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Broaddrick:
Raped by Bill Clinton
By Dorothy Rabinowitz
Wall Street Journal
VAN
BUREN, Ark.--To
any reporter, it was the kind of story that doesn't come along often
in a career--an alleged 1978 sexual assault involving William Jefferson
Clinton, then attorney general of Arkansas. From the viewpoint of
Juanita Broaddrick, it has been a trial and concern ever since reports
began emerging in the 1992 presidential campaign, through the Paula
Jones case and into the impeachment proceedings.
Indeed, her story was crucial to the outcome of those proceedings--just
one among several reasons it is far more than another now-irrelevant
Jane Doe account. It was when several wavering House Republicans
read the Jane Doe material from the independent counsel's office
that they decided they would vote to impeach. As Jane Doe No. 5,
Mrs. Broaddrick had filed an affidavit denying that Mr. Clinton
had subjected her to--as the delicately phrased document put it--"unwelcome
sexual advances." Interviewed by the independent counsel's
office, she said that affidavit was false, and that she had been
assaulted--an account essential to understanding the second presidential
impeachment in U.S. history.
Since the 1992 campaign, journalists had chased after Mrs. Broaddrick,
a resistant quarry if ever there was one. With the advent of the
Clinton-Lewinsky scandal last year, the chase took on a new level
of intensity. A Fox News crew pursued her down the highway, as she
tried to outrace them at 90 miles an hour. Time magazine reporters
trying to get to her pretended they were covering a local tennis
benefit. The Broaddricks' phone rang incessantly with requests for
interviews, all of them refused until one weekend last January.
Mrs. Broaddrick finally agreed to see NBC's Lisa Myers, who had
already done a brief report on her in March and who had been calling
her regularly for nearly a year. Within a day, Ms. Myers and a crew
were on their way, even as an ABC producer was on the phone asking
if Mrs. Broaddrick would come to New York to meet with Barbara Walters.
Too late--nor was she about to vault from home, where she was surrounded
by all that gave comfort and warmth, to go rushing to New York to
talk about this with a stranger. It was hard enough with a reporter
familiar to her.
First she had to break the news to her obdurately protective husband
that, after all the years of running from the media, she had consented
to go on camera. She is clear enough, in her mind, about how she
had come to this decision. On New Year's Eve, as the family sat
around a table celebrating with friends, someone passed around a
copy of the Star, which had a report about her saying, among other
things, that Mr. Clinton had bribed her husband to keep him quiet.
The rest of New Year's Eve was a ruin. So was the day that followed,
as she contemplated all the layers of tawdry rumor about her that
had multiplied in the wake of the other, larger scandal involving
the president. Perhaps the time had come, she thought, to get the
facts out and put an end to all the stories, as Ms. Myers, a respected
veteran reporter, had so long argued.
To encounter this woman, to hear the details of her story and the
statements of the corroborating witnesses, was to understand that
this was an event that in fact took place.
Still, three hours before the crew started shooting, Mrs. Broaddrick
began to shake with fear as she considered the consequences, what
she would be telling, and about whom. He was the president. She
thought of asking if it was too late to get out of the whole thing.
Still, soon enough, the camera crew had set up, the interview begun.
The filming went on from midmorning to evening, and then it was
over.
The interview took place Jan. 20, just over a month after the president's
impeachment on Dec. 19. The Senate trial had been under way for
nearly two weeks--focused, at this point, on whether Monica Lewinsky
should testify. At NBC, the debate was what to do about the Broaddrick
interview--a large question. NBC had scheduled the program for airing
on the Jan. 29 episode of "Dateline," Mrs. Broaddrick
heard--but it did not air then or later. The network had an explosive
story on its hands, to be sure, and also an exhaustively investigated
one. NBC's researchers had combed through the Broaddricks' entire
lives, through dusty basement files and court records. "They
got to read," Mrs. Broaddrick marvels, "old papers about
the case we settled with two employees fired for theft 20 years
ago."
As the days passed, with no Broaddrick interview--and the Feb.
12 Senate impeachment trial vote imminent--NBC News spokesmen told
all callers the "Dateline" report was still a work in
progress, requiring more investigation. Other sources at NBC asked--profoundly
off the record--how much more confirmation could the story need?
