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Dick's Guide to President Clinton and Kathleen Willey

On Television's "60 Minutes", March 15, Kathleen Willey called President Clinton a liar. Kathleen Willey is one more woman that has been a victim of a seemingly insatiable sexual predator, President Bill Clinton. She claims that when he sexually assaulted her she wanted "to just give him a good slap across the face.'' But she also worried about the President's reckless behavior. The President groped her in 1993, when she went to the President and asked for a paying job. Her husband committed suicide the same day.

Clinton "kissed me on my mouth and pulled me closer to him. And ... I remember thinking - ... `what in the world is he doing? He touched my breasts with his hand ... and he whispered ... `I've wanted to do this ever since I laid eyes on you.' I didn't feel intimidated. I just felt overpowered,'' Willey. Clinton had sworn in a deposition that what Willey says happened did not happen. The conflicts in their stories means that one of them has committed perjury. Obviously, an ETHICAL lawyer-politician like Bill Clinton would not lie. If he were a liar he would have long ago been disbarred by the Kathleen American Bar Association (ABA) which makes sure lawyers behave ethically. (Of course, it could be the ABA believes that lying IS ethical lawyer behavior.)

Willey's account backs up the allegations made in the Paula Jones lawsuit. Clinton supporters, who know the man and his reputation for honesty and fidelity, attacked Willey as they had Jones, nit picking differences in specific details given by differing accounts of her 1993 Oval Office meeting with the president. Clinton, as honest a man as ever drew a breath, denies any sexual encounter but says he may have kissed her on the forehead because she was so distressed about her family's economic situation. A married man with Clinton's religious and family values, would never grab a woman's breasts. Willey was asked "is Clinton lying?" She answered "Yes."

Willey said the president placed one of her hands on his genitals and "that's when I pushed away from him and ... decided it was time to get out of there. It was kind of like I was watching it in slow motion. ... And, at the same time ... I thought -- Well, maybe I ought to just give him a good slap across the face. And then I thought -- Well, I don't think you can slap the President of the United States.'''

Willey is a Clinton supporter, a woman who likes to see lechers in the White House. So, why did she spill the beans on the Great Groper? Because, she said, "too many lies are being told, too many lives are being ruined. ... I think it's time for the truth to come out.'' Apparently Kathleen can live with a wife cheating womanizer in the White House, but not a lying one.

Paid White House lawyers, who would do anything to zealously defend their lying womanizing client, immediately started to attack Clinton's victim. (There is little decency in a lawyer's tool kit — zealous defense of the seediest people and corporations is the actually encouraged by the lawyer's union (The ABA) thus legitimizing the right of lawyers to take money from even the worst rapists, thieves, polluters and killers.

Peter Yost, a reporter with Associated Press who revels in writing news from sources afraid to admit to their claims (i.e. the notorious Washington closet leakers speaking on conditions of anonymity) reported that two leakers "close to Clinton's defense" said that Willey had written nice letters to Clinton after the incident. These anonymous silent slime pots -- likely lawyers themselves -- failed to realize that writing such notes was a safer thing for Kathleen to do, than to get physically close to the Big Groper. The National Organization of Women, a political organization that often says if fights for women's rights, said little about Clinton's lying to Americans about his long term affair with Gennifer Flowers. NOW supports lying womanizers. NOW trashed Paula Jones, and thought of her as a "trailer babe" who should have been honored to be called before the president to perform sex. But, even the lesbians of NOW had to agree that Clinton's behavior — in the Willey case — was sickening. "It's not just sexual harassment; if it's true, it's sexual assault,'' Patricia Ireland of the National Organization for Women said on CNN's "Late Edition." NOW failed to support Paula Jones in her lawsuit against Clinton, but whined feminist screams at Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, during his 1991 nomination hearings, for allegedly sexually harassing one woman ten years ago. It could be that these illogical feminists are more interested in their own political power base than in women's rights.

"Then he kissed me on my mouth and pulled me closer to him. And ... I remember thinking - ... `what in the world is he doing?' he touched my breasts with his hand ... and he whispered ... `I've wanted to do this ever since I laid eyes on you.' And ... then he took my hand, and he put it on him. And, that's when I pushed away from him and ... decided it was time to get out of there.''

"When I think back on it, it was kind of like I was watching it in slow motion ... And, at the same time ... I thought, `Well, maybe I ought to just give him a good slap across the face.' And then I thought, `Well, I don't think you can slap the President of the United States.''

"I have gone over this so many times ... `Did I bring this on? Did I send ... the wrong signal?' The only signals that I was sending that day, was that I was very upset, very distraught, and I needed to help my husband. ... I didn't feel intimidated. I just felt over-powered. ... I just could not believe ... the recklessness of that act. ... Later on ... I was feeling angry. I was feeling that I had been taken advantage of. My circumstances had been taken advantage of. ... I was there, asking a friend, who also happened to be the President of the United States, for help.''

(Willey declined to talk in detail about Democratic fund-raiser Nathan Landow, with whom she says she discussed her upcoming testimony in the Paula Jones case. But she described talking to Robert Bennett, the president's lawyer in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case.)

``I felt pressured by Mr. Bennett. ... He mentioned that he had just ... been at the White House, and ... the president asked for me and told him ... that he just thought the world of me. And, he said, `now, this ... was not sexual harassment, was it?' And, I didn't answer him. And he said, `Well ... it wasn't unwelcome, was it?' And I said to him, `It was unwelcome and unexpected.' ... I felt pressured. Especially when he threw in the ... business about `Well, the president ... thinks the world of you.' I found that a little laughable. If the president thought the world of me, why did he do what he did?''

(Willey said Bennett suggested she find herself a criminal lawyer.)

``The insinuation to me was that Mr. Bennett was implying that I was going to face some kind of a criminal charge for perjury ... or something else ... and I didn't, and I don't.''

(In an interview with The Associated Press, Bennett said, ``Any suggestion that I threatened or intimidated her in any way is a bald-faced lie.''

(Bennett said he was asked by Willey's lawyer ``if I could name a lawyer he could talk to'' and that Bennett did so, providing the name of prominent Washington attorney Plato Cacheris.)

Willey says that she was doing volunteer work in the 1992 campaign when Clinton called her from Williamsburg, Va., at her home in Richmond, ``and he asked me how far I was from Williamsburg.'' Clinton was having trouble with his voice, she said, and "I just jokingly said, `It sounds like you need some chicken soup.' And, he said, `Well, would you bring me some?' And ... I don't really think I answered him because I thought he was just being facetious. And then he told me that he was surrounded by Secret Service agents, and ... he would try to get rid of them ... if I would come down. And he said he would call me back later, which he did. And I declined to go. ... Because my instincts told me he wasn't interested in chicken soup.''

(A friend, Julie Steele, says she was asked by Willey to lie about her White House encounter with Clinton.) ``My personal belief is that she was pressured. ... I think that the White House wanted to try to discredit me, and they found a pawn in her.''

(Friend Linda Tripp says Willey confided the sexual encounter with Clinton just after leaving the Oval Office, but Tripp says Willey seemed joyful.)

"I remember saying to her ... `you are just not going to believe this.'' And we went outside, and I told her what had happened. ... In defense of her ... if I get into a very ... tense situation ... I fall back on my sense of humor. I think when I said, `you are not going to believe this one,' maybe she took that as joyful.''

(A few months later, Tripp was moved out of the White House to the Pentagon, while Willey got a paying job.)

She said, `I know you're here because the president wants you here.' ... She was very angry. Very upset. Very bitter. ... She ended the conversation by saying, `I'm going to get you, and ... everyone else in this place, before this is all over.''

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