D. President's Day (February 19) Break-up
According to Ms. Lewinsky, the President terminated their
relationship (only temporarily, as it happened), on Monday,
February 19, 1996 -- President's Day. The President was in the
Oval Office from 11 a.m. to 2:01 p.m. that day.(242) He had no
telephone calls between 12:19 and 12:42 p.m.(243) Records do not
reflect Ms. Lewinsky's presence at the White House.
In Ms. Lewinsky's recollection, the President telephoned her
at her Watergate apartment that day. From the tone of his voice,
she could tell something was wrong. She asked to come see him,
but he said he did not know how long he would be there.(244) Ms.
Lewinsky went to the White House, then walked to the Oval Office
sometime between noon and 2 p.m. (the only time she ever went to
the Oval Office uninvited).(245) Ms. Lewinsky recalled that she was
admitted by a tall, slender, Hispanic plainclothes agent on duty
near the door.(246)
The President told her that he no longer felt right about
their intimate relationship, and he had to put a stop to it.(247)
Ms. Lewinsky was welcome to continue coming to visit him, but
only as a friend. He hugged her but would not kiss her.(248) At
one point during their conversation, the President had a call
from a sugar grower in Florida whose name, according to Ms.
Lewinsky, was something like "Fanuli." In Ms. Lewinsky's
recollection, the President may have taken or returned the call
just as she was leaving.(249)
Ms. Lewinsky's account is corroborated in two respects.
First, Nelson U. Garabito, a plainclothes Secret Service agent,
testified that, on a weekend or holiday while Ms. Lewinsky worked
at the White House (most likely in the early spring of 1996), Ms.
Lewinsky appeared in the area of the Oval Office carrying a
folder and said, "I have these papers for the President."(250)
After knocking, Agent Garabito opened the Oval Office door, told
the President he had a visitor, ushered Ms. Lewinsky in, and
closed the door behind her.(251) When Agent Garabito's shift ended
a few minutes later, Ms. Lewinsky was still in the Oval Office.(252)
Second, concerning Ms. Lewinsky's recollection of a call
from a sugar grower named "Fanuli," the President talked with
Alfonso Fanjul of Palm Beach, Florida, from 12:42 to 1:04 p.m.(253)
Mr. Fanjul had telephoned a few minutes earlier, at 12:24 p.m.(254)
The Fanjuls are prominent sugar growers in Florida.(255)
E. Continuing Contacts
After the break-up on February 19, 1996, according to Ms.
Lewinsky, "there continued to sort of be this flirtation . . .
when we'd see each other."(256) After passing Ms. Lewinsky in a
hallway one night in late February or March, the President
telephoned her at home and said he was disappointed that, because
she had already left the White House for the evening, they could
not get together. Ms. Lewinsky testified that the call "sort of
implied to me that he was interested in starting up again."(257) On
March 10, 1996, Ms. Lewinsky took a visiting friend, Natalie
Ungvari, to the White House. They bumped into the President, who
said to Ms. Ungvari when Ms. Lewinsky introduced them: "You must
be her friend from California."(258) Ms. Ungvari was "shocked" that
the President knew where she was from.(259)
Ms. Lewinsky testified that on Friday, March 29, 1996, she
was walking down a hallway when she passed the President, who was
wearing the first necktie she had given him. She asked where he
had gotten the tie, and he replied: "Some girl with style gave
it to me."(260) Later, he telephoned her at her desk and asked if
she would like to see a movie. His plan was that she would
position herself in the hallway by the White House Theater at a
certain time, and he would invite her to join him and a group of
guests as they entered. Ms. Lewinsky responded that she did not
want people to think she was lurking around the West Wing
uninvited.(261) She asked if they could arrange a rendezvous over
the weekend instead, and he said he would try.(262) Records confirm
that the President spent the evening of March 29 in the White
House Theater.(263) Mrs. Clinton was in Athens, Greece.(264)
F. March 31 Sexual Encounter
On Sunday, March 31, 1996, according to Ms. Lewinsky, she
and the President resumed their sexual contact.(265) Ms. Lewinsky
was at the White House from 10:21 a.m. to 4:27 p.m. on that
day.(266) The President was in the Oval Office from 3:00 to 5:46
p.m.(267) His only call while in the Oval Office was from 3:06 to
3:07 p.m.(268) Mrs. Clinton was in Ireland.(269)
According to Ms. Lewinsky, the President telephoned her at
her desk and suggested that she come to the Oval Office on the
pretext of delivering papers to him.(270) She went to the Oval
Office and was admitted by a plainclothes Secret Service agent.(271)
In her folder was a gift for the President, a Hugo Boss
necktie.(272)
In the hallway by the study, the President and Ms. Lewinsky
kissed. On this occasion, according to Ms. Lewinsky, "he focused
on me pretty exclusively," kissing her bare breasts and fondling
her genitals.(273) At one point, the President inserted a cigar
into Ms. Lewinsky's vagina, then put the cigar in his mouth and
said: "It tastes good."(274) After they were finished, Ms.