They had four witnesses giving corroborating testimony--citizens
with nothing to gain and possibly much to lose by going public and
talking, as the husband of one witness kept warning her. Still,
they had come forward. NBC had investigated and investigated, and
it was not yet enough. Word went out from NBC that the network had
to cross-check dates, or lacked enough dates. Meanwhile, for any
journalist asking what happened to the interview with Mrs. Broaddrick,
the office of NBC News president Andrew Lack had a simple, uplifting
message--namely that NBC wanted to make sure the story was "rock
solid" journalism.
Mrs. Broaddrick understood her position. All she had tried to avoid
by refusing all these years to talk to the press, all that she had
feared--that she would not be believed, that she would be passed
off as just another bimbo with a Clinton story--had now come to
pass, in her view. As soon as it was evident there was to be trouble
about airing the piece, she recalls, Lisa Myers told her: "The
good news is you're credible. The bad news is you're very credible."
Mrs. Broaddrick repeats this more than once, as though trying to
puzzle its meaning--but its meaning of course is entirely clear
to her, as to everyone else hearing it. It meant that to encounter
this woman, to hear the details of her story and the statements
of the corroborating witnesses, was to understand that this was
an event that in fact took place. "Too credible" sums
the matter up nicely.
It isn't hard to see what had given NBC pause. There was, first
of all, the detail. Then the subject herself--a woman of accomplishment,
prosperous, successful in her field, serious; a woman seeking no
profit, no book, no lawsuit. A woman of a kind people like and warm
to. To meet Juanita Broaddrick at her house in Van Buren is to encounter
a woman of sunny disposition that the nudgings of anxiety can't
quite suppress--a woman entirely aware of life's bounties. She sits
talking in the peaceful house on a hilltop overlooking the Broaddricks'
40 acres, where 30 cows, five horses and a mule roam. An effervescent
dog called Wally and a three-legged companion, Pearl, rush around
in their midst. It is a good life all right.
The story: In 1978, 35-year-old Juanita Broaddrick--a Clinton campaign
worker--had already owned a nursing home for five years. Since her
graduation from nursing school she had worked for several such facilities
and decided she wanted to run one of her own. It was that home that
Attorney General Clinton visited one day, on a campaign stop during
his run for governor. He invited Juanita, then still married to
her first husband, to visit campaign headquarters when she was in
Little Rock. As it happened, she told him, she was planning to attend
a seminar of the American College of Nursing Home Administrators
the very next week and would do just that. On her arrival in Little
Rock, she called campaign headquarters. Mrs. Broaddrick was surprised
to be greeted by an aide who seemed to expect her call, and who
directed her to call the attorney general at his apartment. They
arranged to meet at the coffee shop of the Camelot Hotel, where
the seminar was held--a noisy place, Mr. Clinton pointed out; they
could have coffee in her room.
They had not been there more than five minutes, Mrs. Broaddrick
says, when he moved close as they stood looking out at the Arkansas
River. He pointed out an old jailhouse and told her that when he
became governor, he was going to renovate that place. (The building
was later torn down, but in the course of their searches, NBC's
investigators found proof that, as Mrs. Broaddrick said, there had
been such a jail at the time.) But the conversation did not linger
long on the candidate's plans for social reform. For, Mrs. Broaddrick
relates, he then put his arms around her, startling her.
"He told me, 'We're both married people,' " she recalls.
She recalls, too, that in her effort to make him see she had no
interest of this kind in him, she told him yes, they were both married
but she was deeply involved with another man--which was true. She
was talking about the man she would marry after her divorce, David
Broaddrick, now her husband of 18 years.
The argument failed to persuade Mr. Clinton, who, she says, got
her onto the bed, held her down forcibly and bit her lips. The sexual
entry itself was not without some pain, she recalls, because of
her stiffness and resistance. When it was over, she says, he looked
down at her and said not to worry, he was sterile--he had had mumps
when he was a child.
"As though that was the thing on my mind--I wasn't thinking
about pregnancy, or about anything," she says. "I felt
paralyzed and was starting to cry."
As he got to the door, she remembers, he turned.
"This is the part that always stays in my mind--the way he
put on his sunglasses. Then he looked at me and said, 'You better
put some ice on that.' And then he left."
Her friend Norma Rogers, a nurse who had accompanied her on the
trip, found her on the bed. She was, Ms. Rogers related in an interview,
in a state of shock--lips swollen to double their size, mouth discolored
from the biting, her pantyhose torn in the crotch. "She just
stayed on the bed and kept repeating, 'I can't believe what happened.'
" Ms. Rogers applied ice to Juanita's mouth, and they drove
back home, stopping along the way for more ice.
