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An editorial by Salon Editor David Talbot in which he defends Salon's editorial integrity against attacks by the Wall Street Journal's editorial page and other far-right organs.
By David Talbot
April 17, 1998
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Defiantly, the independent counsel bids farewell to Malibu while holding tight to his investigation of the president.
By Jonathan Broder and Murray Waas
April 17, 1998
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When Kenneth Starr gave up his Scaife-funded Pepperdine chair, it was a tacit admission that long-standing charges of conflict of interest were valid. Now it's time for him to give up his through-the-looking-glass investigation.
By Andrew Ross
April 17, 1998
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Despite the seemingly impossible odds, there are good reasons why Paula Jones might appeal the dismissal of her case.
By Jonathan Broder
April 16, 1998
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President Clinton's chief lawyer demands independent counsel recuse himself from Hale investigation.
By Jonathan Broder And Murray Waas
April 14, 1998
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The Justice Department's "request" that Kenneth Starr investigate his own chief Whitewater witness is one of the last nails in the independent counsel's coffin.
By Bruce Shapiro
April 10, 1998
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Pro-family advocates would rather pass judgment on Monica Lewinsky's mom than on the government forcing her to testify against her child.
By Lori Leibovich and Dawn MacKeen
April 8, 1998
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Legal experts raise questions about the prosecutor's apparent conflicts of interest.
By Joe Conason and Murray Waas
April 8, 1998
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Kenneth Starr says his only concern is the truth. Then why is he giving fre passes to people who have lied and broken the law?
By Gene Lyons
April 7, 1998
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Attorney General Janet Reno considers turning the tables on Kenneth Starr and investigating his key Whitewater witness.
By Murray Waas And Jonathan Broder
April 3, 1998
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Now that Paula Jones has gone, all the Republicans have left against President Clinton is the Whitewater land deal. That does not fill them with enthusiasm.
By David Corn
April 3, 1998
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The end of the Paula Jones lawsuit will seriously damage Kenneth Starr's investigation, an expert says.
By Jonathan Broder
April 3, 1998
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The end of the Paula Jones lawsuit will seriously damage Kenneth Starr's investigation, a legal expert says.
By Jonathan Broder
March 30, 1998
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When Kenneth Starr gave up his Scaife-funded Pepperdine chair, it was a tacit admission that long-standing charges of conflict of interest were valid. Now it's time for him to give up his investigation
By Andrew Ross
March 30, 1998
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Salon reports that Kenneth Starr's deputy, Hickman Ewing Jr., met quietly several times with an anti-Clinton private investigator employed by conservative billionaire Richard Mellon Scaife.
By Murray Waas
March 30, 1998
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A reporter who has been following the Whitewater investigation
from the start finds Kenneth Starr giving a free pass to people who have lied and broken the law, so long as they testify against President Clinton.
By Gene Lyons
March 30, 1998
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Legal experts raise questions about the prosecutor's apparent conflicts of interest.
By Joe Conason and Murray Waas
March 30, 1998
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Legal experts raise questions about the prosecutor's apparent conflicts of interest.
By Jonathan Broder And Murray Waas
March 30, 1998
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There is a right-wing conspiracy to bring down the president.
By Andrew
Ross
March 19, 1998
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Before you cry too many tears for Kathleen Willey, consider the unfortunate brother and sister she fleeced.
By Bruce Shapiro
March 18, 1998
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How a manic-depressive's quest for revenge finally killed him,
but not before he embroiled the country in a tortuous six-year quest called
the Whitewater investigation.
By Gene Lyons
March 16, 1998
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By Susie Bright
March 13, 1998
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A Salon investigative report details how the Rev. Jerry Falwell and a California political organization helped finance and orchestrate an extensive anti-Clinton propaganda campaign.
By Murray Waas
March 11, 1998
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How the Rev. Jerry Falwell and a California political organization helped finance and orchestrate an extensive anti-Clinton propaganda campaign.
By Murray Waas
March 11, 1998
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Americans under President Clinton's command have had their careers ruined -- and have even gone to jail -- for doing what The President is alleged to have done.
By David Horowitz
March 9, 1998