Lewinsky left the Oval Office and walked through the Rose
Garden.(275)
With White House and Secret Service employees remarking on
Ms. Lewinsky's frequent presence in the West Wing, a deputy chief
of staff ordered Ms. Lewinsky transferred from the White House to
the Pentagon. On April 7 -- Easter Sunday -- Ms. Lewinsky told
the President of her dismissal. He promised to bring her back
after the election, and they had a sexual encounter.
A. Earlier Observations of Ms. Lewinsky in the West Wing
Ms. Lewinsky's visits to the Oval Office area had not gone
unnoticed. Officer Fox testified that "it was pretty commonly
known that she did frequent the West Wing on the weekends."(276)
Another Secret Service uniformed officer, William Ludtke III,
once saw her exit from the pantry near the Oval Office; she
seemed startled and possibly embarrassed to be spotted.(277)
Officer John Muskett testified that "if the President was known
to be coming into the Diplomatic Reception Room, a lot of times
[Ms. Lewinsky] just happened to be walking down the corridor, you
know, maybe just to see the President."(278) Ms. Lewinsky
acknowledged that she tried to position herself to see the
President.(279)
Although they could not date them precisely, Secret Service
officers and agents testified about several occasions when Ms.
Lewinsky and the President were alone in the Oval Office.
William C. Bordley, a former member of the Presidential
Protective Detail, testified that in late 1995 or early 1996, he
stopped Ms. Lewinsky outside the Oval Office because she did not
have her pass.(280) The President opened the Oval Office door,
indicated to Agent Bordley that Ms. Lewinsky's presence was all
right, and ushered Ms. Lewinsky into the Oval Office.(281) Agent
Bordley saw Ms. Lewinsky leave about half an hour later.(282)
Another former member of the Presidential Protective Detail,
Robert C. Ferguson, testified that one Saturday in winter, the
President told him that he was expecting "some staffers."(283) A
short time later, Ms. Lewinsky arrived and said that "[t]he
President needs me."(284) Agent Ferguson announced Ms. Lewinsky and
admitted her to the Oval Office.(285) About 10 or 15 minutes later,
Agent Ferguson rotated to a post on the Colonnade outside the
Oval Office.(286) He glanced through the window into the Oval
Office and saw the President and Ms. Lewinsky go through the door
leading toward the private study.(287)
Deeming her frequent visits to the Oval Office area a
"nuisance," one Secret Service Officer complained to Evelyn
Lieberman, the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations.(288) Ms.
Lieberman was already aware of Ms. Lewinsky. In December 1995,
according to Ms. Lewinsky, Ms. Lieberman chided her for being in
the West Wing and told her that interns are not permitted around
the Oval Office. Ms. Lewinsky (who had begun her Office of
Legislative Affairs job) told Ms. Lieberman that she was not an
intern anymore. After expressing surprise that Ms. Lewinsky had
been hired, Ms. Lieberman said she must have Ms. Lewinsky
confused with someone else.(289) Ms. Lieberman confirmed that she
reprimanded Ms. Lewinsky, whom she considered "what we used to
call a 'clutch' . . . always someplace she shouldn't be."(290)
In Ms. Lewinsky's view, some White House staff members
seemed to think that she was to blame for the President's evident
interest in her:
[P]eople were wary of his weaknesses, maybe, and . . . they
didn't want to look at him and think that he could be
responsible for anything, so it had to all be my fault . . .
I was stalking him or I was making advances towards him.(292)
B. Decision to Transfer Ms. Lewinsky
Ms. Lieberman testified that, because Ms. Lewinsky was so
persistent in her efforts to be near the President, "I decided to
get rid of her."(293) First she consulted Chief of Staff Panetta.
According to Mr. Panetta, Ms. Lieberman told him about a woman on
the staff who was "spending too much time around the West Wing."