For some time to come, Mrs. Broaddrick relates, she chastised herself
for agreeing to coffee in a hotel room. "But who, for heaven's
sake, would have imagined anything like this? This was the attorney
general--and it just never entered my mind."
It was when several wavering House Republicans read the Jane Doe
material from the independent counsel's office that they decided
they would vote to impeach.
All the way home, she says, they talked about two questions: How
could a man like this be governor of a state? The other, more urgent
one was what to tell David, the man she loved, about the condition
of her face. She decided to tell him she had been hit in the mouth
by a revolving door. His answer: "That didn't happen."
A few days later, she told him what had actually occurred, and it
had its lasting effect. In the years that followed, they would never
go to any meeting concerning nursing homes if they knew the governor
would attend. Still, one day, when they ran into Mr. Clinton, he
greeted them with his customary affability. This precipitated a
scene wherein her husband grabbed Mr. Clinton hard, by the hand,
and warned him: "Stay away from my wife and stay away from
Brownwood Manor [her nursing home]." The governor, she recalls,
tried to pass it off as joshing, but had to wrest himself from Mr.
Broaddrick's grip.
But Mr. Clinton didn't forget her, as it turned out. In 1984, her
nursing facility was judged the best in the state, which brought
a congratulatory official letter from the governor. On the bottom
was a handwritten note: "I admire you very much." That
contact was not quite as memorable--or personal--as the one that
occurred in 1991, when she was called out of a meeting concerning
state nursing standards. She had no idea that the person who had
summoned her was Gov. Clinton, who waited by a stairway for her.
He took her hands, she recalls, and told her that he wanted to apologize,
and asked what he could do to make things up to her. She said nothing
and walked away. For a time, she and Norma wondered what had brought
this on. Not long after, Mr. Clinton announced he was running for
president.
Trouble began in 1992, when the story Mrs. Broaddrick had shared
with a small circle of friends reached a wide public, thanks to
a business associate by the name of Philip Yoakum. A bitter opponent
of Mr. Clinton, he urged that she come forward during the presidential
campaign, which she declined to do. When the Paula Jones lawsuit
came along, the plaintiff's lawyers approached her, but Mrs. Broaddrick
was determined to stay clear of involvement. That was how she came
to sign the false affidavit.
It was this matter that the White House spokesmen and others point
to when dismissing her account. Her lawyer, Republican state Sen.
Bill Walters, prepared the affidavit--the model for which he says
he got from White House lawyer Bruce Lindsey, who was happy to oblige.
Her lawyers, Mrs. Broaddrick relates, didn't actually know the facts--that
the sexual advances in question were very far from consensual. Her
goal was to keep out of everything.
When Kenneth Starr's investigators came around, explains her 28-year-old
son, Kevin, a lawyer, it was a different matter. "I told my
mother--and she understood it--that this was another whole level.
She knew it was one thing to lie in a civil trial so she could get
away from all this, but another to lie to federal prosecutors and
possibly a grand jury."
Fearful of punishment for that earlier perjury, she was prepared
to admit to the independent counsel's officers--after receiving
immunity--that her prior affidavit had been false. In the event,
it became a footnote in the Starr report, and carried no weight
as far as obstruction of justice charges were concerned. Both Mrs.
Broaddrick and her lawyers emphasize that no one from the White
House had harassed her or subjected her to other pressures aimed
at keeping the story quiet.
Which does not mean the White House is rushing to facilitate any
coverage of this story. Mrs. Broaddrick reports that NBC told her
its investigators were waiting for the White House to answer some
40 questions relating to this matter. Asked for a response to Mrs.
Broaddrick's charges, a White House spokesman told this writer yesterday
that the story was so old that Mr. Clinton's personal lawyer, David
Kendall, was the one to answer it. After repeated phone calls, Mr.
Kendall's assistant said he was unavailable for comment.
In the meantime Mrs. Broaddrick gets intermittent calls from NBC
investigators, still hanging out at the Capital Hotel in Little
Rock, waiting. In the meantime, too, spokesmen for NBC News still
announce their intention to make certain the story is solid--a heartening
testimony to the elevated standards of journalism that have now
apparently seized the network. Mrs. Broaddrick laughs, noting that
NBC is still seeking answers and working on the program, which the
network may one day air--an event for which she is not holding her
breath.
Copyright 1999 by The Wall Street Journal. Used
with Permission
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