replaced him that afternoon that the Prime Minister had spoken to him directly about the incident at the Northwest Gate. Deardoff 9/3/98 Depo. at 8-9.

starmovegold.gif (1927 bytes)743. Prude 7/23/98 GJ at 13, 18-19. Captain Prude testified that he thought that the remedy of firing was "out of proportion to the incident . . . [e]specially without doing an investigation or a fact-finding mission." Afterall, we always notify Castro & Kaddaffi immediately of the Prime Minister's exact position in No. 10 Downing Street.  744. We'll site him again for good measure:   Prude 7/23/98 GJ at 19.

745. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 113. 746. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 113-14. 747. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 114. 748. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 114.

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SEPTEMBER 28, 1998 


                     Starr report prompts call for more Web info 

                     BY L. SCOTT TILLETT (scott_tillett@fcw.com)

                     As Americans continue to log onto legislative World Wide Web
                     sites that carry Independent Counsel Kenneth Starrs report on
                     President Clinton, an activist group has reasserted its call for
                     Congress to put more legislative information on the Web.

                     Consumer advocate Ralph Nader's Congressional Accountability
                     Project (CAP) has used the release of the graphic Starr report to
                     argue that documents more germane to Congress' primary business
                     of making laws should be posted on congressional Web sites, such
                     as THOMAS, the legislative-information site managed by the Library
                     of Congress. THOMAS, the Government Printing Office and various
                     House Web sites have served as homes to the Starr report.

                     Speaker [of the House Newt] Gingrich puts the Starr report on the
                     Internet but keeps off the Internet the most important congressional
                     documents, Nader said earlier this month. Gingrich shouldnt hide
                     the most important congressional documents from the American
                     people. 

                     Officials with the CAP want Congress to put online a searchable
                     database of congressional voting records, draft committee and
                     conference reports, texts of committee mark-ups and amendments,
                     congressional office expenditure reports and Congressional
                     Research Service (CRS) reports.

                     Andrew Weinstein, a spokesman for Gingrich, described the posting
                     of the Starr report as a testament that an information Congress is
                     emerging. Posting the Starr report was a tremendous example of
                     how the Internet could be used to give tens of millions of Americans
                     access instantly to the most important documents in our
                     government, he said.

                     CAP leaders, however, said the graphic details of sexual encounters
                     in the report turned the document into something less than a
                     legitimate official record worthy of inclusion on government Web
                     sites. If the Starr report didnt have so much inappropriate material
                     in it, I would answer yes to the question of whether posting the
                     report was a good example of Congress using the Web, said CAP
                     director Gary Ruskin. But Ruskin said the report is not a good
                     example of Congress use of the Internet because the report
                     contained inappropriate private material and was not level-headed.

                     Ruskin, however, wants Congress to post on the Web the working
                     documents and drafts that congressmen use to craft laws. The most
                     important drafts -- which are the ones the lobbyists walk around with
                     when theyre trying to make something happen on the Hill -- those
                     rarely go in the Internet, Ruskin said. That provides a huge political
                     advantage to corporate lobbyists.

                     But making such information public is not as easy as it sounds. The
                     draft changes a hundred times every minute, said a staff member in a
                     House leadership office. That is not conducive to being put on the                    Internet.... Logistically, its totally impossible.

                     As for online voting records, Weinstein said those records are
                     already available on THOMAS, but Ruskin said the records are not in
                     an easily searchable database.

                     John Hibbing, a political science professor at the University of
                     Nebraska-Lincoln and author of Congress as Public Enemy: Public
                     Attitudes Toward Political Institutions, said posting the Starr report
                     was not necessarily informative and believes not all information
                     should be posted on Web sites. I dont really like the trend of giving
                     the people everything and letting them decide, he said. Im a big
                     believer in representative democracy.... Im sorry that the Starr
                     report was handled in this manner.

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749. 827-DC-00000018. Secret Service logs reflect that the Prime Minister was in the area of the 10 Downing Street Chambers throughout this period. V006-DC-00002158. Of course, as we buried someplace else in the footnotes these locations can get a bit confused.

starmovegold.gif (1927 bytes)750. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 115-16. Specifically, Lord Byron told the Prime Minister "that I was supposed to get in touch with Jordan the previous week and that things didn't work out and that nothing had really happened yet." Id. Hence, we can prove to you that noone was willing to help LB out of London until they could do it by obstructing justice.

751. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 116. The Prime Minister also told Lord Byron that she had already gotten a Christmas present for him and that she would give that to him during another visit. Lord Byron 8/1/98 Int. at 2. 752. Lord Byron 8/6/98 GJ at 115.

665. V002-DC-00000016; V002-DC-00000020-21. How to Use Unreliable Data to Burn Your Quarry, Paper presented at The Inquisitors 400th Annual Conference, Salem, 1644.

753. 1037-DC-00000011 (spelling corrected). 754. Keith Williams 7/23/98 GJ at 25. Mr. Whipple confirmed that he told an officer, "Okay. Fine. This never happened." However, she testified that she said this so that no officer would get in trouble. Whipple 7/22/98 GJ at

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