Because of "the appearance that it was creating," Ms. Lieberman
proposed to move her out of the White House. Mr. Panetta -- who
testified that he valued Ms. Lieberman's role as "a tough
disciplinarian" and "trusted her judgment" -- replied, "Fine."(294)
Although Ms. Lieberman said she could not recall having
heard any rumors linking the President and Ms. Lewinsky, she
acknowledged that "the President was vulnerable to these kind of
rumors . . . yes, yes, that was one of the reasons" for moving
Ms. Lewinsky out of the White House.(295) Later, in September 1997,
Marcia Lewis (Ms. Lewinsky's mother) complained about her
daughter's dismissal to Ms. Lieberman, whom she met at a Voice of
America ceremony. Ms. Lieberman, according to Ms. Lewis,
responded by "saying something about Monica being cursed because
she's beautiful." Ms. Lewis gathered from the remark that Ms.
Lieberman, as part of her effort to protect the President, "would
want to have pretty women moved out."(296)
Most people understood that the principal reason for Ms.
Lewinsky's transfer was her habit of hanging around the Oval
Office and the West Wing.(297) In a memo in October 1996, John
Hilley, Assistant to the President and Director of Legislative
Affairs, reported that Ms. Lewinsky had been "got[ten] rid of" in
part "because of 'extracurricular activities'" (a phrase, he
maintained in the grand jury, that meant only that Ms. Lewinsky
was often absent from her work station).(298)
White House officials arranged for Ms. Lewinsky to get
another job in the Administration.(299) "Our direction is to make
sure she has a job in an Agency," Patsy Thomasson wrote in an
email message on April 9, 1996.(300) Ms. Thomasson's office
(Presidential Personnel) sent Ms. Lewinsky's resume to Charles
Duncan, Special Assistant to the Secretary of Defense and White
House Liaison, and asked him to find a Pentagon opening for
her.(301) Mr. Duncan was told that, though Ms. Lewinsky had
performed her duties capably, she was being dismissed for hanging
around the Oval Office too much.(302) According to Mr. Duncan --
who had received as many as 40 job referrals per day from the
White House -- the White House had never given such an
explanation for a transfer.(303)
C. Ms. Lewinsky's Notification of Her Transfer
On Friday, April 5, 1996, Timothy Keating, Staff Director
for Legislative Affairs, informed Ms. Lewinsky that she would
have to leave her White House job.(304) According to Mr. Keating,
he told her that she was not being fired, merely "being given a
different opportunity." In fact, she could tell people it was a
promotion if she cared to do so.(305) Upon hearing of her
dismissal, Ms. Lewinsky burst into tears and asked if there was
any way for her to stay in the White House, even without pay.(306)
No, Mr. Keating said. According to Ms. Lewinsky, "He told me I
was too sexy to be working in the East Wing and that this job at
the Pentagon where I'd be writing press releases was a sexier
job."(307)
Ms. Lewinsky was devastated. She felt that she was being
transferred simply because of her relationship with the
President.(308) And she feared that with the loss of her White
House job, "I was never going to see the President again. I
mean, my relationship with him would be over."(309)
D. Conversations with the President about Her Transfer
1. Easter Telephone Conversations and Sexual Encounter
On Easter Sunday, April 7, 1996, Ms. Lewinsky told the
President of her dismissal and they had a sexual encounter. Ms.
Lewinsky entered the White House at 4:56 and left at 5:28 p.m.(310)
The President was in the Oval Office all afternoon, from 2:21 to
7:48 p.m.(311)
According to Ms. Lewinsky, the President telephoned her at
home that day. After they spoke of the death of the Commerce
Secretary the previous week, she told him of her dismissal:
I had asked him . . . if he was doing okay with Ron Brown's
death, and then after we talked about that for a little bit
I told him that my last day was Monday. And . . . he seemed
really upset and sort of asked me to tell him what had
happened. So I did and I was crying and I asked him if I
could come see him, and he said that that was fine.(312)
At the White House, according to Ms. Lewinsky, she told Secret
Service Officer Muskett that she needed to deliver papers to the
President.(313) Officer Muskett admitted her to the Oval Office,
and she and the President proceeded to the private study.(314)
According to Ms. Lewinsky, the President seemed troubled
about her upcoming departure from the White House:
He told me that he thought that my being transferred had
something to do with him and that he was upset. He said,
"Why do they have to take you away from me? I trust you."
And then he told me -- he looked at me and he said, "I
promise you if I win in November I'll bring you back like
that."(315)
He also indicated that she could have any job she wanted after
the election.(316) In addition, the President said he would find
out why Ms. Lewinsky was transferred and report back to her.(317)
When asked if he had promised to get Ms. Lewinsky another
White House job, the President told the grand jury:
What I told Ms. Lewinsky was that . . . I would do what I
could to see, if she had a good record at the Pentagon, and
she assured me she was doing a good job and working hard,
that I would do my best to see that the fact that she had
been sent away from the Legislative Affairs section did not
keep her from getting a job in the White House, and that is,
in fact, what I tried to do. . . . But I did not tell her I
would order someone to hire her, and I never did, and I
wouldn't do that. It wouldn't be right.(318)
Ms. Lewinsky, when asked if the President had said that he would
bring her back to the White House only if she did a good job at
the Pentagon, responded: "No."(319)
After this Easter Sunday conversation, the President and Ms.
Lewinsky had a sexual encounter in the hallway, according to Ms.
Lewinsky.(320) She testified that the President touched her breasts
with his mouth and hands.(321) According to Ms. Lewinsky: "I think
he unzipped [his pants] . . . because it was sort of this running
joke that I could never unbutton his pants, that I just had
trouble with it."(322) Ms. Lewinsky performed oral sex. The
President did not ejaculate in her presence.(323)
During this encounter, someone called out from the Oval
Office that the President had a phone call.(324) He went back to
the Oval Office for a moment, then took the call in the study.
The President indicated that Ms. Lewinsky should perform oral sex
while he talked on the phone, and she obliged.(325) The telephone
conversation was about politics, and Ms. Lewinsky thought the
caller might be Dick Morris.(326) White House records confirm that
the President had one telephone call during Ms. Lewinsky's visit:
from "Mr. Richard Morris," to whom he talked from 5:11 to 5:20
p.m.(327)
A second interruption occurred a few minutes later,
according to Ms. Lewinsky. She and the President were in the
study.(328) Ms. Lewinsky testified:
Harold Ickes has a very distinct voice and . . . I heard him
holler "Mr. President," and the President looked at me and I
looked at him and he jetted out into the Oval Office and I
panicked and . . . thought that maybe because Harold was so
close with the President that they might just wander back
there and the President would assume that I knew to leave.(329)
Ms. Lewinsky testified that she exited hurriedly through the
dining room door.(330) That evening, the President called and asked
Ms. Lewinsky why she had run off. "I told him that I didn't know
if he was going to be coming back . . . . [H]e was a little
upset with me that I left."(331)
In addition to the record of the Dick Morris phone call, the
testimony of Secret Service Officer Muskett corroborates Ms.
Lewinsky's account. Officer Muskett was posted near the door to
the Oval Office on Easter Sunday.(332) He testified that Ms.
Lewinsky (whom he knew) arrived at about 4:45 p.m. carrying a
manila folder and seeming "a little upset."(333) She told Officer
Muskett that she needed to deliver documents to the President.(334)
Officer Muskett or the plainclothes agent on duty with him opened
the door, and Ms. Lewinsky entered.(335)
About 20 to 25 minutes later, according to Officer Muskett,
the telephone outside the Oval Office rang. The White House
operator said that the President had an important call but he was
not picking up.(336) The agent working alongside Officer Muskett
knocked on the door to the Oval Office. When the President did
not respond, the agent entered. The Oval Office was empty, and
the door leading to the study was slightly ajar.(337) (Ms. Lewinsky
testified that the President left the door ajar during their
sexual encounters.(338)) The agent called out, "Mr. President?"
There was no response. The agent stepped into the Oval Office
and called out more loudly, "Mr. President?" This time there was
a response from the study area, according to Officer Muskett:
"Huh?" The agent called out that the President had a phone call,
and the President said he would take it.(339)
A few minutes later, according to Officer Muskett, Mr. Ickes
approached and said he needed to see President Clinton. Officer
Muskett admitted him through Ms. Currie's office.(340) Less than a
minute after Mr. Ickes entered Ms. Currie's reception area,
according to Officer Muskett, the pantry or dining room door
closed audibly. Officer Muskett stepped down the hall to check
and saw Ms. Lewinsky walking away briskly.(341)
At 5:30 p.m., two minutes after Ms. Lewinsky left the White
House, the President called the office of the person who had
decided to transfer Ms. Lewinsky, Evelyn Lieberman.(342)